Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Down The Rabbit Hole?


We tend to celebrate risk only after it has led to great things, which means we rarely celebrate the risk-takers who haven't yet been rewarded for their efforts. The paradox here is that we are often unwilling to embrace ambition and originality until it is safe to do so - in short, we're unwilling to take risks ourselves. - Anon. [Taken from Coach Joel, who took it from the interweb.]

Monday, November 17, 2008

Go Forth And Spread Beauty And Light

Sunday, November 16, 2008

The Audacity Of Hope

From ESPN.com's "Hungry For A Better Life." TAMALE, Ghana -- On the most important day of his life, Shadrak Kwabena wakes up hungry. He is 9 years old, his pencil legs covered in knee-high, hand-me-down yellow socks. This is the moment his mother imagined when she took him to the coach three years ago with a request: Please give my son a future.

He makes his way toward the mosque for morning prayer, the dirt streets pocked with rock and rubble. Around town, other boys slip into the predawn darkness. The ones who own soccer cleats wear them; parents save for months to afford the $12 shoes. Many come barefoot. Word has spread: A scout is in Tamale, with strange words and customs, who possesses the mystical power to change a person's destiny forever.

Read the rest. There's really nothing I can add to this remarkable and simultaneously uplifting and heartbreaking story.

Tryouts © ESPN.com

Saturday, November 15, 2008

SRAM

When a company takes good care of cartoon characters, you know that's a good sign!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

The Philosopher And The Wolf

"A spur-of-the-moment decision to buy a wolf cub changed Mark Rowlands’s life. From that moment on he found human company never quite matched up." - The Philosopher & The Wolf.

Brenin

It was not just that I loved having him around - although I did. Much of what I learnt, about how to live and how to conduct myself, I learnt during those 11 years. Much of what I know about life and its meaning I learnt from him. What it is to be human: I learnt this from a wolf. And so thoroughly did he insert himself into every facet of my life, so seamlessly did our lives become intertwined, that I came to understand, even define, myself in terms of my relationship to Brenin. - Mark Rowlands

I'd like to pretend that I don't know what motivates someone to adopt a wolf cub, but I know exactly what it is. As soon as I saw the picture, I thought, "I want to adopt a wolf." If you have a pet wolf, that makes you a BAMF. A wolf is pretty much the coolest pet ever. It's not even really a pet, as Mark found out. You are the wolf's pet. Probably the not the best idea for someone who doesn't have a strong foundation in training animals. Reminds me of the Dane Cook sketch on owning a pet monkey. If you tell people that you want to get a pet monkey, they will give all sorts of reasons as to why you really do not want a pet monkey. However, all of those reasons, those are the reasons why you really do want a pet monkey. The same thing is true with a wolf. The fact that it might eat your neighbor's children? THAT is a reason to own a wolf. The fact that if you leave it behind in the yard that it might smash through the fence to follow you? THAT is a reason to own a wolf. Sorry… That is a reason to let a wolf own you.

Aside from the obvious awesomeness of running tandem with your spirit animal guide who is actually a real wolf, the focus of the article is on what Brenin taught Mark about himself. Of course, a philosophy professor couldn't just stick to the stuff that kicks ass. He had to get all, well, philosophical about it. Surprise, surprise. However, Mark also doesn't let his musings interfere with the fundamental relationship that he and Brenin shared: they were friends.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Thank You


Saturday, November 08, 2008

Tough Day At The Office

Some days, it is very hard to be me.