Monday, March 08, 2010

BBC News - Mapping the growth of the internet

Number of people online
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SuperPower: a season of programmes exploring the power of the internet.

(Source: ITU)


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Fascinating chart of worldwide internet usage, graphically illustrating the haves and have nots.

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Saturday, February 27, 2010

Managing Information: A Special Report (10 Articles +) from The Economist « ResourceShelf

Managing Information: A Special Report (10 Articles ) from The Economist

The report consists of 10 articles and an audio report. We%u2019ve excerpted on a couple of paragraphs from a few of the articles. The rest of the articles are linked near the bottom under %u201CAdditional Articles.%u201D Some excellent material here and for those of you who enjoy and/or use statistics about info, this report has a lot of them in one place. Let%u2019s get started.

Data, Data Everywhere

Wal-Mart, a retail giant, handles more than 1m customer transactions every hour, feeding databases estimated at more than 2.5 petabytes%u2014the equivalent of 167 times the books in America%u2019s Library of Congress (see article for an explanation of how data are quantified). Facebook, a social-networking website, is home to 40 billion photos. And decoding the human genome involves analysing 3 billion base pairs%u2014which took ten years the first time it was done, in 2003, but can now be achieved in one week.

All these examples tell the same story: that the world contains an unimaginably vast amount of digital information which is getting ever vaster ever more rapidly. This makes it possible to do many things that previously could not be done: spot business trends, prevent diseases, combat crime and so on. Managed well, the data can be used to unlock new sources of economic value, provide fresh insights into science and hold governments to account.

[Snip]

There are many reasons for the information explosion. The most obvious one is technology. As the capabilities of digital devices soar and prices plummet, sensors and gadgets are digitising lots of information that was previously unavailable. And many more people have access to far more powerful tools. For example, there are 4.6 billion mobile-phone subscriptions worldwide (though many people have more than one, so the world%u2019s 6.8 billion people are not quite as well supplied as these figures suggest), and 1 billion-2 billion people use the internet.

Data Deluge

The best way to deal with these drawbacks of the data deluge is, paradoxically, to make more data available in the right way, by requiring greater transparency in several areas. First, users should be given greater access to and control over the information held about them, including whom it is shared with. Google allows users to see what information it holds about them, and lets them delete their search histories or modify the targeting of advertising, for example. Second, organisations should be required to disclose details of security breaches, as is already the case in some parts of the world, to encourage bosses to take information security more seriously. Third, organisations should be subject to an annual security audit, with the resulting grade made public (though details of any problems exposed would not be). This would encourage companies to keep their security measures up to date.

All Too Much-Monstrous Amounts of Data

Wal-Mart, a retail giant, handles more than 1m customer transactions every hour, feeding databases estimated at more than 2.5 petabytes%u2014the equivalent of 167 times the books in America%u2019s Library of Congress (see article for an explanation of how data are quantified). Facebook, a social-networking website, is home to 40 billion photos. And decoding the human genome involves analysing 3 billion base pairs%u2014which took ten years the first time it was done, in 2003, but can now be achieved in one week.

All these examples tell the same story: that the world contains an unimaginably vast amount of digital information which is getting ever vaster ever more rapidly. This makes it possible to do many things that previously could not be done: spot business trends, prevent diseases, combat crime and so on. Managed well, the data can be used to unlock new sources of economic value, provide fresh insights into science and hold governments to account.

Quantifying the amount of information that exists in the world is hard. What is clear is that there is an awful lot of it, and it is growing at a terrific rate (a compound annual 60%) that is speeding up all the time. The flood of data from sensors, computers, research labs, cameras, phones and the like surpassed the capacity of storage technologies in 2007.

[Snip]

Only 5% of the information that is created is %u201Cstructured%u201D, meaning it comes in a standard format of words or numbers that can be read by computers. The rest are things like photos and phone calls which are less easily retrievable and usable. But this is changing as content on the web is increasingly %u201Ctagged%u201D, and facial-recognition and voice-recognition software can identify people and words in digital files.

%u201CIt is a very sad thing that nowadays there is so little useless information,%u201D quipped Oscar Wilde in 1894. He did not know the half of it.

This article also includes and interesting and useful chart titled, %u201CData Inflation.%u201D
For example, 5 megabytes=The Complete Works of Shakespeare%u20262 gigabytes=1 to 2 hour movie (compressed)%u20265 petabytes=The amount of mail delivered this year by the U.S. Postal Service

Audio: A Conversation with Kenneth Cukier (A Correspondent for The Economist)

Information has gone from scarce to superabundant. That brings huge new benefits %u2013 but also big headaches.

Additional Articles

A Different Game: Information is Transforming Traditional Businesses

Clicking For Gold: How Internet Companies Profit From Data on the Web

The Open Society: Governments are Letting in the Light

Show Me: New Ways of Visualising Data

Needle in a Haystack: The Uses of Information About Information

These days metadata are undergoing a virtual renaissance.

New Rules for Big Data: Regulators are Having to Rethink Their Brief

Handling the Cornucopia: The Best Way to Deal with all that Information is to use Machines But They Need Watching

Sources and Acknowledgments

Offer to Readers (Download PDF Version of the Complete Special Report)
Buy a copy of the complete report.

Source: The Economist

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This entry was posted on Thursday, February 25th, 2010 and is filed under Digital Repositories, Info Management and Retrieval, Information Industry, Technology and Internet. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

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My two most essential print manages: The New Yorker and The Economist

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Thursday, February 25, 2010

Essential Reading: Google Buzz | Personal Branding Blog - Dan Schawbel

Google Buzz has been talked about nonstop since it came out, from Fox News to NPR and back again. Stories typically range from security flaws to tips on how to best use the new social network. Buzz is Google%u2019s current attempt to have a social network and compete against the likes of Facebook. What%u2019s different about this network is that it leeches onto Gmail%u2019s current user base, which is already used by around 176.5 million people. As a symbiote, Buzz

taps into your current Gmail network and shares your content with your Buzz followers, much like Twitter, but in a gated environment, much like Facebook. It may appear like a %u201CTwitter clone,%u201D but most heavy users say it resembles %u201CFriendFeed,%u201D where you can publish more than 140 characters and assemble large discussions with your followers. It even has the %u201Cliking%u201D system that is familiar to FriendFeed and Facebook users.

1. Use Your Google Profile as a brand portal

Google announced %u201CGoogle Profiles,%u201D quite some time ago, but now we%u2019re seeing the importance of these profiles emerge, with the launch of Buzz. It%u2019s obvious that Google wants your profile to become your personal brands portal on the web. They want you to share your profile URL instead of the URL%u2019s for your other social networks because you can link to all of your other profiles from your Google one. Also, just like a Twitter profile, you can verify your Google Profile to make it seem more legitimate.

