Mooi inititiatief van Eye Filmmuseum: Eye Film Player. Voor niks, of weinig, kan je heel veel gave films zien.
Better than free: Kevin Kelly’s 8 generative values voor een tijdperk waarin alles (wat digitaal is) simpel is te kopiëren. Het product is niet langer de belangrijkste waarde, de generatieve, meer emotionele waarde is van belang. Een generative value is een eigenschap of kwaliteit “that must be generated, grown, cultivated, nurtured”.
Els van Zwol maakt stiekem heel lang een interessante blog over muziek, boeken, kunst, van alles. No thrills, al 10 jaar goed bezig.
Vertrouw op de mens, ook voor ontwikkelingshulp, geef ze cash. Mooi artikel in de Correspondent van Maite Vermeulen. Simpel, en voorkomt strijkstokken en bureaucratie.
Album uit 1996, maar pas recent ontdekt, Filth Pig, van Ministry.
Deviate with Rolf Potts. Auteur van Vagabonding, een klassieker die om mij niet duidelijke redenen totaal onterecht nog niet in het Nederlands is vertaald (wil ik wel doen voor een fatsoenlijk honorarium).
Cool-tools van Mark Frauenfelder en Kevin Kelly. Lekker nerdy.
Met Groenteman in de kast. Ok, eigenlijk tweede Nederlandse podcast over kunst en andere dingen. Lekkere nonchalante lul, die Gijs Groenteman, met die ironisch-emotieloze stem.
Ik lees What Technology Wants uit 2010 van Kevin Kelly en vraag me steeds meer af waarom ik in Yuval Harari’s in Homo Deus uit 2015 geen enkele referentie naar dit boek van Kevin Kelly vind. Kende Harari het werk van Kelly echt niet?
Ik vond deze geweldige documentaire van de VPRO op Youtube via Harari’s site. De video is niet beschikbaar in Nederland?
Ik lees in Kevin Kelly’s What Technology Wants het engelse woord skeuonym – “an action continued from a technology no longer practiced” volgens Kevin Kelly’s website. Denk aan: de film terugdraaien of doorspoelen, een telefoonnummer draaien, een album uitbrengen (ook als deze alleen op Spotify uitkomt), iets aanzwengelen (van voor de uitvinding van de startmotor).
Ik zoek het op in De Dikke Van Dale, maar die kent in ieder geval het woord skeuoniem niet.
Het woord skeuomorfisme is wel een bekend woord. Het betekent iets maken naar een vorm of materiaal zonder dat dit nog een functie heeft. Althans, Wikipedia kent het, maar ook Van Dale kent het niet.
Afgelopen zaterdag bezochten we de tentoonstelling The Roaring Twenties in museum Kranenburg in Bergen. Erg leuke tentoonstelling met mooi werk van Erik van Lieshout, Esiri Erheriene-Essi, Helen Verhoeven. Top voor zo’n relatief klein museum!
Gezien/gelezen
William Eggleston – The Democratic Forest. Geweldig boek dat het democratisch fotograferen van Eggleston geweldig samenvat.
Gelezen
Anansi Boys van Neil Gaiman. Fantastisch verhaal over twee broer, zonen van een god die verstrikt raken tussen de wereld van mensen en goden.
Hans Aarsman – Vroomm! Vroomm!. Fotoboek van Hans Aarsman over auto’s met mooie persoonlijke verhalen van Hans Aarsman.
Bij mijn favoriete boekhandel De Eerste Bergensche Boekhandelkocht ik Mijn Lieve Gunsteling van Marieke Lucas Rijneveld. Ik had nog niet eerder iets gelezen van Marieke Lucas. Mijn eerste indruk was: wow wat een literaire krachtpatserij: een boek met ballen. Later lees ik over Marieke Lucas dat ze non-binair is en dan vind ik mijn gedachte erg flauw maar schrijf hem toch op omdat hij echt was.
Op Netflix vond mijn egaa de geweldige serie over de tweede wereldoorlog: Greatest Events of WWII in Colour. In colour betekent dat de zwart-wit beelden fantastisch goed zijn in gekleurd.
Being on the private email list of Derek Sivers has some advantages (anyone can be on the list, it is not something elitist, just go here: https://sive.rs/list). One advantage is getting early access to Derek’s new work. How To Live is Derek’s new book, he pointed me to through the email list. I bought it and read it.
As the title suggests, the book is great guidance for life. It is packed with great advice and categorized into 27 topics. The advice is sometimes contradictory, and Derek does not hide that: he gave the book the subtitle “27 conflicting answers and one weird conclusion.” And I don’t care either; life is contradictory.
Much of the advice Derek has thought up or gathered in this book may have its origins in Buddhism and Stoicism, and I think it also builds on folks like Nassim Taleb (Antifragile), Kevin Kelly and Seth Godin.
The book is way too dense to summarize in any way. Here are some parts by topic that I found useful for myself.
Be independent.
Instead, do what you’d do if you were the only person on Earth.
Commit.
