![]() |
| Claude Monet 1874 Sunset on the Seine Oil on Canvas |
The Art & Artists blog gifted us a 27-part series on the wondrous works of Claude Monet. Do take advantage of it.
A view of life and commercial real estate from Newark and Licking County, Ohio
![]() |
| Claude Monet 1874 Sunset on the Seine Oil on Canvas |
The Art & Artists blog gifted us a 27-part series on the wondrous works of Claude Monet. Do take advantage of it.
The skill can’t be ‘learn the fixed answer,’ because there is no fixed answer. The skill has to be continuous judgment.
Speed matters, but speed without judgment is just fast failure.
-Nicholas Bate, from here
We nationalized risk, socialized failure, taxed boldness, and administered everything else. Result: a magnificent country that builds nothing anymore, that manages its decay with a funereal elegance, and where the most gifted young person dreams of only one thing—leaving.
Freedom doesn't die assassinated. It dies anesthetized, to applause.
Why is improvement hard?
Part of the issue is everyone wants to improve, but nobody wants to destroy. Change often requires destruction. Or, at least, unlearning.
Selfmade men always do a lopsided job of it, and the sheriff had come out conspicuously short on the capacity to sympathize with anyone but himself. No doubt ears still were burning at the Fort Peck end of the telephone connection; he'd had to tell that overgrown sap of an undersheriff he didn't give a good goddamn what the night foreman said about dangerous, get the thing fished out of the river if it meant using every last piece of equipment at the dam site. This was what he was up against all the time, the sheriff commiserated with himself during the drive from Glascow now, toward dawn. People never behaving on bit better than they could get away with.
-Ivan Doig, Bucking the Sun
At the Sun Valley Conference a number of years ago, Jeff Bezos told the story about asking Warren Buffett for advice on a phone call. It went like this:
Bezos: "If you're the second richest guy in the world and your investment thesis is so simple, why isn't everyone just copying you?"
Buffett: "Because no one wants to get rich slow."
There is no formula for getting rich in a hurry. It's pure luck or timing. But there is a formula for building wealth slowly. You have to live below your means, have a healthy savings rate, regularly invest your money into risk assets and then wait.
-Ben Carlson, Risk & Reward
Whenever we seek to avoid the responsibility for our own behavior, we do so by attempting to give that responsibility to some other individual or organization or entity. But this means we then give away our power to that entity, be it "fate" or "society" or the government or the corporation or our boss. It is for this reason that Erich Fromm so aptly titled his study of Nazism and authoritarianism Escape from Freedom. In attempting to avoid the pain of responsibility, millions and even billions daily attempt to escape from freedom.
-M. Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled
.......................................perfectionism:
1. Mistakes don’t make you a failure. They make you a learner.
2. Achievements are not a symbol of your worth. They’re a snapshot of your performance.
3. Beating yourself up doesn’t make you stronger; it leaves you bruised. Don’t say anything to yourself that you wouldn’t say to a good friend.
4. It’s impossible to please everyone. Decide whose opinion matters to you—and whose doesn’t.
5. Character is not revealed by how many setbacks you face. It’s forged by how you face them.
6. People gauge your competence mostly by your hits, not your misses.
7. The objective is not to be the best; it’s to get better. The person you’re competing with is your past self, and the bar you’re setting is for your future self.
8. Our biggest regrets aren’t actions—they’re inactions. Don’t set yourself up to wish you’d taken more chances.
9. Healthy goals include two targets: an aspirational result and an acceptable outcome. If you fall anywhere between them, you haven’t failed.
10. Success is not a straight line. It’s a squiggly line.
![]() |
| Claude Monet +/-1863 Sunset over the Sea |
For me, a landscape does not exist in its own right, since its appearance changes at every moment; but the surrounding atmosphere brings it to life - the air and the light which vary continually. For me, it is only the, surrounding atmosphere which gives subjects their true value.
.............................weighs in on self-sabotage:
The most sophisticated villain creation happens in your own head. You split yourself into parts and declare war. The disciplined self fights the lazy self. The ambitious self quarrels with the comfortable self. The good self goes to war with the bad self.
This internal villainization feels productive because you're fighting your demons and conquering weakness. You declare war on procrastination, make it the enemy, and fight it with willpower and discipline. It fights back by getting stronger. The harder you battle, the more energy you feed it. Your resistance becomes its fuel.
Every internal villain follows the same pattern. The more you fight anxiety, the more anxious you become about being anxious. The more you battle negative thoughts, the more mental energy you spend thinking negative thoughts. The more you battle against your body, the more your body wars against you. . . .
The solution is integration and understanding that your procrastination is trying to protect yourself from judgment, your anxiety is trying to keep you safe, and your comfortable self is trying to preserve energy for survival.
They are merely parts of you serving outdated functions. Fighting them creates internal civil war, but understanding them creates internal peace. The issue is peace doesn't provide the same chemical hit as war, so most people keep fighting themselves until they die.
-Stan Taylor, The Black Book of Power
.................................self-chosen distractions.
Michael has been thinking about this subject for a long while. To wit:
It's simple, you just take something, and then you do something to it, and then you do something else to it. Keep doing this and pretty soon you've got something.
-attributed to Jasper Johns
Life is pretty simple: You do some stuff. Most fails. Some works. You do more of what works. If it works big, others quickly copy it. Then you do something else. The trick is the doing something else.
-attributed to Tom Peters
We may define future shock as the distress, both physical and psychological, that arises from an overload of the human organism's physical adaptive systems and its decision-making processes. Put more simply, future shock is the human response to overstimulation.
------------------------------
Change is not merely necessary to life; it is life. By the same token, life is adaptation.
There are, however, limits on adaptability. When we alter our life style, when we make and break relationships with things, places or people, when we move restlessly through the organizational geography of society, when we learn new information and ideas, we adapt; we live. Yet there are finite boundaries; we are not infinitely resilient. Each orientation response, each adaptive reaction exacts a price, wearing down the body's machinery bit by minute bit, until perceptible tissue damage results.
Thus man remains in the end what he started as in the beginning: a biosystem with a limited capacity for change. When this capacity is overwhelmed, the consequence is future shock.
-Alvin Toffler, Future Shock (1970)
Guard your speech. Never speak of yourself, your affairs, or of anything else in a discouraged or discouraging way. Never admit the possibility of failure, or speak in a way that infers failure as a possibility. Never speak of the times as being hard, or of business conditions being doubtful. Times may be hard and business conditions doubtful for those who are on the competitive plane, but they can never be for you; you can create what you want, and you are above fear. When others are having hard times and poor business, you will find your greatest opportunities.
Train yourself to think of and to look upon the world as something which is Becoming, which is growing; and to regard seeming evil as being only that which is undeveloped. Always speak in terms of advancement; to do otherwise us to deny your faith, and to deny your faith is to lose it. Never allow yourself to feel disappointed. You may expect to have a certain thing at a certain time, and not get it at that time; and this will appear to you like failure. But if you hold to your faith you will find that the failure is only apparent. Go on in the certain way, and if you do not receive that thing, you will receive something so much better that you will see that the seeming failure was really a great success.
-Wallace D. Wattles, The Science of Getting Rich
America may have a sick political system and an economy that does not work well for many, but it is distinctly different, and in many ways better than its prime competitors. Our legacy, and our future, lies in large part in preserving that system without falling into the trap of centralized autocracy.
-Joel Kotkin, from this edition
Because the hard part of writing—the part where you wrestle with what you actually believe—that’s still 100% human.
And if you try to cheat that, you might still publish something…
But it won’t be yours.
-Mark Manson, as cut-and-pasted from here
It’s a George Gershwin, Frederick Douglass, Mark Twain, Estevan Ochoa, Saul Bellow, Elon Musk, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Duke Ellington, Aaron Copland, Ulysses S. Grant, Cochise, Ted Williams, Dorothy Parker, Rod Serling, Jimmy Stewart, Carl Sandburg, and Wyatt Earp sort of place . . .
-Michael Wade, from here
Your first attempt might not be very good, but nobody's early work is good. There will always be a gap between where you are and where you want to be. And the bridge between that gap is courage. The courage to look foolish in the beginning. The courage to show up again when your early work is criticized. The courage to look yourself in the mirror and say, "I realize I'm not good enough yet, but the only way to get better is to keep working on it."
-James Clear, from this episode
You've been so focused on the loss of external things that you failed to account for the ongoing loss of internal things. And unlike money or jobs, time and integrity don't regenerate once spent. Every day you live disingenuously is a day of your life burnt. How many more are you willing to torch? . . .
In health terms, chronic stress is deadly when it wrecks your immune system, heart, and brain. So, keeping the peace externally might be killing you slowly, whereas a short burst of conflict, followed by a freer life, could literally improve your health. Your contract could be cutting years off your life by keeping you under constant stress. Loss aversion made you avoid short-term pain as the cost of long-term well-being. A bad trade.
-Stan Taylor, The Black Book of Power