Three main benefits of having a Google Profile:

  1. When someone googles your name, your profile shows up at the bottom with your picture. If you don%u2019t create and complete your profile, then someone who shares your name can own that spot. Search results display three profiles per searched name.
  2. It has %u201CGoogle juice,%u201D which means that the websites you link to from your profile will have a boost in the search engine. It will eventually mean that your buzz%u2019s, through your profile, will also rank high for certain keywords.
  3. It acts as a central hub for all the information you share, your professional and personal information and contact information. In this way, it allows you to manage your digital identity, as well as others.

A Google Profile, if completely filled out, should answer these five questions:

  1. Who is this person?
  2. Where else are they located on the web?
  3. How do I connect with them?
  4. What value are they creating?
  5. How many people are following them and who is following them?

When you first create your Google Profile, make sure everything is filled out. This includes, basic information such as your name, location and companies you%u2019ve worked for. Also, before creating your profile, make sure that you registered your Google account name with your full name and not a nickname because you can have a custom URL (http://google.com/profiles/firstname.lastname). This is an important move for personal branding because of name recognition. Next, you want to add the same avatar/picture that you use with all of your other profiles. Then, check off %u201CDisplay my full name so I can be found in search.%u201D I%u2019ll leave the other two check boxes, that have to do with privacy, up to you. Fill out your bio and include links throughout it. You should use the same bio, word for word, that can be found on your blog or website.

Finally, add links to your website, blog, and prominent social profiles (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn) that you%u2019re active on. Use the full names and URL%u2019s when you add each site because it%u2019s good SEO. Order the sites from the site that best represents you as a brand to the least. If you want, you can also add your Flickr photos into your profile by going to the %u201CPhotos%u201D tab when in edit mode. To take this one step further, you can purchase a domain name (yourname.com) at MyDomain.com (sponsored link) and redirect it to your Google Profile.

2. Syndicate external content into Google Buzz

There%u2019s no doubt that Google will prioritize Buzz in search, which means that content, engagement and authority is important for ranking high. For instance, on Twitter, if you%u2019re a power user, with a large following of influential users, and you tweet, then it%u2019s highly probable that it will rank high in search. This, one can assume, will be similar to how Buzz operates, but only for users that make their profile and feed public.

While many of my followers believe you shouldn%u2019t link your Google Buzz account to your other social networks, I believe that it%u2019s the only way to scale your online identity. As we join more and more social networks, yet focus on the few that are really paying off for us, we will have to scale our personal brands to remain active on those networks.

You can add %u201Cconnected sites,%u201D such as:

  • YouTube
  • Twitter
  • Flickr & Picasa
  • Google Reader
  • Google Status

From my experiments, I%u2019ve noticed that people respond much better to fresh and not syndicated content, but if you shy away from adding these services, then it will appear like you%u2019re an inactive user (if you don%u2019t have the time to manage your Google Buzz account).

3. Create tighter relationships with close contacts

So far, Google Buzz is positioned as a social network for your friends and close business contacts, instead of a megaphone that you can use, such as Twitter, to market yourself to the world. It is possible that this may change and Google might create a separate space, away from Gmail, for Buzz though. Since Buzz draws upon your current %u201Cinner circle%u201D of Google contacts, it gives you the ability to stay and touch with people that are important in your life. Just like any community, you have to share useful information, leave comments, help others and be personable, if you want to use it successfully.

You can even develop your relationship on Google Buzz by using the mobile iPhone application! This way, you can interact with other Buzz users around you and you%u2019ll be notified when they buzz, which might be uncomfortable at first, but pose for an interesting networking opportunity.

4. Promote your Google Profile/Buzz account

Since Google Profiles contain your personal and professional information, in addition to your lifestream, it%u2019s wise to start promoting this single URL to all of your contacts, instead of each individual site. Why promote your blog, Facebook fan page, YouTube channel and eight other URL%u2019s, when you can promote one that can connect other people to all of them? When you promote your Google Profile, make sure the URL appears like this: http://www.google.com/profiles/dan.schawbel#buzz. This way, when someone clicks the link, they will be taken directly to the %u201Cbuzz%u201D tab in your profile.

Ten places to promote your Google Profile:

  1. Open up all of your social media profiles and add a link to your Google Profile.
  2. Instead of listing one hundred URL%u2019s on your business card, list your website/blog and your Google Profile URL.
  3. In your email signature, put your URL.
  4. If you guest post on a blog or write an article for an online site, put your URL in your byline.
  5. Write a blog post talking about Google Buzz, while listing your own account.
  6. You get one URL in your Twitter profile, so add your Google Profile URL there.
  7. Add a Buzz Wordpress plugin to your blog so that people can promote your posts to their Buzz accounts.
  8. Update your Google status with an announcement that you%u2019re using Google Buzz and link to your profile.
  9. When commenting on blogs, use your Google Profile URL instead of your website or blog.
  10. Have other Buzz users promote you by sharing great content in the first place.

Google Buzz is here to stay. You%u2019re probably already using Gmail and if you%u2019re not, then you should really make the jump soon because having a Hotmail or Yahoo account is outdated and will make people perceive you as someone who isn%u2019t keeping up with the times. Remember to complete your Google Profile, connect all of your websites, build relationships and promote your profile wherever you can. There%u2019s no doubt in the future that the people who have build their personal brands on Google with Buzz will gain more visibility in search and become more successful.

Related posts:

  1. 3 Step Personal Branding System A lot of people I%u2019ve spoken to don%u2019t know where...
  2. A Secret Personal Branding Tip For MyBlogLog One of the social networks that I feel is...
  3. Personal Brand Audit: What%u2019s Your Google Score? This is part 3 in the %u201CPersonal Brand Audit%u201D series....

This is ESSENTIAL reading: not only about Buzz, but about Google's central role as spoke in the wheel of online presence.