You and your best friends don’t decide anew daily whether you’re friends or not. You are friends, without question. You’re committed to each other, even if you’ve never said so. That’s what’s wonderful about it. Commit to your habits to make them rituals.
Fill your senses.
Never have the same thought twice.
Do nothing.
Expressing your anger doesn’t relieve it. It makes you angrier. Actions often have the opposite of the intended result. People who try too hard to be liked are annoying.
The stock market takes money from active traders and gives it to the patient.
Think super-long-term.
Imagine your future self judging your current life choices. When deciding, ask yourself how you’ll feel about it when you’re old.
We overestimate what we can do in one year. We underestimate what we can do in ten years. If you take up a new hobby at forty, or whatever age you think is too late, you’ll be an expert by the age of sixty.
Your future self is depending on you. Your descendants depend on you. Our future generations are depending on us. Use the compounding amplifier of time.
Make memories.
Remember them all. Document everything, or you’ll eventually forget it. Nobody can erase your memories, but don’t lose them through neglect. Journal every day.
Turn your experiences into stories. A story is the remains of an experience.
Derek Sivers
Master something.
Pick one thing and spend the rest of your life getting deeper into it. Mastery is the best goal because the rich can’t buy it, the impatient can’t rush it, the privileged can’t inherit it, and nobody can steal it. You can only earn it through hard work. Mastery is the ultimate status.
Concentrating all of your life’s force on one thing gives you incredible power. Sunlight won’t catch a stick on fire. But if you use a magnifying glass to focus the sunlight on one spot, it will. Mastery needs your full focused attention.
Define “success” for yourself. Describe the outcome you want. You can’t hit a target you can’t see.
You need to understand something very counter-intuitive about goals. Goals don’t improve your future. Goals only improve your present actions. A good goal makes you take action immediately.
Once you get momentum, never stop. It’s easy to continue, but it’s hard to start again if you stop. Never miss a day.
Take tiny breaks when working to go longer than most.
Pursue your mission at the expense of everything else.
You do it for the journey, not the destination.
Let randomness rule.
Let the random generator decide what you do, where you go, and who you meet. Let the random generator make your artistic decisions when doing creative work, shaking up your usual style.
Random stuff happens. All you can control is your response. Every day, you’ll practice reacting to chaos: with dignity, poise, and grace.
Pursue pain.
Comfort is a silent killer. Comfort is quicksand. The softer the chair, the harder it is to get out of it. The right thing to do is never comfortable. How you face pain determines who you are. Be a famous pioneer.
This is the power of the pioneer: to enable the impossible, to open a new world of possibility, to show others that they can do it too, and to take it even further.
Chase the future.
Work as a futurist and technology journalist. Stay on the cutting edge of things so new they barely exist.
Old friends and family see you as you used to be and unintentionally discourage your growth.
The longer something lasts, the longer it will probably last.
The world of news is noisy because they have to hype it.
Learn.
Get out of your room and try a new skill in the real world. Go to the physical place where it’s happening, and put your ass on the line with something to lose. A vivid, visceral feeling of danger will teach you better than words.
Follow the great book.
Rules must be absolutely unbreakable. If you try to decide, each time, whether it’s OK to break the rule or not, then you’ve missed the whole point of rules.
Discipline turns intentions into action. Discipline means no procrastination. Discipline means now.
Choose the pain of discipline, not the pain of regret. Self-control is always rewarding.
Laugh at life.
They win by being playful, creative, adaptive, irreverent, and unbound by norms.
Comedy is tragedy plus time. Time belittles anything by showing it’s not as bad as it seemed. Humor does that instantly.
Prepare for the worst.
Vividly imagine the worst scenarios until they feel real (Seneca, of course). Accepting them is the ultimate happiness and security. Realize that the worst is not that bad.
Live for others.
The best marketing is considerate, and the best sales approach is listening. Serve your clients’ needs, not your own. When done right, business is generous and focused on others. It draws you out of yourself and puts you in service of humanity.
The most extreme version of living for others is becoming famous. Do everything in public, for the public. Share everything you do, even though it’s extra work.
Get rich.
Money is nothing more than a neutral exchange of value. Making money is proof you’re adding value to people’s lives.
Create your own business. Come up with a brand name that can be attached to any business. (Perhaps it’s your name.) Use it for the rest of your life on everything of quality. A recognized brand can charge a premium price, earning more than unrecognized names.
Use other people’s ideas. Ideas are worth almost nothing. Execution is everything.
Be separate—in a category of your own.
Nothing destroys money faster than seeking status. Don’t show off.
I met this young salesman. He had a good year. From the bonus, he bought his wife a Landrover for shopping. The car cost him more than 2000 euros per month. Quickly, he realized his mistake and sold the car, 10,000 down.
You only need to get rich once. When you win a game, you stop playing. Don’t be the dragon in the mountain, just sitting on your gold. Don’t lose momentum in life. Once you’ve done it, take it with you and do something else.
Reinvent yourself regularly.
Your past is not your future. Whatever happened before has nothing at all to do with what happens next. There is no consistency. Nothing is congruent. Never believe a story.
At every little decision, ten times a day, choose the thing you haven’t tried. Act out of character. It’s liberating. Get your security not from being an anchor but from being able to ride the waves of change.
Break down the walls that separate you from others and prevent real connections. Take off your sunglasses. Don’t text when you should talk.
The hardest part of connecting with someone is being honest.
Notice how you feel around people. Notice who brings out the best in you. Notice who makes you feel more connected to yourself—more open and honest.
Create.
Calling yourself creative doesn’t make it true. All that matters is what you’ve launched. Make finishing your top priority. Suspend all judgment when creating the first draft. Just get to the end.
Most of what you make will be fertilizer for the few that turn out great. But you won’t know which is which until afterward. Keep creating as much as you can.
Stay in situations where you’re forced to show your work to others.
Keep a counterweight job. Something effortless that covers your bills. Something you can do a few hours per day but otherwise not think about. It gives discipline and regularity to your life. It gives deadlines and freedom to your art.
Let the deadline of death drive you. Create until your last breath.
Don’t die.
Avoiding failure leads to success. The winner is usually the one who makes the least mistakes. This is true in investing, extreme skiing, business, flying, and many other fields. Win by not losing.
Most of eating healthy means just avoiding lousy food. Most of being right is just not being wrong. To have good people in your life, just cut out the bad ones.
Make a million mistakes.
People who avoid mistakes are fragile, like the robot that only walks. Your million mistakes will make you someone that can’t be knocked down.
Make change.
Don’t accept anything as-is. Everything you encounter must change. Preservation is your enemy. Only dead fish go with the flow. Begin by righting what’s wrong. Look for what’s ugly: ugly systems, ugly rules, ugly traditions. Look for what bothers you.
If you can fix it now, do it. Otherwise, aim lower until you find something you can do now. Make it how it should be. Don’t worship your heroes. Surpass them.
Balance everything.
All bad things in life come from extremes. Too much of this. Too little of that.
When you’re balanced, you’re unlikely to get stressed. You’ve got a stronger foundation and a resilient structure. You can handle surprises and make time for what’s needed.
Schedule everything to ensure a balance of your time and effort. Scheduling prevents procrastination, distraction, and obsession. Even creative work needs scheduling. The greatest writers and artists didn’t wait for inspiration. They kept a strict daily schedule for creating their art.
As said, these are the things I found important. The book is full of things for you. You can get the book through Derek’s site: https://sive.rs/.
In The Consolations of Philosophy, Alain de Botton helps us put life’s difficulties into perspective. De Botton guides us through the works of a number of well-known philosophers (Socrates, Epicurus, Seneca, Montaigne, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche) and distills lessons from their work.
From Socrates we learn to examine the statements of self-confident people. Oftentimes you find these statements can not stand up to even mild scrutiny. So, subject their convictions and also your own premises to criticism. Support your beliefs with good answers to counter arguments.
Epicurus tells us that epicurean is actually not, as opposed what we often associate it with today, equivalent to being an unbounded bon-vivant. Instead, Epicurus tells which components are more important than “stuff” for our well-being: friendship, freedom, reflection.
Seneca learns us to enjoy the beautiful things of life, but to always be prepared to loose these acquirements. And to not get freaked out when this happens.
Do not assume the world is conspiring against you. Annoying things happen to you while no one is aiming to hurt you. You are not being sabotaged. (Even better, to speak with Kevin Kelly, the world is conspiring to your success: pronoia.)
Motaigne states that he who thinks he is wise, is in fact a fool.
The banal physical things can not be denied. Even the king has to shit and it stinks too.
Our culture is not the norm. Our habits and rituals are just as strange as those from a distant Indian tribe in the jungle of South America. Arrogance is misplaced.
Wisdom and scholarship are different things. Wisdom is rarely taught in schools. Not (just) philosophers are able to lead a virtuous life. Also a poorly-educated worker can live wisely and “produce” wisdom. (Grandmother’s wisdom).
Schopenhauer strikes me as a grumpy man. It is not our intelligence that steers our decisions, but the unconscious. Our intelligence is busy justifying our decisions through the construction of logical reasonings. Very much like Kahneman has found: fast decision making is done by our System 1 thinking, which is impulsive and subjective. Our System 2 is more thoughtful and slow, but tends not to correct System 1 decisions but rather justify those decisions.
Love between man and woman is only successful if our unconscious thinks that it may produce good offspring. Procreation is what drives all this, unconsciously. Consoling consequences: when your love is declined, this is only because nature predicts an unsuccessful reproduction, not so much because the other person dislikes you.
Nietzsche explains there is no joy without difficulties. Difficulties are necessary prerequisites for joy.
From the efforts of the craftsman follows the genius of the artist. Genius is not born but created. The route to follow learning your crafts: sublimate, spiritualize (internalize), elevate. Do not resign to things that are too difficult to achieve, but instead fight to achieve these. There is no other way.