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Posts Tagged ‘#365Ways’

Sick Day

Sick today, the annoying kind where your brain doesn’t work. At all.

I’ll be on the couch with a book.

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It’s a good day when I can promote a friend’s fiction, and today is a good day!

Here’s the latest flash fiction from the always terrific Arthur H. Manners in the excellent Nature: Futures (if you can’t see the full text, the easiest way to get access is to log in with a Google account):

A troubleshooting guide to your flat-pack planet

Got a problem? The Sandbox Corporation makes every effort to provide a seamless world-building experience, but occasionally issues occur. Please see our comprehensive troubleshooting guide, with more than 1015 scenarios covered.

Confused? Contact a customer service representative today*. Or, better yet, see below for our curated FAQ of common issues.

It’s funny because it’s (going to be) true;)

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Another entertaining project from Neal.fun:

Size of Life

(Although the image of a person next to that Titanoboa is more than a little scary. At least we could have taken that angry turkey Velociraptor!)

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You don’t have to be miserable or suffer to create art; but you do have to be honest, and honesty is terrifying.

— Elizabeth Bear

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It’s a new year and a new opportunity to take a breath, reassess, and target new (or old!) goals. That doesn’t mean you have to join a gym or swear off every. single. one. of your favorite guilty pleasures or anything like that. That approach tends not to be sustainable.

(You may remember that I don’t really do resolutions, but I do like to take advantage of the January “fresh start effect” to reset… and to forgive myself when things don’t always go to plan🙂

That said, January is a good time to remember what you like, what you’d like to do, and to do more to get there.

If you’ve been working but feel you’re not making as much progress as you want, this piece might be useful:

How to practice effectively…for just about anything

This video focuses on physical tasks, but writing and many other tasks are also mind-body processes. And the idea of focused, targeted repetition with a concrete result in mind? 

That’s the kind of goal I can get behind. 

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“After that, work and hope. But never hope more than you work.”

― Beryl Markham

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“Art is not a mirror held up to reality but a hammer with which to shape it.”

― Bertolt Brecht

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“You must find the place inside yourself where nothing is impossible.”

― Deepak Chopra

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Welcome to a new year. Past me thought I might need a little encouragement as we step into the unknown. Here’s the letter I wrote myself in case you do too:

Dear FutureMe,

You’ve got this.

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One Good Thing

This has been a year for the history books, and a lot of it has been bad. 

But not all of it. 

A recent article got me thinking about the importance of focusing on the good things. In this case, the author forgot his wallet on a train in England and despaired of getting it back.

Need cheering up after a terrible year? I may have just the story you’re looking for

Spoiler alert: A considerate person found it and returned it to him.

Good things happen. Strangers help strangers, neighbors come through in emergencies, people work together to support good causes, and much more.

I try to focus here on the more positive dimensions of life, but it can be hard to do when so much of the world is looking the other direction. Social and other media do their best to highlight the dramatic, the car crashes, the bad news. I get it, it sells, and humanity is programmed to pay attention to problems so we can avoid them. 

But I’m certainly not alone in thinking that we’ve gone too far in that direction. 

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A lot of positive things have happened this year, in the worlds of science, of technology, of society, and more. Need a source of happier news? I may have promoted this site before but I’m going to do it again, because David Byrne and his mission deserve it.

Reasons to be Cheerful

We tell stories that reveal that there are, in fact, a surprising number of reasons to feel cheerful…. Reasons to be Cheerful was founded by artist and musician David Byrne, who believes in the power of approaching the world with curiosity—in art, in music, in collaboration and in life….Through stories of hope, rooted in evidence, Reasons to be Cheerful aims to inspire us all to be curious about how the world can be better, and to ask ourselves how we can be part of that change.

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In some ways, it’s also been a challenging year personally, but alongside the difficult we’ve also had the encouraging.

Before I go to bed I try to ask myself, “What was good today?” Even on the worst days there’s at least one good thing.

Friends (multiple!) put out some terrific new stories. Saving baby squirrels. Donating to help our community. Hiking in the woods. Ice cream after. 

Those are just a few of my good things. What are yours?

“Find the good. It’s all around you. Showcase it and you’ll start believing in it.”

— Jesse Owens

Happy New Year!

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