Posted via web from Game of Games

Buzz by weirdchina - Robert Kong Hai from Buzz

ig List of Tips And Tricks for Google Buzz

---------------------------------------------------------

How To Do Everything in Google Buzz
http://www.fastcompany.com/1546226/how-to-do-everything-in-google-buzz-including-turn-it-off

5 Google Buzz Tips for the Advanced User
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/5_google_buzz_tips_for_the_advanced_user.php

How to Make Google Buzz Follower Lists Private
http://www.businessinsider.com/how-to-make-your-google-buzz-follower-lists-private-2010-2

4 Google Buzz Hacks for Users, Developers, and Haters
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/4_google_buzz_hacks_for_users_developers_and_haters.php

How to Disable Google Buzz
http://techie-buzz.com/how-to/enable-or-disable-google-buzz.html

How to Hide Update Count in Gmail
http://techie-buzz.com/how-to/hide-google-buzz-update-in-gmail.html

Get Rid of Email Updates from Google Buzz
http://techie-buzz.com/how-to/hide-archive-google-buzz-updates-in-gmail.html

Add any Blog or RSS Feeds to Google Buzz
http://www.google.com/buzz/bradfitz/PPjHXDhANAC/Want-to-connect-your-blog-or-some-other-feed-to

How to Bring Google Buzz Updates to Twitter
http://blog.louisgray.com/2010/02/how-to-bring-your-google-buzz-entries.html

How To Integrate Facebook, Twitter, and Buzz into Your Gmail
http://mashable.com/2010/02/12/facebook-twitter-buzz-gmail/

How To Make a Google Buzz Desktop App
http://mashable.com/2010/02/13/google-buzz-ssb/

How To Embed Your Google Profile Into Your Blog
http://www.google.com/buzz/layne.heiny/9Tj2ew5Aar3/Embed-Your-Google-Profile-Into-Your-Blog-Ive-been

How To Add a Google Buzz Button To Wordpress
http://www.techlifeweb.com/2010/02/12/add-a-google-buzz-button-to-wordpress/

How to send group updates and direct messages on Google Buzz using @replies
http://www.google.com/buzz/mntetai/8eG1fLaJ8Hw/As-posted-by-Dewitt-Clinton-How-to-send-group

------------------------------------------------------------

If you receive too many Buzz updates in your Inbox at an annoying rate, but you like having them nonetheless to keep track of your conversations
http://hollywooddigital.wordpress.com/2010/02/25/google-buzz-tip-1/

------------------------------------------------------------

jQuery plugin that embeds any Google Buzz posts into a website.
http://jquery-buzzbee.appspot.com/

------------------------------------------------------------

Google Buzz Keyboard Shortcuts - Cheat Sheet!

http://kosciak.blox.pl/2010/02/Google-Buzz-Cheat-Sheet.html

------------------------------------------------------------

“Verified name” badge

Get Your Google Buzz Profile Verified
http://techpp.com/2010/02/12/get-your-google-buzz-profile-verified/

Buzz = conversational social network; twitter = broadcast social network. If you are a buzz or twitter person, follow weirdchina

Posted via web from Game of Games

From Louis Gray - Why Buzz Beats Twitter, Facebook and Friendfeed

Why Buzz Beats Twitter, Facebook, and Friendfeed - Search Engine Journal
Buzz is a breath of fresh air in an increasingly noisy social media world. Why do I think it’s superior to Twitter, Facebook, and Friendfeed? Let’s take the easiest comparison first: Buzz vs. Friendfeed Right now, Buzz basically is Friendfeed but with immediately greater penetration. Real conversations with more people. [BTW I know I have Buzz on the brain because I just tried to create itali...

If you don't have a gmail account, consider getting one now. Otherwise, you will quickly be seen as "behind the times" (if you care about such things). In addition, consider creating a Google Profile. This IMO is the best hub for your online presence.

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Old School Germantown (Powerpoint w/sound)

Check out my first poetry/music/powerpoint mashup. Had a lot of fun creating it. I expect to do more.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

International Leadership For Serious Games Gathering...

Check out this website I found at networkedblogs.com

I'd like to go to this -- in Boston, week of May 24th 00 although I disagree with the overall premise. Serious Games IMHO has NOTHING really about technology. It is more about philosophy - a new way of looking at the world

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Thursday, February 04, 2010

Productivity Games

Sounds like an oxymoron, but there are such things as productivity games. My own Game of Games is any example.

Posted via web from Game of Games

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Business virtual needs - Hypergrid Business

Check out this website I found at ow.ly

Good article about issues confronting businesses that might wish to use virtual worlds, such as Second Life.

Posted via web from Game of Games

Thursday, October 01, 2009

Participate

Today, marks the 19th Message of the Day, I've spoken in the 641-715-3800, ext 55310 Voice mail box. I have 21 more to go, to reach my goal of posting 30 messages in 30 days.

Well, yesterday, I finally stopped improvising and wrote the rudiments of a script before talking into the telephone.

The script follows, on the theme of Participating. Do you see any worthwhile thoughts here?

Participate!

The Message of the Day is "Participate, participate in your experience..."

I was reflecting:

What does it mean to be fully engaged?

What does it mean to be fully embracing life?

The key is participating, participating in your experience and experiencing your participation.

I just like to read a few quotes and share a simple story.

Antoine de Saint-Exupery, French writer and aviator:

“The notion of looking on at life has always been hateful to me. What am I if I am not a participant? In order to be, I must participate.”

Goethe, German writer:


“We are forced to participate in the games of life before we can possibly learn how to use the options in the rules governing them.”


John Dewey, American philosopher

Such happiness as life is capable of comes from the full PARTICIPATION of all our powers in the endeavour towrest from each changing situations of experience its own full and unique meaning.



So here's a story:

A long time ago, I participating in an Insight Training Seminar, among the many human potential seminar that were big in the 1980s and 90s. It was a wonderful experience and I learned a lot about myself. One thing I distinctly remember was the beginning of the seminar and the seminar leader encouraging participants to participate as much as possible, and to not sit back and watch the seminar unfold before them.

So five days later, after the seminar was over, a bunch of us testified as to the positive impact the seminar had on their lives. But there were several -- perhaps even a majority -- who said what the seminar leader had predicted they'd say: "I wish I would have participated more. I wish I would have gotten more involved."

From time to time it is easy, I think, to sit back and be a spectator on this moving train that is life. But we miss out on a lot by sitting back and watching the dance go on all around us.

We need to get involved. We need to participate in our experience. And experience our participation.

So, to close this message of the day, I 'd like to close by a quote from William Arthur Ward, one of America's most gifted writers of inspirational sayings.

“Do more than belong: participate. Do more than care: help. Do more than believe: practice. Do more than be fair: be kind. Do more than forgive: forget. Do more than dream: work.”

And that's the message of the day.

Have a wonderful day.

PS: All of the other messages are posted here.

Monday, September 28, 2009

The Message of the Day Has a Home on the Web!

One of the things I've learned halfway into this Message of the Day project is that few people are motivated to pick up the phone and call-in. However, people will visit the website and listen to my rantings.

I suppose it makes sense. People are generally on the web, when they find out about the latest message. From there it's a simpler matter to click on the Message of the Day link and listen to the message.

I was originally going to create a separate Message of the Day mini-site, but drop.io makes creating a site rather superfluous. Although I suppose I could by doing so create a simple Google Adwords campaign and bring in a few dollars for my efforts. Maybe even put up a simple discussion board around the message topics.

But I do after all have to do other income-producing tasks. Seems in a way, like a pity. But that's the way it is.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Within Thirty Days

Just purchased the www.withinthirtydays.com domain. (Check back soon if nothing's there!) Have an idea for a 30 day project and need support? Twitter me @angelojohn.

30 {Insert Content Here!} in 30 days

Last week, I began my Message of the Day project. The idea is to create daily voice mails that can be accessed by calling 641-715-3800, Code 55310. Pretty much the first thing in the morning, I record an unscripted message and announce its existence to my social networks.

As I mentioned in a previous post, the idea for doing this came nearly a decade ago from a friend of mine, Rene Molenkamp. Rene is a life coach, consultant, and ex-Jesuit priest who in the early internet days had the idea of sending out a daily spiritually-oriented message to the members of our Diversity and Spirituality organization. It was just an idea we batted around, with Rene having more enthusiasm for it than me.

Ten years later, I decided to put the idea into practice, voice-mail style.

But this wasn't the first time I started a "thirty days" project. Maybe five years ago, I started the Thirty Poems and Thirty Days project on Ecademy.

The project was controversial on Ecademy. Nearly every day, I got dissed by some of the other posters, who either didn't like my poetry or didn't like my project. I did have a few defenders, but the haters tended to drown them out.

Anyway, I persisted and it was great fun. I'd carry my tape recorder around, come up with an idea for a poem, write it and post it. I then interacted with people who posted reactions to my poems.

But eventually life took over: there just came a point where I made other things more important than coming up with a poem. However, I completed 18 poems, about half of which are decent. And I still plan to complete the book I envisioned (but what will I call it: almost Thirty Poems in Thirty Days?).

Nothing in particular save intuition motivated me to begin this particular endurance test. I'm enjoying creating my Message of the Days now, but I've only just begun, with something like 23 voice mails to go. I really am determined to go the full 30 days this time.

What would help a lot is encouragement. I get some from my small coterie of regular listeners, but I could use some more, so please!

Call and listen to the message of the day today at 641-715-3800, Code 55310. After listening to the message, you can if you want leave me a message.

If you like it, tell your friends about it.

I'd love to hear what you think.

Friday, September 18, 2009

The Network of Light - A Vision

I expanded on this -- even read a poem! - on today's (Friday, September 8's) Message of the Day, which you can listen to by calling 641-751-3800, code 55310.

Here's the back story and an old article describing the vision of the Network of Light.

The Back Story

I was in New York City visiting an old and dear friend, the late Rachele Rhodes, who was in from California visiting her daughter and another friend. Rachele and I had Chinese at a restaurant overlooking Central Park and had such a good time together that we decided to extend our visit. So rather than put her on the train to her next destination of Philadelphia, I drove her halfway to the train station in Trenton.

During this drive, the idea for the Network of Light emerged.

You see Rachele had a particular challenge in the area of money. Although there was a time in her life when she was somewhat successful player in the human potential movement, she had developed a mysterious cancerous condition way before I met her in the acupuncture office of my friend Francis Mastrogiovanni in Osaka, Japan.

When I met her, I didn't know anything about her condition. I was just struck by what I perceived as her deep spirituality, and her ease at being in the world. Very quickly, we became fast friends. She was instrumental in helping me establish a Japanese satellite conference of the Boston-based Human Unity Conference, moving from Osaka to Tokyo to make this happen. She also was part of a network of people I knew who were associated with the Emissaries of Divine Light, a spiritual organization and the steward of that year's Human Unity Conference.

I later learned about Rachele's condition, for which she tried every conceivable form of treatment. She once told me she was the subject of a kind of panel, in which physicians gathered around a table in an auditorium and discussed her how best to treat her. She had consultations with some of the world's finest surgeons, had been to see the psychic surgeons of the Philippines, had done so many things in search of healing that she had compiled a thick file on conventional and alternative cancer therapies. She even counseled other individuals, including an ex-husband.

But neither her condition, nor her poverty seemed to trouble her much. I saw her as one who operated with a level of trust that was greater than anyone I'd ever met, (even though one of her two daughters basically saw her as a basket case, living on the kindness of friends).

But Rachele really wanted to work. She compiled a resume of the work she had done in the human potential movement, got counseling from career specialist, and kept inquiring. She'd get a little sick and then went at it again. It was heartbreaking having to watch her go through all this, but for her I guess it was just what she needed to be doing, nothing more or less.

This was pretty much were she was when I saw her in New York.

As we were driving to Trenton, suddenly the notion I'd been kicking around for some time hit me. It came to me -- this vision of the Network of Light -- out of left field.

You see, at the time I was establishing myself as a coach and consultant. As a one-man show, I had it in my mind to discuss with Rachele the possibility of hiring her to help with my business. After all, I knew that she had very competently performed that role for a number of individuals, some of whom were quite renown. Why not ask her to do the same for me?

But when I presented the idea to Rachele, her reaction surprised me. You know, she said, people always ask me to do things like this, like helping them get clients. She cited the times she did this, particularly for this nutritionist she knew. These helpers know I'm good at helping them -- in fact, it isn't unusual that it's me who ends up counseling the people I bring to the practitioner -- but being a helper like that just isn't what I want to do.

At that moment, I realized that I wasn't really looking for someone to work for me. I was looking for something more cooperative and collaborative, some form of relationship that involved mutual support. But not just a friendship, something deeper somehow. What I sensed was the possibility that a small group of people might establish themselves as a spiritually oriented mini support group. And that each members of THAT small group would also have membership in interconnected but separate small groups who were operating more or less the same way, but with a different intent. One might be a group that was focused on supporting their members entrepreneurial interests; another might be group studying medicine. All of these groups would support one another and comprise a network of mutually supporting groups.

I was then moved immediately to call my friend Jesse de la Rosa to put this plan into action. Jesse, Rachel and I became what we called a node of the Network of Light. We'd meet twice a month over the phone and share stories. It felt loving and supportive.

But our association didn't last particularly long, mostly because I -- the leader -- lost energy for it. My challenge had always been that I would often envision an exalted scenario of some sort or another, but then I would notice the holes in my pockets and realize that I needed money. That need would drive me away from that exalted scenario, and into doing temp work, leading the scenario to wither and die.

But I still persisted. I enlisted Martha Lasley of the consultancy, Leadership That Works, to the cause. Her father allowed us to use an office in a private Princeton club to do a presentation/workshop on the method. My friend Terry Lane designed a beautiful website on what we called NOL. You can probably find some images of it on the Wayback Machine, that site that preserves old websites.

I even noticed that there were others who were working on similar ideas around the world. One was a group in France that called itself the Network of Light, another was a couple of individuals involved in the legendary Findhorne Community.

But the idea proved to big for me to realize. So I let the ownerhsip of the www.networkoflight.com website lapse. I moved on. This was maybe 13 years ago.
To some extent I've abandoned this vision. I think in many respects I was trying to recreate artificially something that already existed.


Anyway, here's an FAQ I wrote back then.

What is the Network of Light?

"What is the Network of Light?

The Network of Light is our term for the web of interwoven relationships between inwardly directed, spiritually oriented individuals, groups, and organizations around the world. These entities are the organic cells or clusters of the larger Network of Light. They evolve, learn, and form relationships with other cells on the Network.

"What is the work of the Network of Light?"

The work of the Network of Light is to actively participate in the co-creation of the Divine Plan. “Members” of the Network of Light are Light Workers, the receptors who attune to the greater will and allow themselves to be used as instruments for the greater good.

"What is the vision for the organization, 'The Network of Light'?

The organization, the Network of Light, exists as a servant to the will of the actual Network of Light, which has always existed and will always exist. The organization’s role is to serve as facilitator, catalyst, and linkage agent. The organization aspires to make visible the nature and structure of the actual Network of Light and to serve the will of network members.

"What is the mission of the Network of Light organization? "

Our mission is threefold:
• To share new models and tools for helping individuals cope with the demands of the post-Millennium age
• To nurture, link and support inwardly-directed, spiritually-oriented individuals, small groups, and organizations around the world
• To support and nurture the creation of clusters or small groups of individuals who wish to align in the spirit of spiritual support.

"What is an example of a tool that might help individuals “cope with the demands of the post-Millennium age?”

One example is the cluster, or spiritual alignment group. On these pages are suggested strategies for forming your own clusters and using them as a means to enhance personal growth.

"I’d like to start a cluster. How do I get started?"

You can get started on your own by using the resources on this site. We hope eventually to have a cadre of mentors who will help anyone who wishes to start a spiritual alignment group.

"What do you mean by “inwardly-directed, spiritually-oriented individual, groups or organizations”?

We are drawing a distinction between those whose perspective is shaped and formed primarily by outward influences and those whose are directed more from within. An extreme example of an outwardly directed individual is one who professes blind obedience to a particular religious dogma. An extreme example of an inwardly directed individual is a mystic.

Conclusion: An imagination can be a dangerous thing.

Thoughts?

Thursday, September 17, 2009

My "Message of the Day" Project

OK, First a shameless plug.

  • Please call 641-715-3800, Code 55310 and listen to my Message of the Day
  • After you listen, leave me a message if you're so inclined.
  • Be sure to leave your phone number if you'd like me to call you back
  • Don't be shy, let me know what you think
OK, some history about how the "Message of the Day" project started.

The genesis was through a conversation whoa maybe 15 years ago with Rene Molenkamp back in our Diversity and Spirituality Network days. Endlessly inventive, Rene had the idea of sending out a spiritually-oriented message of the day via email.

About a decade later, I decided to give it a try, via voice message. I record a daily message, and a caller calls 641-715-3800, Code 55310 to hear it and maybe respond back. Today, I recorded my fifth message and have the intention of continuing this for at least 30 days.

Here's where I need your help. Please call 641-715-3800, Code 55310 and listen to the message. If you feel so moved, leave me a message. If you like the message, tag this note or share the number with your friends. I'd love to have this whole thing go viral and watch it spread. Being weak, I could use some encouragement to keep this going.

So please call the message, listen, and then leave your response. If you want, leave your phone number on your message if you'd like me to call you back. I'd also like some suggestions as to future topics.

Thanks for reading this and being in my life.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Not happy that Netanyahu will soon be prime minister of Israel.
Listening to all-day webinar, 95% of stuff I already know

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Its a Snow Day in Temp Nation. We workin' from home!

Monday, January 26, 2009

testing out ping.fm for simultaneous posting to my social networks

Saturday, August 30, 2008

My Town Immigration: A Few Thoughts

About eight years ago, there are next to no Mexicans in my town. Lately, Mexicans -- nearly all from Oaxaca -- are easily the biggest minority in town. In this 4,500+-population town there are Mexican restaurants, convenience stores and more. Just like in SoCal, there is a place where guys congregate in the morning, making themselves available for work. The local community health center has had to add bilingual workers, and local drug stories do a tidy business in phone cards that allow callers to call Mexico cheaply.

Suddenly, our small park evenings are filled with guys playing soccer or basketball. The local school now has kids coming in that speak little English, making it necessary for the school to hire translators. The local pantry, formerly place where area homeless people went to supplement their diet, now has a Mexican majority. Likewise the local thrift store. Likewise a lot of places.

I am to the left of Ron Dellums on most issues. However, what has been happening to my town has given me pause. The US, conservative on many areas, tolerates illegal immigration. It lets kids of illegals who are born here become full citizens. It allows kids to go to school and provides free healthcare. We are much more tolerant of illegal immigrants that pretty much other developed country, who for the most part ghettoize folk or treat them as less than human.

I think the best of all worlds would do away with borders entirely. People can create laws, but people will find away around them. Basically, people will find a way to get to places that allow them and their families access to a better life. People in developed countries get lazy and shun the kind of work their forefathers happily took on. They don't want to work 18 hours a day, and they don't for the most part want to work with their hands.

You don't have to go very far to see the passions this whole situation engenders. Go to any newspaper site or open discussion forum. People complain about Mexicans, Brazilians, whomever. They dream of an American that simply doesn't exist any more. Where minorities were minorities and acted like minorities. And now there's this guy called Obama. What is the world coming to?

There are no easy solutions. About the only thing Bush got right during his presidency was his "guest worker" proposal. McCain, the senator of a border state, saw the sense of it also. But the Republican base doesn't like it. There are people who think that the whole mess would be solved by forcibly exporting folk back to Mexico. But come on, that's not going to happen. Forget the morality of the thing. Can you imagine how much it would cost?

Me, I mostly get to practice my Spanish. The guys'll talk with me, but the women mostly just look straight ahead. They are focused on their kids, getting them into schools, getting them ready to exploit this new rich land.

My little town, now like a lot of towns across the USA.

It's a brown nation now, Amelia. Getting more so every day.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

The Reappearance of Rev. Wright: Black on Black Crime

The sudden rash of press conferences by Rev. Jeremiah Wright seemed to me like a classic example of one African American tearing another one down. Not a naive man, Wright must have known that his rantings could have the effect of crippling Obama's candidacy. But Wright didn't really care. His interest was in advancing his own misinformed agenda, not matter what the fallout.
Perhaps this is an isolated case, but I can't help but think of this as yet another example of one African American male cutting another African American male down to size. Wright, maybe unconsciously, is saying to Obama: "you aren't really all THAT. And let me remind you of who you really are."

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Hillary, the Inevitable

I love this comment about the probable Democratic nominee:

Maureen Dowd quotes, The New Republic's Leon Wieseltier,

“She’s never going to get out of our faces. ... She’s like some hellish housewife who has seen something that she really, really wants and won’t stop nagging you about it until finally you say, fine, take it, be the damn president, just leave me alone.”

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Building Citizen Journalism Microsites

A blast to be involve with building citizen journalism microsites such as this one. A good challenge to overcome my deep-seated laziness. A good way to bring to bear all that I have learned.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Not only "your brain on drugs", but your money too...

