Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘creativity’ Category

after the high tide

Last weekend the Atlantic coast of France experienced “les grandes marées” – high sea levels with spectacular waves and the risk of flooding in coastal towns.

After the high tides recede there is a bumper crop for fishermen and others seeking seafood.

I took this photo on the Île-de-Ré and now that I look at it, it reminds me of a musical score…..almost as if the people are the notes! Two ways to think of “composition” I guess.

It wasn’t only people out taking advantage of the receding sea…..

after the high tide

…..the birds were too (and isn’t there a nice symmetry or reflection between these two images?)

Read Full Post »

jet

In the A to Z of Becoming, one of the verbs starting with G, is GO!

Every day I look up into the sky and see a mass of jet trails as planes fly from south to north, north to south, and sometimes in other directions too! I often wonder where the people are going.

Where are you going to go this year?

Physically. Are you going to go back again to somewhere you’ve been before and visit it with fresh eyes? Are you going to go and explore somewhere you’ve never been? I love to travel. It always changes my world, gives me a chance to reflect from a completely different vantage point. I hope you can have that experience too.

I don’t think you need to go far to have that kind of experience, and I don’t think you necessarily have to make it a long visit. Even a day trip can be not only a pause, but a turning point.

Just choose somewhere different from where you usually live, and GO!

But thinking about this verb, “go”, brings up something else for me too. Not just travel and visiting different places, but doing what your heart longs for.

What does your heart long for? What are the dreams you have for this life? Have you started to listen to what your heart says? Have you started to give the universe the chance to make your dreams come true?

None of that is going to happen if you are just waiting…..waiting for the “right” time, the “right” opportunity, or until this or that other thing happens. It’s never going to happen unless you start.

So, make this week be the week you hear “GO!” – and you are off and running!

Read Full Post »

Magritte gets an idea
I often have the experience that I take a photo, then when I get home and upload it onto my iPad or my Mac, I see it with new eyes, and those eyes see something I swear the old ones didn’t see when I took the shot!

Here is an example. I saw these trees and did my usual……moved about a bit changing my angle of view until I was happy with what I saw. Then I clicked.

Now I’m home, I see something else entirely, and it makes me wonder if this kind of view inspired Magritte….

magritte

 

Read Full Post »

Tiles and moss

Wherever you look on Earth, you’ll find Life.

Whether it’s the moss on the tiles here, or flowers by the roadside, trees, grass, insects, birds, fish……and, if you use microscopes, you can find bacteria in every environment on, and in, our planet.

There is Life in the most astonishing places. In the mouths of volcanoes, deep, deep under the sea where no light has ever reached, high up on the tallest mountains…..it’s everywhere.

Life is such a creative force, gathering what it finds here – chemicals, sunlight, energy – and creating more Life from what it finds.

Life is such a social force, working not just in competition with other organisms, but, crucially, in collaboration with them.

Life is such a force for change, constantly developing, growing, reproducing, evolving.

And here we are…..human beings. Life with consciousness. A form of Life which knows that it is alive and can think, and feel, and reflect.

Isn’t this all so amazing? That the Universe should have this drive towards ever greater complexity? That the Universe should seem to celebrate such astonishing diversity and uniqueness? That the Universe should produce consciousness?

Read Full Post »

Edinburgh lights

I often take photos of the light, of sunsets, sunrises, of shafts of sunlight and of moonlight, but I don’t often take photos of artificial light.

However, last night, in Edinburgh, I turned round and saw this……..I couldn’t resist.

See how good an iphone shot can be? All I have done to the original image is to crop it.

Yet again, photography is a vehicle for meditation and contemplation for me. The more I look at this photo, the more I see, and the happier I feel.

Read Full Post »

yellow and blue

I think it is often difference which catches my eye.

i think difference is beautiful.

Sameness quickly becomes, well, sameness.

This simple photo is beautiful, not just because the blue sky is beautiful, and the yellow lichen on the tree is beautiful, but also because of the contrast between the blue and the yellow, and the contrast between the smoothness of the sky and the roughness of the branches.

Mass production and mass control seems to have a different ethic from this – uniformity and the “elimination of variation”.

Here’s to a celebration of difference, of uniqueness and of diversity.

