Sunday 16th December 2018
Phew - that was a foul drive from Durham yesterday - snow, sleet, high winds, flooding, freezing rain, you name it... Thank you Doris. It's good to be back home and able to relax in the warm with an Advent Blog.
Phew - that was a foul drive from Durham yesterday - snow, sleet, high winds, flooding, freezing rain, you name it... Thank you Doris. It's good to be back home and able to relax in the warm with an Advent Blog.
Today's post is bound to make you smile. If you don't yet know its author - Chris Nichols, Founding Partner of GameShift, a consultancy based in the UK that describes itself as providing "alchemy for business" through a collaborative hub of highly impressive professionals from diverse backgrounds - you should make contact as soon as you can. He is erudite, entertaining and inspirational. For 15 years he was a Director of the Ashridge Business School, having formerly worked as an investment banker, corporate financier and business strategist, most recently for PwC. He is a deep thinker, brimming with curiosity and encouraging energy, with an interest in sustainability, responsibility and innovation. As you can tell from his post below, he is passionate about people, seeing them grow and this is true in every aspect of his life. He describes himself as a poet and provocateur, but there is so much more to him... He is a loving and devoted family man. You can connect with him on Twitter and find out - his handle is @chrisnicholsT2i
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Meet Little Pickle, granddaughter number two. She was meant
to arrive on Christmas Day, but decided to pop in yesterday instead. She hasn’t got a name yet, so I’m calling her
Little Pickle for the moment.
She’s a really wonderful reminder of the Zen koan, “What is this?”.
She’s a really wonderful reminder of the Zen koan, “What is this?”.
What is this? A scrap of the cosmos, arranged in this way,
that wasn’t independently in the world a few hours before, but is here now.
What is this? This tiny being coming to live on this fragile
planet for a while, almost six decades younger than me. By the time she sees
her grand-children born, she’ll be living in a world I can barely imagine.
What is this? This arrangement of energy that will unfold
over months and years into whatever she will be. What will she be? What will be
her unique voice? What will be the greatest gift she brings?
I have not one clue.
And that’s what makes Little Pickle such a great koan.
The point of a koan isn’t to get an answer. The point is to stop our busy brain in its tracks and insist that we notice what’s here.
The point of a koan isn’t to get an answer. The point is to stop our busy brain in its tracks and insist that we notice what’s here.
Life is full of opportunities to live on autopilot. It is
worth taking the time, at least every very now and then, to stop as ask “What
is this?”.
These parents met. Then one egg, one sperm, these actual
ones, not others, combine at that particular time. They produce this unique
arrangement of life. Born in this time, this particular point in human history.
Of all the possible arrangements of life, Little Pickle turns up as this
particular human being, right now.
What is this?
One day, when Little Pickle is bigger, maybe I’ll get to
stand with her on a clear Dartmoor night when we can see the star-filled sky. I
hope I get the chance to tell her that we are both made of stardust and that there’s
nothing else to be made up from. We’ve all been going around and around for 14
billion years, arranged as different forms of energy, time and time again.
Currently we’re turning up as Chris and Little Pickle. Later
on, we’ll be something else.
Someone wise once said, just remember that when we look up
in awe and wonder at the starlit heavens, we are the universe looking at
itself. Let’s not forget, in our busyness and the dance of our familiar
patterns, we are also the cosmos, in all its infinite and unfolding mystery.
If we take the time to stop and look, any day is a time of
awe and wonder.
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