BBC NEWS | Europe | Drug use 'behind crumbling euros'


Users of the drug crystal methamphetamine may be causing euro banknotes to disintegrate, German police have told Der Spiegel magazine.

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Online Scam Resource

This site monitors online scams. Found out about this service while responding to an e-mail from someone who saw my resume on Monster.com. Decided to Google the name of the company where the e-mail was from. Well, well!! This is a very good resource.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Borderless World

As the above article on Africa-Europe migration suggests, illegal immigration is a worldwide concern. But the simple fact is that people will continue to try to go to where they perceive are better opportunities. Just as governments seek to keep outsiders out, China -- the world's most populous country -- tries to keep information out. But the advance of information technology makes this a battle that they will ultimately lose. People want to be free to go where they choose; information wants to be free to go where it chooses.

I can feel you resisting, but humor me for a moment and consider that a borderless world is an inevitability. Put your political viewpoint aside and engage this intellectual exercise: Say you are a global planner working under contract to the world's governments. You've been charged with the task of creating an orderly transition plan to a borderless world.

What will be your first and subsequent steps?
How might you minimize the expected chaos?
What might your borderless world eventually look like?
What, if any, are the upsides of a borderless world?

Friday, May 05, 2006

Spring: In From the Cold

Been a long time since I posted anything. A metaphor for the darkness I've seen.

In the darkness, one forgets that light exists.

When the dawn appears, warmth and memory returns.

Along with questions:

What strategies might I use to keep the darkness away?

How can I productively live blending light and shadow?

Monday, October 24, 2005

"Worst President in History" -- Here's what a guy who worked for Bush now says...

How Scary Is This? - New York Times: "Lawrence Wilkerson, a retired Army colonel who served as chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell, addressed the administration's arrogance and ineptitude in a talk last week that was astonishingly candid by Washington standards.

'We have courted disaster in Iraq, in North Korea, in Iran,' said Mr. Wilkerson. 'Generally, with regard to domestic crises like Katrina, Rita ... we haven't done very well on anything like that in a long time. And if something comes along that is truly serious, something like a nuclear weapon going off in a major American city, or something like a major pandemic, you are going to see the ineptitude of this government in a way that will take you back to the Declaration of Independence.'"

Comments?

Saturday, October 08, 2005

Jello Gets Hit with the Smartphone Bug

Well, I did it. I went and got myself a Samsung i730 Smartphone. My Palm semi-crashed and I used that excuse to go to the Verizon store. Despite my relatively impoverished state, I was tired of carrying around a pda and a phone and wanted a portable device that did everything. I settled on the Samsung, because it DOES everything. I've spent much of the weekend studying it plus accessorizing it. Perhaps I'll soon get down to doing some "actual work."

Anyway, I found this link on free phone software you might find interest...Free is sometimes good and sometimes not..."Buyer" beware.



"Free mobile software websites

By Wendong on Palm OS

1. GetJar

Via vehera.symbiandevelopersjournal.com.

GetJar.com is a good site to get free Java, Symbian, Palm or Pocket PC Softwares. And it provides device-specific RSS feeds, so you can monitor free software based on your phone model.

2. phonefreeware.com

J2ME Freeware
S60 Freeware
UIQ Freeware

3. midlet.org

This website is around for a long time.

4. midlet-review.com

It lists some free games

5. palmopensource.com

A great resource site for Palm OS. But it also has a list of open source projects for Pocket PC.

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

"Everybody's a Writer" Dept

"We've heard that a million monkeys at a million keyboards could produce the complete works of Shakespeare; now, thanks to the Internet, we know that is not true.
- Robert Wilensky"

Sunday, September 18, 2005

The Big Dog -- Bill Clinton -- Speaks Out on Bush

"WASHINGTON (AFP) - Former US president
Bill Clinton sharply criticised George W. Bush for the
Iraq War and the handling of Hurricane Katrina, and voiced alarm at the swelling US budget deficit.

Breaking with tradition under which US presidents mute criticisms of their successors, Clinton said the Bush administration had decided to invade Iraq 'virtually alone and before UN inspections were completed, with no real urgency, no evidence that there were weapons of mass destruction.'"

Comment: We need some Democrats to stand up and tell the truth. Complicit with the ill-advised Afghanistan and Iraq adventures, some Democrats are finally loosening their tongues. The Katrina debacle is the reason.

I ony hope someone on the aspirant Presidential scene appears who will stand up and tell the truth, not play polling games.

Saturday, September 17, 2005

Reading is Overrated: Part Two

Many people thought I was crazy to voice the sentiments expressed in my article, Writing is Overrated. I feel a little vindicated to find that there is at least one other person -- this one with a pedigree!-- who shares the same views.

elearningpost blog...

"The Power of Conversation

Paul Hartzog following up on a statement made by Dr. Tom Malloy of the University of Utah — “I don’t read anymore; I just talk to people who have.”

“When two people have a conversation, they act as proxies for the many ideas in their heads which are drawn from the many things they have read. In effect, a conversation is a many-to-many interaction that is both mediated and moderated by the participants. The individuals catalog, sort, tag, and filter ideas as they are drawn into the shared space of the conversation.”">elearningpost

Good News from From William Gibson's Blob

On the writer's blog 7/31/05

"I am. I am writing. Just as some of you have guessed.

Never the most linear of processes, for yours truly, but something is starting to rise, in the spectral ringing hangar of the Novel Department. Looks like the Spruce Goose but with more wings. Why is there a tail at either end? My friends, we can only wait and see. No smoking here, hardhat at all times, steel-toed brogues, lumpy demob suit, loose lips sinking ships..."

When people ask Tom Waits where he's been 'til recently, he tells 'em "stuck in traffic". And, boy, do I ever know what he means. But then again it's all part of the pro-cess.

Pass me that caulking-gun, Eugene, I just spotted a nasty recess in the flank of our synopsis here..." -- William Gibson<

Friday, September 09, 2005

"The World Loves George Bush" Dept.

BERLIN, Germany (Reuters) -- A conservative German minister in a southern state has caused uproar by saying U.S. President George W. Bush should be "shot down" for his handling of the crisis in hurricane-struck New Orleans.

Andreas Renner, Social Minister in Germany's southern state of Baden-Wuertemberg, clarified later that he had only meant Bush should be downed politically.

Wednesday, August 31, 2005

Bush's Real Agenda

Hertzberg, telling the truth, writing in the New Yorker...

"the Bush Administration’s top priority, not excluding fighting terrorism: the use of the tax code to transfer wealth to the rich and, especially, the superrich."

Sunday, June 19, 2005

Back in the Saddle Again

Haven't blogged in some time, but am now in the mood. The degree to which I am social is positively correlated with my self-esteem. So I feel like talking again after a long time. A semi-dark time.

