Posts Tagged ‘gaps’

Pressing the "Pause" button

Friday, August 15th, 2008

We have hit a point in our refurbishment plan where for the first time in weeks we have no workmen here, no mess, no noise, no strangers… Not only that but it is that time in our business cycle where many of our clients have gone off for the summer, it feels as if some great cosmic digit has pressed my ‘pause‘ button. That is no bad thing.  It is a bit like the amber traffic signal, which gives us a moment between the two binary extremes of Stop & Go.

The Buddhists believe that one can experience God in the gap between breathing in and breathing out. Winter can be considered the time between Autumn’s fruitfulness and Spring’s new growth. 

Just being in this paused state is quite restful if one doesn’t feel obliged to fight its energy and try to make things happen. 

“The right word may be effective, but no word was ever as effective as a rightly timed pause.”   Mark Twain

“Now and then it’s good to pause in our pursuit of happiness and just be happy.”   Guillaume Apollinaire

Filling the gaps

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

You may recall that Cooke Towers is being refurbished, and that we have being going through all sorts of chaos as the virtual heart has been torn out of our home. We are camping in the Utility Room and cooking on a single ring plus a microwave. It feels pretty basic, but I am also aware that there are many families in Burma and China that would love to have what we have right now.

I think the nadir of the process was the day I came home to holes in the walls and holes in the floor. It just seemed to break some fundamental integrity of the room. Oddly, once these holes were repaired, and the walls replastered, I started feeling better about it all. As you can gather from the picture, we have begun to regain some structure, having put in base and wall units. It is still very much work in progress but now I can fill-in the missing gaps and have some idea what we will be left with.

The human brain is brilliant at doing this and will always try to join up the dots to make sense of our data, and convincing as these hypotheses may be, they only represent guesses. However, we often act on them as if they were truths. We assume motivation, we infer meaning and significance from things that others do and fail to do hardly stopping to consider that we, as mere bit part actors in their dramas may be totally irrelevant to them in that instant.

If you find yourself stewing over an imagined slight, rather than feeling bad, go and talk to them and check your facts and interpretation. 9 times out 10 you will find that you were wrong enough to make this a valuable exercise.

“We simply assume that the way we see things is the way they really are or the way they should be. And our attitudes and behaviors grow out of these assumptions.” Stephen R. Covey

“Begin challenging your own assumptions. Your assumptions are your windows on the world. Scrub them off every once in awhile, or the light won’t come in.” Alan Alda

Resources:

  1. Previous kitchen blogs here and here