Hong Hao

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Image courtesy of Hong Hao

This artwork by Hong Hao is pretty mesmerizing. When you get down to it, the artwork is stunningly simple. It is just a bunch of “things” that looked like they have been put on a large flat bed scanner. Once again, I marvel at the simplicity yet I’m drawn to the complexity of all of the “things” squished together like a real-life Tetris puzzle. Pretty cool…

No Impact Man – Happiness vs. Consumption

I’ve posted here before about No Impact Man, so let me give him some more air space. He posted recently about the balance between happiness and consumption. He drew a crude graph basically making the point that having to completely restrict his life and the life of his family to not consume, did not make them happy. At the same time, though, over-consuming and taking advantage of all that being an American citizen offers us was also not rewarding at all. So, he was talking about the point where we can be a part of this disposable American world while also trying to live a somewhat sustainable lifestyle without feeling like not doing everything just right makes you a bad person.

Finally, there is the point on the graph which I have marked as”the goal.” This point, to me, is the Holy Grail of balance between quality of life and resource conservation. This is the place where you get to go out to a restaurant with friends once or twice a week, but you don’t waste resources in a way that doesn’t even improve your lifestyle by, say, eating out every night because you’ve fallen out of the habit of grocery shopping.

This point, “the goal,” is really just the place where you are really conscious of what you use. You don’t take things for granted. You understand that your actions have consequences for other people and the planet. It is the point between asceticism and waste, between self-denial and self-indulgence. It is the place of balance.

I think this point is well made and I think should be a goal for many of us. I’ve started to bring a reusable coffee mug with me to Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts so I don’t feel like a heel every time I throw out a coffee cup, so I can enjoy the coffee AND not waste resources. Small? Yes, but I think that is the goal.

The Rise of the Creative Class

I’m reading a book I wish I would have read a while back called The Rise of the Creative Class. The quote I’m actually going to place here is a quote Richard Florida pulled from The Creative Mind by Margaret Boden, but I think it is great. She says that
creativity

involves not only a passionate interest but self-confidence too. A person needs a healthy self-respect to pursue novel idea, and to make mistakes, despite criticism from others. Self-doubt there may be, but it cannot always win the day. Breaking generally accepted rules, or even stretching them, takes confidence. Continuing to do so, in the face of skepticism and scorn, takes even more.

A quote like this keeps giving me juice to be a creative person and keep creating. There is something about having a blank “canvas” and having the confidence to create something. They aren’t always going to be masterpieces, but sometimes you have to put yourself out there and make mistakes in order to have your successes.