Read Full Post »

air and water

water and fire

air water and fire

air water fire earth and Life

Read Full Post »

I used to support this idea that you ‘write what you know.’ You hear that advice given to young writers all the time and even to kids in school. It’s one of the greatest disservices – even in elementary school, teachers ask students just back from holidays to write about what you did, what happened to you, what you know. What about what you imagine? The imagination is the richest tool you will ever have as a novelist and, really, as a person. Anybody can do research. To use your imagination is to use a gift of the gods. The imagination is really disrespected when you’re telling people over and over to write what you know. This idea that what you experienced in your backyard when you were 15 is more significant or more real is just not true. Lawrence Hill

I’m increasingly convinced that imagination is indeed a “gift of the gods” and that it is the “richest tool” any creative person can use, not just writers. 

In fact, I’m increasingly convinced that more imagination is needed to solve the problems and crises we face, to feel genuine empathy with others, to develop tolerance, and to re-enchant our dis-enchanted lives.

Read Full Post »

Look at this!

I saw it on a French Nature programme, but it’s originally from the BBC.

If you look carefully you’ll see the little puffer fish at the centre of his creation. Isn’t it totally amazing?

How can such a wee fish make such a perfectly accurate circular pattern like this? And isn’t it just beautiful?

Apparently this is what the male puffer fish creates to attract a female. If the female fish is satisfied with the creation she lays her eggs right in the middle of it, he fertilises them, then she lays more, which he fertilises. Then she swims off.

The way he makes the pattern, it creates a perfect consistency of sand in the middle for the protection of the eggs. In other words, from an engineering perspective, it’s brilliant. 

But what amazed me most was how he makes it so beautiful, and how the beauty of the pattern attracts the female.

Are you aware of any other creatures, apart from human beings, which produce creative works of beauty? I know certain birds, and some other creatures, can create incredible nests, but ones which seem to be created to be beautiful? I didn’t know other creatures did that.

Read Full Post »

John Berger writes

Because true translation is not a binary affair between two languages but a triangular affair. The third point of the triangle being what lay behind the words of the original text before it was written. True translation demands a return to the pre-verbal. One reads and rereads the words of the original text in order to penetrate through them to reach, to touch, the vision or experience that prompted them. One then gathers up what one has found there and takes this quivering almost wordless “thing” and places it behind the language it needs to be translated into. And now the principal task is to persuade the host language to take in and welcome the “thing” that is waiting to be articulated.

Interesting, huh? That mechanical translation matches word to word then seeks to get the grammar correct, but is the original idea or meaning translated well that way?

As I begin to live in a country where the language is not my first language, I find that, at least in this first phase, I’m translating all the time. Reading or hearing French and translating it into English in my head to understand the meaning. But already there are phrases which seem to require no translation, and phrases that pop into my head fully formed in French. I’m guessing that gradually I’ll do less and less translation.

But actually although Berger is talking about translating a text from one language into another, I think maybe the same issues apply to all communication. I have an idea or a feeling to express, pick some words, some phrases. I’m translating it into written or spoken language. Aren’t I? Which leads me to wonder about the rich diversity of inner lives. I’m sure we all get that experience, from time to time, where we think that someone else seems to come from another planet. Where their worldview is so different from ours that we don’t even seem to be speaking a common language, despite the fact that a superficial observation would lead to the conclusion that we are indeed speaking the same language.

When Berger mentions the third point of the triangle, I suspect he is thinking of our inner lives. That leads me to three questions today.

  1. How can I know my inner life?
  2. How can I express or show my inner life?
  3. How can I know the inner life of another?

For me, the first involves practices of awareness and reflection, the second, creative acts, and the third requires ongoing dialogue. Isn’t it interesting that all three have no end? I will never know myself completely, never be able to fully express myself, and never fully know another. That makes me feel both excited and humble.

Excited because all that is an adventure, a voyage of discovery, and a constant stream of revelation and wonder. It is the ‘émerveillement du quotidien‘.

Humble because nothing can be known completely, fully or finally. Montaigne knew that with his ‘Que sais-je?

Over to you now. How do you answer those three questions? You, personally, in your own life?

  1. How can I know my inner life?
  2. How can I express or show my inner life?
  3. How can I know the inner life of another?

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »