Quotes to Live By

This daily habit, capturing a piece of morning reading or serendipitous stumbling on wisdom, started  on Twitter here and from October 2024 continued here...every day... "Live to the point of tears" - Albert Camus Albert Camus (1913–1960) was a French-Algerian philosopher, author, and journalist, known for his existentialist and absurdist philosophy (although he rejected the existentialist label). Camus received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1957 for illuminating the human conscience and tragically he died in a car accident in 1960 at the age of 46. "The very least you can do in your life is to figure out what you hope for; and then live inside that hope." - Barbara Kingsolver As ChatGPT writes back to my curiosity (here),…

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Herbie Hancock and Bubbles of Spirit

Strolling down a trail into the magical Stern Grove forest in San Francisco, the crankiness of a long drive dissolved into giddy anticipation. I was just minutes away from seeing a greatest-of-all-time in jazz music. Minutes away from being meters away from the eclectic pianist Herbie Hancock, whose wild arc of jazz piano styles from traditional to funk, electronica and fusion all started seven decades ago in the 1950s.  The bass of a warm-up DJ thudded through the tall stands of beautiful eucalyptus, with their crisp subtle scent. The mist of a heavy summer fog hung in the trees across branches, gently being pulled in an onshore breeze from the Pacific. My pace accelerated, just as when walking in a crowd in an airport terminal or…

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A Fine is a Price

I always say that at least 51%:49% are cynical capitalists, no matter what they might say at the school gate about their do-gooding...the evidence is everywhere, if you watch for it! As the Abstract summarizes: The deterrence hypothesis predicts that the introduction of a penalty that leaves everything else unchanged will reduce the occurrence of the behavior subject to the fine. We present the result of a field study in a group of day-care centers that contradicts this prediction. Parents used to arrive late to collect their children, forcing a teacher to stay after closing time. We introduced a monetary fine for late-coming parents. As a result the number of late-coming parents increased significantly. After the fine was removed no…

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Lenses on Language in America, and ‘What Room’?

Hey everybody, What a dramatic week in the US, to put it mildly! As I start to shift from this wonderful year of travels, and the relaxed musings of reflective personal writing in Life Notes, I’m bringing us back to my original aim of sharing a curation of the most interesting things I’ve observed and learnt during the week (yes, still working on brevity!). In weeks to come, you’ll see the content start to shift in reflection of the new career direction I will be announcing :) This has me spending days and nights swilling in fascinating conversations, reading learning to bring a new angle into my past work in the climate, energy and natural resources sectors. And, it was funny this…

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