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Creativity

Happiness is not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort.[57]

For me, the most satisfying and self confirming activity a person can engage in is creating something.

I gain a great deal of personal satisfaction from writing something, like this, designing and building something 'from scratch', like the staircases in two of my houses, writing computer software, creating a picture or planning and executing a project. Often the creative satisfaction comes from something as simple as doing some gardening or baking a cake.

I like to be applauded and acknowledged, by those whose opinion I respect when I do something well but often I create entirely for my own satisfaction. I have often noticed the same creative motivation in others. In particular, artists, poets and so on, will often persevere even if they have no admirers and derive no income from their art.

Possibly as a result of my own creative impulse, I am filled with admiration when I see something well executed or conceived like the Empire State Building, the beautiful Degas drawing: Après le Bain in the Art Gallery of NSW or Darwin's formulation of the theory of evolution.

As is evident from the quotations in this essay that the work of the author of Shakespeare (if not himself), of Byron, Einstein, Frank Lloyd Wright, TS Eliot and dozens of others is inspirational.

 

inspiration point

 

When I recruit members for my team I look for this motivation because I know that if their achievements are acknowledged and they are protected from unjust criticism or unrealistic demands, they will do their best no matter what else is happening around them. And I will admire their accomplishments and like them as individuals.

Yet I also know that not everyone is motivated by the stimulation and sense of personal satisfaction creativity brings. I worked too long with the 'one idea inventors', who have had a single flash of inventiveness and now expect it to make their fortune, to believe that all creativity is solipsistic or non-financially motivated. And my worldly experience has taught me that other motivations are much stronger in many people.

For example I have worked with and met just as many people who for reasons of politics, status or power, pleasure seeking, social approbation or simple jealousy, are more likely to destroy the creative efforts of others than to create something themselves.

Many people are motivated by competitiveness, recognition or other needs. These can be confused with the creative impulse. One might question which most motivated someone like Andy Warhol (a genuine pleasure in creation or competitiveness, notoriety, narcissism, or onanistic preoccupation) or what motivates Jeff Koons and other similar 'artists' today.

Although it would be easy to dismiss most sportspersons and compulsive gym goers as simple competitors and/or narcissists, it is obvious that many people engage in sport with no prospect of ever winning, gaining recognition or even of improving their appearance or health. So the motivation to build a muscle or to be anorexic may be closely related to creativity in our primitive brains.

 

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Travel

Berlin

 

 

 

I'm a bit daunted writing about Berlin.  

Somehow I'm happy to put down a couple of paragraphs about many other cities and towns I've visited but there are some that seem too complicated for a quick 'off the cuff' summary.  Sydney of course, my present home town, and past home towns like New York and London.  I know just too much about them for a glib first impression.

Although I've never lived there I've visited Berlin on several occasions for periods of up to a couple of weeks.  I also have family there and have been introduced to their circle of friends.

So I decided that I can't really sum Berlin up, any more that I can sum up London or New York, so instead I should pick some aspects of uniqueness to highlight. 

Read more: Berlin

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Craft - Preface

 

 

 

Preface: 

 

The Craft is an e-novel about Witchcraft in a future setting.  It's a prequel to my dystopian novella: The Cloud: set in the the last half of the 21st century - after The Great Famine.

 As I was writing The Cloud, I imagined that in fifty years the great bulk of the population will rely on their Virtual Personal Assistant (VPA), hosted in The Cloud, evolved from the primitive Siri and Cortana assistants available today. Owners will name their VPA and give him or her a personalised appearance, when viewed on a screen or in virtual-reality.

VPAs have obviated the need for most people to be able to read or write or to be numerate. If a text or sum is within view of a Cloud-connected camera, one can simply ask your VPA who will tell you what it says or means in your own language, explaining any difficult concepts by reference to the Central Encyclopaedia.

The potential to give the assistant multi-dimensional appearance and a virtual, interactive, body suggested the evolution of the: 'Sexy Business Assistant'. Employing all the resources of the Cloud, these would be super-smart and enhance the owner's business careers. Yet they are insidiously malicious, bankrupting their owners and causing their deaths before evaporating in a sea of bits.  But who or what could be responsible?  Witches?

Read more: The Craft - Preface

Opinions and Philosophy

A new political dawn

 

 

The State election on 26th March saw a crushing political defeat for the Australian Labor Party in New South Wales. Both sides of politics are still coming to terms with the magnitude of this change.  On the Labor side internal recriminations seem to have spread beyond NSW.  The Coalition now seem to have an assured eight and probably twelve years, or more, to carry out their agenda.

On April 3, following the advice of the Executive Council, the Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales, gave effect to an Order to restructure the NSW Public Service. Read more...

It remains to be seen how the restructured agencies will go about the business of rebuilding the State.

 

Read more: A new political dawn

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