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  1. When do you stop?

    I’m away at a parkour event this weekend, lots of walking and playing and jumping. One session was a discussion of fear, and of consequences. And one particular question for discussion was, “When do you stop?” People raised lots of ideas—good ideas, wise ideas… lots of things I was in agreement about.

    But I was also thinking, “Wait. Why do I have to decide that?”

    I know I’ve certainly faced decisions about stopping. Work, play, relationships, sports, parkour practices (ask me about the time I climbed across a train station outside of Paris,) … yes, deciding if, when and why to stop is an obvious question.

    If I think about two paths—perhaps diverging in the woods, if you like that imagery—an hour’s hike along the path of one choice, I might decide I’m going the wrong way. There’s one of those when-to-stop decisions. But the mistake was an hour before, where the paths diverged.

    This business venture: what if I had truly been committed, and had planned clearly the way we’d know when to stop? The question is gone. This relationship: could it be planned, or could two people be so honest, that the question doesn’t appear? This parkour jump, at the end of an exhausting day of training: why am I standing here, right now? If I’d planned better, could I have gotten all the same benefit, but a few minutes before right-now, I’d have moved to something else?

    Might it be possible to still have challenge, commitment, growth, love, spontaneity, and humor… without ever having to decide, “should I stop this now?”

    ɕ

    #Parkour #PracticingReflection
  2. Sometimes I look stuff up

    Have you seen this quote?

    There is a time for many words, and there is also a time for sleep.

    ~ Homer

    Honestly, that’s pretty sharp! There’s good wisdom about a few things packed in there: Picking your battles, perhaps; Knowing the seasons of things, the ages of Man and so forth; Setting managable goals or not tackling more than you can do in a day. That Homer guy with the wisdom!

    Until you look it up, and it turns out to be just a throwaway phrase in a transition. Here, read the full paragraphs, XI.35-6 from the Oddyssey:

    And Alcinous answered him, saying: ‘Odysseus, in no wise do we deem thee, we that look on thee, to be a knave or a cheat, even as the dark earth rears many such broadcast, fashioning lies whence none can even see his way therein. But beauty crowns thy words, and wisdom is within thee; and thy tale, as when a minstrel sings, thou hast told with skill, the weary woes of all the Argives and of thine own self. But come, declare me this and plainly tell it all. Didst thou see any of thy godlike company who went up at the same time with thee to Ilios and there met their doom? Behold, the night is of great length, unspeakable, and the time for sleep in the hall is not yet; tell me therefore of those wondrous deeds. I could abide even till the bright dawn, so long as thou couldst endure to rehearse me these woes of thine in the hall.’ (35)

    And Odysseus of many counsels answered him, saying: ‘My lord Alcinous, most notable of all the people, there is a time for many words and there is a time for sleep. But if thou art eager still to listen, I would not for my part grudge to tell thee of other things more pitiful still, even the woes of my comrades, those that perished afterward, for they had escaped with their lives from the dread warcry of the Trojans, but perished in returning by the will of an evil woman. (36)

    ~ Homer

    It’s basically, “sure bro’, if you’re up for it, I’m game to stay up and tell you the story of . . .”

    Question: Is the quote at the top better, or worse now that you know what Homer actually wrote? (Yes, fine, he was actually writing in ancient Greek, but my point stands.)

    It’s a cliché that our favorite quotes say more about us, then they do about who we’re quoting. (Left unconsidered is what it says about me if I collect thousands of quotes.) But that cliché is the entire point of being intentionally reflective: I’m searching out new things, (quotes in this discussion,) and I’m thinking about what they might mean; What the original author or speaker might have meant; How that meaning might change over time from original source to my time, and how it might change for me during my life.

    See? There is a time for many words, and a time for sleep!

    ɕ

    #Homer #PracticingReflection #Quotes
  3. Embracing the obstacles

    External things are not the problem. It’s your assessment of them. Which you can erase right now. If the problem is something in your own character, who’s stopping you from setting your mind straight? And if it’s that you’re not doing something you think you should be, why not just do it? —But here are insuperable obstacles. Then it’s not a problem. The cause of your inaction lies outside you. —But how can I go on living with that undone? Then depart, with a good conscience, as if you’d done it, embracing the obstacles too.

    ~ Marcus Aurelius, 8.47

    slip:4a503.

    slip:4b62.

    #MarcusAurelius #PracticingReflection #Quotes #SelfImprovement
  4. Our journey of small steps

    Meditation is intermittent fasting for the mind. Too much sugar leads to a heavy body, and too many distractions lead to a heavy mind. Time spent undistracted and alone, in self-examination, journaling, meditation, resolves the unresolved and takes us from mentally fat to fit.

    ~ Naval Ravikant

    Today’s message is not really a prompt like the previous 60. Alas, we’ve reached the terminus of our journey of small steps practicing reflection.

    Thank you for being awesome!

    I created this series by taking my personal collection of self-reflection prompts and forming them into these blog posts. Next, I wrote the three getting-started posts to ease you into the daily routine. Finally, I came up with a theme for each of the 8 weeks and wrote short additions that appeared below the main sequence of prompts. These additions carry the through-line of teaching self-reflection. (…or at least, I hope they did.)

    Here are all the additional parts in one place:

    Creating space

    Remember: 2 minutes. Pause life. Read. Think. Resume life.

    Many of the prompts I’m sharing have been chosen from the generous gifts given me by others. When I’m explicitly quoting, they are attributed (as above.)

    2 minutes: Pause life. Read. Think. Resume life.

    Perhaps you’ve already begun to look forward to your two minutes of reflection?

    2 minutes: Pause life. Read. Think. Resume life.

    Have you considered adding some physical ritual to your reflection? Perhaps taking three deep, slow breaths before the reading, or … If you decide to try something, don’t go crazy; just something very small and easy. Or not. That’s fine too.

    2 minutes: Pause life. Read. Think. Resume life.

    Habit

    Everything you do is initiated by triggers. “X” happens to me, so then I do “Y.” Creating a new habit is difficult because we don’t realize we need to attach it to a trigger.

    Trigger. New habit.

    You’re using the arrival of this email as your trigger. Do you recall that I mentioned on day one that I was introducing you to being reflective upon being prompted?

    Trigger. New habit.

    Today’s a good day to look closely at the trigger you’re experiencing. There are always ways you can change a trigger. Tinker—if not for real, then at least as a thought experiment—with changing the daily trigger for this journey.

    Trigger. New habit.

    One day, these triggers from me will end. To what trigger under your control could you attach this nascent habit of self-reflection?

    Reflection

    Reflection is about self-focus. Each day you’re practicing holding up a mirror. Specifically, you’re observing your thoughts, in response to a prompt.

    It’s not necessary to move beyond simply observing our thoughts. Simply practicing _observing_ your thoughts will make you more aware of your thoughts.

    Our practice of reflection is an explicitly inward-facing activity. We’re repeatedly, intentionally being aware.

    Reflection. Inward-facing. Intentional awareness of our own thoughts.

    A good mirror shows an accurate image. A fun-house mirror shows a distorted image. How is your reflection on your own thoughts?

    Having now spent at least 46 minutes in self-reflection and practicing awareness of your own thoughts— …any change in daily lived life? …any change in your relationships? No right answers, simply awareness.

    Are you surprised by your thoughts’, and your mind’s, complexity? Are you amazed? Are you empowered?

    Awareness

    We’ve been developing our awareness via self-reflection. What happens if we turn our awareness outward?

    Were there any moments yesterday when you suddenly—it can be quite jarring the first few times—became aware that you were _aware_ of your own thoughts?

    You are using a trigger to practice reflection. Is there anything in your day that resembles the reflection trigger? Opportunities where you could reflect spontaneously?

    We’re about halfway. Poke your head out of your private journey of practicing reflection and quietly take some guesses about how reflective are the people around you. No judging; recall day one’s message about self-improvement not being zero-sum.

    If you encountered even one moment yesterday where you realized someone else could be more reflective: Visualize that moment you experienced… and imagine slowly raising a hand mirror into that perspective—so you see your own reflection appear on top of that person.

    Are there moments in your day when you realize you are aware that you are observing something outside yourself? If so— If you are aware you are observing, can you use that as a trigger to look inward and reflect on your own thinking?

    Awareness of our inward experience, and our outward experience, is the same. It’s the same awareness. These past few days, we’ve taken our awareness on a brief field trip outside ourselves. For the rest of our little journey here, we’ll remain looking inward.

    Journaling

    How good is your memory? What’s the first food you had after waking eleven days ago? Perhaps, your memory isn’t _that_ good. How about something you are currently interested in: 11 days ago, did you have any insights from your morning reflection?

    Everything about this journey is, of course, optional. But I want you to find paper and pencil/pen. Don’t over-think that, and don’t try to use something digital. Grab any paper and any pen, and have them handy for tomorrow’s reflection.

    Remember that paper? Write the first thought that comes to mind, when I say, write the first thought that comes to mind. You’re done.

    Today, write the first and second thought. It really, truly, does not matter what the thoughts are. Please try writing them down. Put the paper away until tomorrow.

    I’m not even asking that look back at what you’ve written. Simply write a couple thoughts, (or more than a couple, if you wish.)

    And write _several_ thoughts down today…

    Now look back through your week of notes. Maybe write a few notes about your observations of your notes? Maybe, you want to look more into journaling? (Today is the last time I’ll mention journaling in our journey, but I highly recommend continuing.)

    Simply being

    You’ve put a lot of effort so far into practicing reflection. It’s important that we don’t lose the trees for the forest. The focus of daily reflection is the _tree_; the forest will take care of itself.

    One can bring self-judgement into reflection practice, but it is not necessary. Simply practicing being aware will pay dividends. I’m recommending you do the reflection without the judgement.

    A human being. Not a human doing.

    My martial arts teacher, Sensei Wirth, turned the phrase: No this. No that. No delay.

    Many arts teach the lesson of simply being. Zen, for example provide koans: “What is the sound of one hand clapping?”

    Different styles of Yoga teach variosly about sound, light, and breathing.

    The sublime experiences of life can be found anywhere. I’m hoping you find it within this small space you’ve created for reflection.

    Make it yours

    My intention for this series is to bootstrap your practice of reflection. For me to have suceeded, you must end up being self-sustaining in your practice.

    The skeleton of this journey is the 57 prompts which appear at the top of each of these posts. I wasn’t born with those. What will be your prompt, or prompts?

    How are you going to continue to trigger yourself to do your morning reflection?

    I like to read, and daily-study/daily-devotional books is an entire Genre. But there are also web sites, software, flip cards, … what calls to you?

    The best choice for medium and method—for prompts, for journaling, for reflection—is whatever reliably triggers you to reflect. Make it yours; change it whenever you wish.

    Do you recall the beginning of this journey? While I created the prompts and the system which you are now enjoying, how will you continue it yourself? 

    It’s time for the student to become the teacher. What prompts and triggers are you going to create for yourself as you go through your life being your own teacher?

    Recap

    We’re in our final week together. The first week was about creating space. 2 minutes: Pause life. Read. Think. Resume life.

    Our second week was focused on creating a new habit. Do you have your new habit attached to a trigger?

    Week three was about the practice itself of reflection; becoming aware explicitly that we are— well, practicing being aware.

    Awareness occupied our practice during our fourth week. Inward. Outward. Simply being aware is awesome.

    In week five we tried the tiniest taste of capturing our thoughts. Reflection is a power tool for self-improvement. Journaling—and there are many kinds—is another.

    Simply being is easy to understand but difficult to embody. In week six I tried to point at the moon, while hoping my pointing finger didn’t draw your attention instead.

    Last week we began looking beyond this small, introductory journey and talking about ways you could continue on your own.

    Digestif

    When will the rhetorical questions end?

    ɕ

    As a PDF — You can download Practicing Reflection as a single e-book.

    Practicing-ReflectionDownload #Journaling #PracticingReflection
  5. Reflection: Day 60

    LOOK BACK — Look back at some of the things you’ve accomplished or experienced and think… — “Well if that isn’t nice, I don’t know what is.” ~ Kurt Vonnegut — “One never notices what has been done; One can only see what remains to be done.” ~ Marie Curie

    One day, tomorrow in fact, there won’t be any more of these prompts. But having read this far, I hope you’ll believe me when I say: You’ll like tomorrow’s post too.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #MarieCurie #PracticingReflection
  6. Reflection: Day 59

    FESTINA LENTE — Make haste, slowly. Or, unrestrained moderation. — “The worker must be stronger than his project; loads larger than the bearer must necessarily crush him. Certain careers, moreover, are not so demanding in themselves as they are prolific in begetting a mass of other activities. Enterprises which give rise to new and multifarious activities should be avoided; you must not commit yourself to a task from which there is no free egress. Put your hand to one you can finish or at least hope to finish; leave alone those that expand as you work at them and do not stop where you intended they should.” ~ Seneca, On Tranquility

    Last week we began looking beyond this small, introductory journey and talking about ways you could continue on your own.

    ɕ

    #PracticingReflection #Seneca
  7. Reflection: Day 58

    HUMILITY — Imitate Socrates.

    Simply being is easy to understand but difficult to embody. In week six I tried to point at the moon, while hoping my pointing finger didn’t draw your attention instead.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  8. Reflection: Day 57

    WE CREATE OUR OWN STRUGGLES — “All the stress, all the frustrations and disappointments, all the busyness and rushing … we create these with attachments in our heads. By letting go, we can relax and live more simply.” ~ Leo Babauta

    In week five we tried the tiniest taste of capturing our thoughts. Reflection is a power tool for self-improvement. Journaling—and there are many kinds—is another.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #Journaling #LeoBabauta #PracticingReflection
  9. Reflection: Day 56

    WHAT IS MY TALK-TO-LISTEN RATIO? — It’s better to listen to understand, rather than to, (for example,) listen to refute. Silence is fine provided one’s own thoughts are pleasant company. When speaking, think first about why you are about to say whatever it is you’re about to say.

    Awareness occupied our practice during our fourth week. Inward. Outward. Simply being aware is awesome.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  10. Reflection: Day 55

    CHASTITY — “Rarely use venery but for health or offspring, never to dullness, weakness, or the injury of your own or another’s peace or reputation.” ~ Benjamin Franklin

    Week three was about the practice itself of reflection; becoming aware explicitly that we are— well, practicing being aware.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #BenjaminFranklin #PracticingReflection
  11. Reflection: Day 54

    PRACTICE DOING NOTHING, EXQUISITELY — “No need to plan, no need to read, no need to watch something, no need to do a chore or eat while you do nothing. You will start to notice your brain’s habit of wanting to get something done. This exposes our mental habits, which is a good thing. Keep doing nothing. Sit for awhile, resisting the urge to do something. After some practice, you can get good at doing nothing, and this leads to the mental habit of contentment and gratitude.” ~ Leo Babauta

    Our second week was focused on creating a new habit. Do you have your new habit attached to a trigger?

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #LeoBabauta #PracticingReflection
  12. Reflection: Day 53

    TRANQUILLITY — “Be not disturbed at trifles, or at accidents common or unavoidable.” ~ Benjamin Franklin

    We’re in our final week together. The first week was about creating space. 2 minutes: Pause life. Read. Think. Resume life.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #BenjaminFranklin #PracticingReflection
  13. Reflection: Day 52

    AM I SELF-AWARE? — The first step in my journey was realizing I was unhappy. This realization — detecting it, understanding it, believing it, surrendering to it, and finally owning it — was the first piece of bedrock on which I started building.

    It’s time for the student to become the teacher. What prompts and triggers are you going to create for yourself as you go through your life being your own teacher?

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  14. Reflection: Day 51

    CLEANLINESS — “Tolerate no uncleanliness in body, clothes, or habitation.” ~ Benjamin Franklin

    Do you recall the beginning of this journey? While I created the prompts and the system which you are now enjoying, how will you continue it yourself? 

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #BenjaminFranklin #PracticingReflection
  15. Reflection: Day 50

    GET CLEAR ABOUT WHAT YOU WANT, AND SAY NO TO MORE THINGS — “We are rarely very clear on what we want. What if we became crystal clear on what we wanted in life? If we knew what we wanted to create, how we wanted to live … we could say yes to these things, and no to everything else. Saying no to more things would simplify our lives.” ~ Leo Babauta

    The best choice for medium and method—for prompts, for journaling, for reflection—is whatever reliably triggers you to reflect. Make it yours; change it whenever you wish.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #Journaling #LeoBabauta #PracticingReflection
  16. Reflection: Day 49

    WOULD I WANT TO GO ON A LONG CAR RIDE WITH ME? — Long car rides are a quintessential American experience. Along with the good however, comes the opportunity for bad. With others present the confined space, lack of privacy, and monotony of rolling vistas create a microcosm of life on a tiny stage. How I share that stage with the others in the car, and what specifically I do while on that stage tells all.

    I like to read, and daily-study/daily-devotional books is an entire Genre. But there are also web sites, software, flip cards, … what calls to you?

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  17. Reflection: Day 48

    FAULT — “So is it possible to be altogether faultless? No, that is impractical; but it is possible to strive continuously not to commit faults. For we shall have cause to be satisfied if, by never relaxing our attention, we shall escape at least a few faults. But as it is, when you say, “I will begin to pay attention tomorrow,” you should know that what you are really saying is this: “I will be shameless, inopportune, abject today; it will be in the power of others to cause me distress; I will get angry, I will be envious today.” See how many evils you are permitting yourself. But if it is well for you to pay attention tomorrow, how much better would it be today? If it is to your advantage tomorrow, it is much more so today, so that you may be able to do the same again tomorrow, and not put it off once more, to the day after tomorrow.” ~ Epictetus, 4.12.19-21

    How are you going to continue to trigger yourself to do your morning reflection?

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #Epictetus #PracticingReflection
  18. Reflection: Day 47

    MODERATION — “Avoid extremes; forbear resenting injuries so much as you think they deserve.” ~ Benjamin Franklin

    The skeleton of this journey is the 57 prompts which appear at the top of each of these posts. I wasn’t born with those. What will be your prompt, or prompts?

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #BenjaminFranklin #PracticingReflection
  19. Reflection: Day 46

    FIND JOY IN A FEW SIMPLE THINGS — “For me, those include writing, reading/learning, walking and doing other active things, eating simple food, meditating, spending quality time with people I care about. Most of that doesn’t cost anything or require any possessions. To the extent that I remember the simple things I love doing, my life suddenly becomes simpler.” ~ Leo Babauta

    My intention for this series is to bootstrap your practice of reflection. For me to have succeeded, you must end up being self-sustaining in your practice.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #LeoBabauta #PracticingReflection
  20. Reflection: Day 45

    BEFITTING A HUMAN BEING — “What would you wish to be doing, then, when death finds you? For my part, I would wish it to be something that befits a human being, some beneficient, public-spirited, noble action. But if I cannot be found doing such great things as these I should like at least to be doing that which cannot be impeded and is given me to do, namely, correcting myself, improving the faculty that deals with impressions, toiling to achieve tranquillity, and rendering to the several relationships of life their due; and, if I am so fortunate, advancing to the third area of study, that which deals with the attainment of secure judgements.” ~ Epictetus, 4.10.12-3

    The sublime experiences of life can be found anywhere. I’m hoping you find it within this small space you’ve created for reflection.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #Epictetus #PracticingReflection
  21. Reflection: Day 44

    JUSTICE — “Wrong none by doing injuries, or omitting the benefits that are your duty.” ~ Benjamin Franklin

    Different styles of Yoga teach variosly about sound, light, and breathing.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #BenjaminFranklin #PracticingReflection
  22. Reflection: Day 43

    WHAT HAVE I BEEN READING? — I’ve performed this experiment countless times. Read little: nothing happens. Read more: ideas, new connections, inspiration, questions, motivation, short-cuts, wonder.

    Many arts teach the lesson of simply being. Zen, for example provides koans: “What is the sound of one hand clapping?”

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  23. Reflection: Day 42

    SELF-COMPASSION — Beware the stern, vociferous, insistent, internal critic. In my head, it sounds like me, but it is not me. If I said to another, even a fraction of the things I say incessently to myself, I would be arrested, or more likely, assaulted.

    My martial arts teacher, Sensei Wirth, turned the phrase: No this. No that. No delay.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  24. Reflection: Day 41

    SHARPEN THE SAW — “It’s preserving and enhancing the greatest asset you have–you. It’s renewing the four dimensions of your nature: physical, spiritual, mental, and social/emotional. … “Sharpen the saw” means expressing all four motivations. It means exercising all four dimensions of our nature, regularly and consistently in wise and balanced ways.” ~ Stephen Covey

    A human being. Not a human doing.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection #StephenCovey
  25. Reflection: Day 40

    SINCERITY — “Use no hurtful deceit; think innocently and justly, and, if you speak, speak accordingly.” ~ Benjamin Franklin

    One can bring self-judgement into reflection practice, but it is not necessary. Simply practicing being aware will pay dividends. I’m recommending you do the reflection without the judgement.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #BenjaminFranklin #PracticingReflection
  26. Reflection: Day 39

    HONESTY — “I am unafraid as I prepare myself for that day when the artifices and disguises will be stripped away and I shall make judgement of myself. Is it just brave talk, or do I mean what I say? Were they for real, those defiant words I spoke against fortune, or were they just theatre—just acting a part?” ~ Seneca

    You’ve put a lot of effort so far into practicing reflection. It’s important that we don’t lose the trees for the forest. The focus of daily reflection is the tree; the forest will take care of itself.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection #Seneca
  27. Reflection: Day 38

    MY OATH — Today is the first day of the rest of my life. I shall make no excuses and hold no grudges. I care not where I came from, only where I am going. I don’t compare myself to others, only to myself from yesterday. I shall not brag about successes nor complain about my struggles, but share my experiences and help my fellows. I know I impact those around me with my actions, and so I must move forward, every day. I acknowledge fear, doubt, and despair, but I do not let them defeat me.

    Now look back through your week of notes. Maybe write a few notes about your observations of your notes? Maybe, you want to look more into journaling? (Today is the last time I’ll mention journaling in our journey, but I highly recommend continuing.)

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #Journaling #PracticingReflection
  28. Reflection: Day 37

    IS THERE AN ELEMENT OF STRUGGLE IN MY HISTORY? — This reminds me to be kind for everyone I meet is working through their own struggle. Through the experience of my own struggle I can better understand and empathize with others on similar journeys. Furthermore, being reminded of my past struggles suggests perspective on my day-to-day general lack of struggle.

    And write several thoughts down today…

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection
  29. Reflection: Day 36

    MUCH ABIDES —
    Tho’ much is taken, much abides; And tho’
    we are not now that strength which in old days
    moved Earth and Heaven, that which we are, we are;
    one equal temper of heroic hearts,
    made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
    to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
    ~ Alfred Lord Tennyson

    I’m not even asking that look back at what you’ve written. Simply write a couple thoughts, (or more than a couple, if you wish.)

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #AlfredLordTennyson #PracticingReflection
  30. Reflection: Day 35

    SYNERGIZE — “What is synergy? Simply defined, it means that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. It means that the relationship which the parts have to each other is a part in and of itself. It is not only a part, but the most catalytic, the most empowering, the most unifying, and the most exciting part.” ~ Stephen Covey

    Today, write the first and second thought. It really, truly, does not matter what the thoughts are. Please try writing them down. Put the paper away until tomorrow.

    ɕ

    Arrived in the middle? Visit the first post, Where to begin?
    (The entire series is available to download as a PDF ebook.)

    #PracticingReflection #StephenCovey