Monday, March 07, 2005

Making Torture Acceptable

Yesterday's New York Times reported that the CIA has been exporting "terrorists" to places that do not have explicit anti-torture laws. The newspaper documented several instances in which suspects had been transported overseas and subsequently tortured by US allies.

At the same time, Fox "24" television series routinely shows terrorism suspects being tortured by the US anti-terrorism good guys. As the practice seeps into the popular lore, we can perhaps assume that such acts are now acceptable in our so-called civilized society.

When we condemn others who resort to other forms of depravity, we now have no real moral highground to stand on. Other acts of barbarism, such as beheading hostages, differ only in manner of degree. Our condemnation of these acts of barbarism therefore amounts to little more than "the pot calling the kettle black."

Back to my homepage...

Tuesday, February 22, 2005

Moacir Santos

Just discovered a two-CD set, Ouro Negro by Brazilian composer Moacir Santos. Can't get the music out of my head. Mature, sophisticated, Brazilian soundtrack jazz.

Thursday, January 27, 2005

Marsalis and the death of American jazz innovation

One wonders if anyone listens to jazz anymore, save old people with lp collections and overeducated New Yorkers. One of the reasons is the ubertraditionalist, Wynthon Marsalis, and his stranglehold on innovation in jazz. Marsalis' position with the Lincoln Center gives him imprimatur status -- the person who gives the stamp of legitimacy on what gets noticed and what gets played. Largely because of him, it can be argued that the American music has stagnated into a swamp of old school traditionalism and experimentalism has moved offshore to places like Paris and Stockholm. This piece contrasts Marsalis' traditionalist approach with one more concerned with being up-to-date that playing politically correct, "in-the-tradition," stale music.

village voice > music > Old School by Francis Davis

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Conspiracies

Spent 4 rather pointless hours watching 24, Fox's weekly winter drama and my guilty pleasure. Now with the "war on terror" commonplace received wisdom, one wonders how many of these conspiracy-type yarns will grace the small screen. Powers would be would have you believe that their are terrorists under every rug.

Sunday, December 05, 2004

War on Terror, my a...!

Glad to see my point of view mirrored in today's New York Times:

"The United States has a strategic problem: its war on terror, unlike its long fight against Communism, is not universally seen as the pivotal global struggle of the age...these continents are more or less united in a critical view of an American power routinely described as hegemonic and intent on using the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to impose what Candido Mendes, a Brazilian political analyst, called "a civilization of fear."

Indeed...

Thursday, November 11, 2004

Reading is Overrated

First, a disclaimer: I am a very bookish individual. Like I imagine is the case with you, I have hundreds and hundreds of books. I delight in purchasing new and used books, particularly if they are reference books or if I can buy them exceptually cheaply.

Yet, I still think that reading is overrated. Here's why:

1 - Reading is usually NOT the most efficient means of accessing information. The best way is to talk to someone who has the information and in so doing, interacting with the data. Do you REALLY need to read that 500-word tome to find out what you need to know about, say, herbal medicine? Wouldn't it be more efficient to ask someone who is an authority on the subject? That way you might find precisely what you need to know and even question the source for clarity.

Of course, it might be useful to read a textbook if you want to master a subject. But even in this case, it is arguably more efficient to interact with subject matter experts.

2 - We overrely on reading to access "truth" or other forms of information. I believe it is literally true that all the answers we need can be found by going within. But we tend in this information age not to trust nor nurture our inner senses. In addition, our modern tendency is to buttress what we think we know by attributing it to some other so-called expert, e.g. "well, so and so said..." My belief is that recognizing the validity of the reading-accessed information is in actual fact a form of recognizing what we know to be true already.

If this is true for more abstract forms of information (e.g. "truth") it is likely also true for technical forms of information. I am not a Da Vinci scholar, but perhaps he utilized his intuition -- his inner sensing -- to discover his many technical contributions, many of which he did not find time to execute.

I don't mean to suggest here the philistinish view that reading is an inherently useless activity. Reading helps orient us, helps us discover -- in a sense -- what we know is true already.

Finally, gentle reader, I've hope you've enjoyed reading this!

Comments?

Sunday, November 07, 2004

Task and Process

My current experience in the Game of Games confirms what I’d forgotten. There are poles: task and process. When accomplishment of task is impeded, issues of process are not being addressed. This is particularly true in groups, which often move to quickly to task while ignoring issues of process. To facilitate groups demands process skills, but process skills should always be at service to task.

>Click here to return to my homepage…

Friday, November 05, 2004

Four More Years

Well, democracy is great when your guy wins. Hard not to be glum about yesterday’s outcome. I take comfort from what one of my teachers told us when I and other westerners were struggling some years ago with life in a Japanese dojo. “No matter what the situation, we have to make friends, enjoy, do the best we can.” Four more years…

Tuesday, November 02, 2004

Election Day

Well, I have NEVER been so invested in an election. A Kerry victory today would be nothing less than a victory of light. Reverse, if Bush wins


Hung Over

In the afterglow of my “Afternoon of Poetry and Storytelling” with Ibou Ndoye, I am metaphorically a bit hung over. The reading was great fun – if a little undersubscribed. Yet my 30 days poetry collection remains about a third finished, work is sparse and I am back to the regular irregular. Just downloaded a tape of me pitching the Game of Games on a Rochester, NY radio station. A welcome antidote to a day of otherwise near-drudgery.


Monday, October 25, 2004

Playing the Deeper Game

I'm in the first week of facilitating the Game of Games developmental workshop. My thinking seems to be changing. I realize that what I've been seeking -- here and elsewhere -- are mentees, not mere licensees. I wish nothing less than to father a lineage, to pass down in that way what I've learned. To walk this path I need courage, an unwavering commitment to move against the grain. I search within to find strength to move through uncharted territory: warrior's way. It is time to junk a lot of stuff, mostly tired, conventional poses. It is time to break out of the box I've put myself in. It is time to play the deeper game.

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

"Hey, we're a star!"


star
Originally uploaded by Angelojohn.

This morning I was interviewed about the Game of Games by Stephen Jacobs, Professor of Information Technology at Rochester Institute of Technology and host of a show called What the Tech. Been a while since I'd done any voice PR so I was a bit rusty. My five minutes of airwaves exposure kicked in the memory of previous days and tricks I used to get on radio or TV. It is kind of a lifestyle and, to work, needs to be part of a regular routine. What it involves is endlessly recycling clips, audio tapes, video tapes -- any PR about you. Polishing these off and sending targeted cover letter(s). Leveraging every media appearance or mention into other, better media appearances or mentions. Repeating this endlessly.

In the internet, niche-market age, there are more outlets than ever before. With attention spans contracting in response to ever-expanding streams of information (and advertising), it is difficult to be successful without knowing how to play this game. But the rules fortunately areen't that difficult to master. It's more about persistence and confidence than anything else.

Of course, I can hear you smirking now: "Hey, if you're so smart, why aren't you rich?!"


Click here to go back to my homepage.


Sunday, October 10, 2004

New Tools and Services

The internet, it seems, breeds new tools each day.

Current favorites:

Onfolio: I find this “content management” tool – enabling one to easily collect references in the form of links or whole pages – indispensable (translation: something I actually paid for). It makes collecting and publishing material for e-zines easy.

21Publish: A new tool, introduced to me by Fernanda Iberra, that enables group or community blogging. We will use this as the glue that binds gamers playing The Game of Games.


Aweber: There is a bit of a learning curve here, but this for me is the best e-zine service out there. It lets one craft autoresponders, which will be a necessary and central part of my efforts to create solo-games for coaching clients.

Saturday, October 09, 2004

"affirmation"


open door
Originally uploaded by Angelojohn.

here
stumble forward
another try

push
brittle
bones
one more
time
up
crooked
streets:

hard-hearted
new york

here
cold
wind
slaps
hard
across your
face

water
falls
down
purifies
night
winter
once again
rain

step around
old
ruins
failed art
memory


step around
be
nimble
hurry
pick up
your pace


behind you
litter

all the times
you screwed up
picked yourself up
and walked

each time
sudden
dawn
blank
canvas
upon which
to paint

things
fall
apart
shatter
come back
together

life finds
a way
to open
a door

*******

click here to go back to my homepage...


Friday, October 08, 2004

Reflection on the intro Game of Games

Ran a free, Emilio De Lia-ess, intro Game of Games last night. Six people all told. Worked real well, although people bitched about it taking more time than they anticipated, lack of structure and a few other things. Despite all this, all got a lot our of it. E-mails continued to go back and forth after the thing was over. Even the biggest complainer (being constructive, actually) claimed, "I really got a lot out of it." Know we are on to something. However, Emilio' sense of humor is missed. I think I'm a pretty funny guy, but he has a lighter touch in these circumstances than I.

Cllck here to go back to my home page.

"Affirmation"

Ok, here's a working draft of the 20th poem in the Thirtydays series. BK, my best critic, tells me the poems he enjoys most are the ones mined from real life, containing real life details. He doesn't much care for these, which he likely views as an exercise in craft. He may be right. Anyway, it is quite a challenge to craft a paired down, word a line poem like this. Similiar, I suppose to hiaku. The skill comes in eliminating, paring the thing down to its raw essence. The goal is to say just enough, not a word more. This one likely needs some pruning, but here it is anway:

“affirmation”

here

stumble forward

another try

push

brittle

bones

one more

time

up

crooked

streets:

hard-hearted

new york

here

cold

wind

slaps

hard

across your

face

water

falls

down

purifies

night

winter

once again

rain

step around

old

ruins

failed art

memory

step around

be

nimble

hurry

pick up

your pace

behind you

litter

all the times

you screwed up

picked yourself up

and walked

each time

sudden

dawn

blank

canvas

upon which

to paint

things

fall

apart

shatter

come back

together

life finds

a way

to open

a door


Thursday, October 07, 2004

Poetry, Again

Well, I started writing for the 30 days series again. I am reluctant to public it, need to get on a bit of a roll again. Dazzled by the Dodge Poetry Festival. Found myself comparing myself to others (sometimes favorably), and was entralled with the notion of dusting off my indifferent reputation in this area. In the meantime, I ready for my reading on 10/30 and the first developmental workshop of The Game of Games. If only I could make a bit of money from all this creativity...

Click here to go back to my homepage.

Thursday, September 16, 2004

"I Cheated"

All day in front of the computer, doing necessary nitpicky things to finetune the promotion of the Game of Games. This also is the third day without a poem. In need of sun, a break, something... I decided to cheat and recycle an old poem, Hymn for Diversity and Spirituality. Be amazing if anyone really noticed it. Anyhow, I am looking forward to getting back to writing new stuff, although the rest takes some of the edge off. Well, maybe I need some of the edge taken off...

Click here to return to my homepage.

Wednesday, September 08, 2004

Tech Blues

Most of the challenge of the thirtypoems project is technical. I spend all too much time screwing around with the website, taking out FP extensions etc. Makes me wonder about life in general. If I were free not to bother with technical things, I would likey be more creative. So, the trick is to offload these things and concentrate on what one does naturally. Of course, it certainly helps to have money to pull this off.

I am by my count around three days behind, counting the break I am taking today. I'm liking what I am writing, which is a good sign...

Click here to go back to my homepage...

Tuesday, August 24, 2004

Macros: Thirty Days Project

More than a creative challenge, the 30 days project now presents technical challenges. Because of my low tech, I first create, then publish on Ecademy, then cut and paste here. I am sufficiently new to this that I don't have the tech down to do this easily. The simplest thing to do is to abandoned the Thirty Days blog and just keep this blog. More elegent thing to do is to figure out a way to use the macro software I downloaded, although I am not convinced this will do the trick. I also have to start writing these poems earlier. As it is, I come down to the wire. Posted about 10 minutes before midnight tonight, for example.

Anyway, about the macros. I have thought for some time that a good sci fi story would be about a guy in the near future who makes macros for a living, macros that do very complex things. After a while, he has too many macros and at the same time wants a new challenge. So he creates a macro that controls all the macros. Then, I Robot-like, the macros take over.
Ah, this sort of thing's been done!

Sunday, August 22, 2004

The third day of thirty days

In the third day of the "thirty days" project, I begin to settle into a kind of rhythm. I begin contemplating subjects in the early afternoon, then start to write in the early evening, finishing usually about an hour and a half before midnight. Most of the poems so far are akin to hymns, very little secular about them. Be interesting to see how this evolves.

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Bipolar Moon

Late night, nearly morning. The rythem of the 30Days/30Poems has taken over my soul. Up late, making connectings via Ecademy. Registering 30 Dayswebsite: the usual big plans. So many times, the big plans have crashed down. Down with the night face up on the bipolar moon. Breathe in, breathe out. Breathe in the pain of the crash, then the pain of all the people who have crashed across time. Breathe the healing sunlit honey-colored rain. Breathe in, breathe out.

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Saturday, August 21, 2004

ThirtyPoemsinThirtyDays

So, I've begun this project -- creating 30 Poems in Thirty Days.
Would be good to start a concurrent project -- one part of my office cleaned on 30 days.
What is this thing about goals and setting targets? I wonder if this is a particularly contemporary, Western, particularly American thing to do. When I asked friends of a Buddhist master I knew of the master's daily schedule, they replied that he "lived the dharma." Meaning, he had no "schedule," as such, but instead responded to what was put before him.

Click here to go back to my homepage...