A Favorite Number, and the Quiet Work of Courage Today didn’t start smoothly. It was chaotic in the way mornings with kids often are — gear everywhere, emotions running high, and a troop of girl scouts carrying their own mix
The quote hits with the simplicity of a road sign: patience when you have nothing, attitude when you have everything. Two clean poles. Two handles to grab when life swings wide. Refelections based on a LI quote from EP But
Reframing Identity and Work-Life Balance This post on linkedin Click here Took me to a rabbit hole I had to acknowledge and parse through! The first slide and the question on it hit me wrong, so I paused before
This is similar to Mark Manson’s works for me – the titles weren’t for me – but the content and the nuance and the complex authenticity within – WAS and IS! I spent an hour listening to Jan Frodeno talk
Responding to a thought on Facebook from a friend Some days it feels as if the whole structure would be better off collapsing under its own weight, because the uncertainty we fear isn’t approaching — it’s already here. I don’t
A rear view mirror moment guding future me – which is me now! From the great Roman emperor commonly known as the last of the 5 good emperors, Marcus Aurelius. He journaled and I… Posted by Shane Livingston on Sunday, February
Scott Galloway – His Book “Notes on Being a Man” A lot of framing and stats are shared – information access here from SG and his perspectives as an academic scholar I don’t have a lot of time to put
Volva, The Norse Witch or Seeress https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=122222320232107167&set=a.122152069472107167 – Sourced from hex and shadow chronicles – https://www.instagram.com/Hexandshadowchronicles A Völva (Old Norse for “staff-carrier” or “wand-carrier”) was a highly respected seeress, shaman, and practitioner of seiðr (magic) in Norse mythology and Viking Age society. These
France 2024 – Olympics – Irony – Perception Every now and then, a simple question opens a door you didn’t expect. Someone asks, “Who painted the Last Supper?” and instead of just answering Leonardo da Vinci, you find yourself spiraling









