Principals | Ray Dalio
Principals | Ray Dalio
Sep 29, 2017 8:51:31 PM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Creativity & Favorites
The meaning of life is to find your gift, the purpose of life is to give it away
The Beach Boys | Long Promised Road
Sep 29, 2017 8:33:03 PM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Creativity & Favorites
Favorite Lyric:
October Cartoon
Sep 29, 2017 8:17:43 PM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Creativity & Favorites
Mistakes are the portals of discovery.
The Flaming Lips
Aug 31, 2017 1:03:12 PM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Creativity & Favorites
Favorite Lyric:
September Cartoon
Aug 31, 2017 11:56:40 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Communication & Relationships, Creativity & Favorites
Tell Me How It Ends | Valeria Luiselli
Aug 31, 2017 10:10:18 AM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Creativity & Favorites
Editor’s Note: I have strong feelings about immigration though I don’t speak much about it. That’s why I read this book; I want to know more before I speak with others. Luiselli is a young Mexican/South African immigrant to the USA. Her time as a volunteer translator in NYC’s immigration courts adds to her own experience and that of her husband, two children and niece who also went through the process. This brief and moving “essay in 40 questions” taught me a lot about what children, specifically from central America go through to get here and then stay. Did you know “La Beastia” is how most undocumented immigrants get here? It’s the freight trains that children climb on and ride through Mexico to reach our borders. Did you know they seek to be arrested rather than flee from Border Police? Right, me neither. The best part of “Tell Me How It Ends” is that it is fact-based yet moving without being a screeching rage against the machine. It’s instead a documentation of the reality of our broken system.
The Autobiography of Mark Twain – original and unabridged; Mark Twain
Jul 31, 2017 3:00:37 PM / by Tim McCarthy posted in Creativity & Favorites
Editor’s note: That Samuel Clemens was a genius writer and humorist is without a doubt. That he was also cantankerous, narcistic and opinionated is proven more clearly than ever in this his own authorized and self-written biography. I now understand why he waited 100 years from his death (published in 2010) to release these notes (and I mean stream of conscious notes – rather blog-like, actually) since few are left unjudged, including himself. But the things he experienced and the times he lived in took me to a far-away place. And watching for it, as I knew to do, his hyperbolic humor often overtook me, as in my favorite excerpt below.
Favorite lyric: