Seinfeld’s Productivity Secret August 31, 2007
Posted by Jade Barclay in goals, gtd, productivity, Seinfled, writing.add a comment
Been having some fun GTD (getting things done – David Allen style) and I stumbled across this… I love it…. “Don’t break the chain” (and he doesn’t mean chain letters)
Recent Productivity faves:
http://www.davidco.com – Getting Things Done (free zip of all GTD articles)
http://www.joesgoals.com – great little tool to keep you on track
http://www.43folders.com – great GTD & productivity resource
http://www.30h30d.com – 30 hours 30 days, one page of simple high-impact goodness from Andy Wibbels (great for multiple projects and the compulsively overwhelmed)
http://www.37signals.com – genius software for productive collaborative projects
and of course, the Seinfeld article from lifehacker.com
http://lifehacker.com/software/motivation/jerry-seinfelds-productivity-secret-281626.php
Year End Resolutions January 5, 2007
Posted by Jade Barclay in books, love, poetry, quest, writing.5 comments
Did I express love this year, real love? The kind of
love that doesn’t announce itself in flashy
circumstances or structured conditions – but an
authentic, quiet, internal love? The kind of love
that bubbles to the surface when I gaze at another
with understanding, a love that places me in their
shoes, granting freedom from judgment and deepening
my compassion? A philanthropic love that expresses
because it simply feels compelled to, because it knows
there is more than enough and everyone can benefit. If
not, then I resolve to be and do better in my
authentic loving.
Did I forgive this year, really forgive? The kind of
forgiveness that cracks open my heart, peeling away
one more layer of righteous indignation, thus allowing
my soul to breathe? The kind of forgiveness that
loosens my clinched fists held high at a situation so
that I don’t enter into the next one with guarded
mistrust? The kind of forgiveness that comprehends
there is a difference between understanding a
behavioral choice and condoning it? If not, then I
resolve to be and do better in my forgiving.
Did I stop this year, really stop? The kind of
stopping that can’t help but make me vulnerable by
becoming more familiar with who I am without
distraction, smoke screens, excuses or self-imposed
numbing? The kind of stopping that turns me, naked,
towards my feelings, giving them permission to
express? No right or wrong – a stopping that simply
lets me hear what I need to hear so that I can live
more effectively? If not, then I resolve to be and do
better in allowing myself to stop.
Did I seek adventure this year, real adventure?
The kind of adventure that requires me to not only take a
leap of faith off my cliff of familiarity but actually
sends me back to get a running start? The kind of
adventure that shakes the dust off my capable but
underused wings and gives them an opportunity to catch
the gorgeous wind of change? The kind of adventure
that knows there is no outside safety net in this
physical world, only an internal one? If not, then I resolve
to be and do better in seeking adventure.
Did I seek wellness this year, real wellness?
The kind of wellness that requires me to be fully
conscious of what I put in my body – the kind of
wellness that requires me to practice what I preach
when it comes to self-love while understanding that
the power to dissolve poor habits starts by simply
choosing to change? Wellness that says, “This is the
only body you’ve got. Treat me with respect, praise me
daily and honor me as the holy temple that I am?” If
not, then I resolve to be and do better in allowing
wellness in my life.
Did I play this year, really play? The kind of play
that gives value to the heavenly activity of fun -
knowing that fun is sacred, that play is the
equivalent of work and that during play -renewal and
relaxation usher in the newest ideas and the clearest
choices for better manifestations? Did I view play as
a necessary life function and not a debatable luxury?
If not, then I resolve to be and do better in my
relationship to playing.
Did I set a goal and see it to completion this year,
really complete it? The kind of completion that lets
the vibration of satisfaction and confidence in my
abilities heal any opposing ideas of not being good
enough? Did I honor my life and its sacred purpose by
utilizing my time with forward thinking and letting my
mistakes be motivators not antagonists? Did I dissolve
my insecurities and procrastination by understanding
that my untapped genius has but one mode of expression
and that is through idea, thought, word and action? If
not, then I resolve to be and do better in setting and
completing my goals.
Did I open myself up to learn this year, really
learn? The kind of learning that entices me to enroll in
being a student of life with thirst and enthusiasm?
Did I set an intention for uncovering more of my
potential, letting divine intellect eat from my plate
and stepping deeper into the waters of wisdom? Did I
open a book, take a class, study a language, learn an
instrument, write a poem, visit another culture? Did
I learn to surprise and thrill myself with the
infinite capacity I have to master more than I thought
I could? If not, then I resolve to be and do better
on my personal path of learning.
Did I clean up my relationships this year, really
clean them up? The kind of cleaning that requires me
to break open the lock, pull back the curtain, throw
open the window and start removing the dust of harsh
words, grudges, false accusations and misguided
choices that have layered my heart? Did I make amends
for the fearful ways that disheartened another, for
neglecting to honor their point of view? With careful
examination, did I communicate my truth, understanding
that sometimes all we may be able to do is agree to
disagree and to do so without judgement or malice? If
not, then I resolve to be and do better on cleaning up
my relationships.
Did I share my good this year, really share? The
kind of sharing that comes from the pure joy of seeing
another succeed, not from what I think they can or
will do for me in return? Did I tithe back to where I
was spiritually fed, transformed and inspired? Did I
practice random acts of kindness and give of my time,
talent, and treasure realizing that my good is a part
of a never-ending wellspring that cannot run dry -
whose source is and always will be the infinite
wellspring of the Divine? Did I commit to walking the
altruistic path, remembering that every step brings
healing and enlightenment to the world? If not, then
I resolve to be and do better in my sharing.
Did I pray this year, really pray? The kind of prayer
that is spoken not to God but AS God – prayers that
affirm rather than beseech, are pregnant with knowing
rather than bloated with doubt? Did I make my every
day activities a prayer – realizing that every thought
I think carries with it the responsibility of
an effect on the world? Did I remember how truly
powerful my own prayer actually is and that by simply
devoting myself to the practice of it, I become the
change? Did I remember that my prayer takes what I
seek and introduces it to me, the seeker? If not,
then I resolve to be and do better with praying.
Did I do all these things because deep down inside I
fully understand how precious I am and that these
activities will help me to see that I am held in the
light as a perfect idea? Did I remember that I have
been perfectly conceived and am always held in the
perfect mind of God as a perfect being? Did I know that
there is nothing that I can ever say, nothing I can
ever do that will separate me from that? If
for any reason, I forgot my divinity this year, then I
resolve to be and do better in my knowing of it, to
fully understand and embody the truth as I believe.
And I believe in the power of Good, for me, for you, for all.
— by Rev. David Ault
Storybase word-a-rama November 17, 2006
Posted by Jade Barclay in activites, emotions, NaNoWriMo, software, writing.add a comment
This wicked online tool comes up with more funky cool emotion/action words than you can poke a stick at….. even more than I come up with on long hard night of Vodka and Red Bull! Fantabulous for art and life alike… check it out.
Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad Emotion? November 16, 2006
Posted by Jade Barclay in activites, emotions, goals, management, mothers, neuroscience, school, values, writing.add a comment
Crap things only feel crap when we make those emotions wrong and try to avoid them in ourselves and others. When we try to avoid making anyone feel hurt or upset or angry or frustrated or confused or overwhelmed. But, what’s so bad about feeling any of those things?
I reckon there oughta be two compulsory things in this world: YOGA and ARTS
YOGA – coz crappy posture = crappy feelings = no oxygen to the brain = no access to the powerhouse of resources you’re dragging around with you every day. If people actually felt great in their bodies and stopped taxing them so bad thru misuse everything would change.
ARTS – coz then you rekindle the love of the dance of life, an innate passion for contrast and curiosity for depth and meaning. Everything you see, hear, feel, notice and observe becomes less about trying to keep the peace or maintain balance (balance schmalance, this is a life of divine extremes, a dance, swinging like a pirate on the pendulum between the furthest points, then swinging even further on the next run), and it all becomes material for your next creative project, regardless of your chosen art form.
Art is myth, and myth is the language of the soul. We all know that a good story has twists and surprises, it isn’t bland and numb and
predictable, so why would we curse our lives to be that way?
My stand-up comedy teacher said: “Personal development is great, but make sure you don’t get too fixed. You’ll run out of material.”
Write-Off Progress 2006 November 1, 2006
Posted by Jade Barclay in activites, goals, NaNoWriMo, writing.2 comments
Never knew writing parties could be so much fun!
I’d love to do a word-count write-off between my son and I, but the youth program’s on a different server – I’ll see what we can wrangle out of NaNo HQ
Also, seriously stoked – after informing bookstore #7 that they really oughta stock up on these little puppies in October each year, I managed to track down the last copy of No Plot? No Problem! in Sydney! (That’s the guide to the crazy month-long novelling adventure written by the NaNoWriMo founder himself, Chris Baty – and he just launched a novel-writing kit for 2006)
5 Days to NaNoWriMo October 26, 2006
Posted by Jade Barclay in activites, goals, NaNoWriMo, writing.add a comment
It’s nearly November! Halloween is the day before fiction time!
This is my 3rd NaNoWriMo, and I’m so excited coz my son’s decided to join in the shenanigans this year. He’s more organised than I am – got his chapter titles and outlines done already! I tend to go with the no-plot-no-problem theory.
The aim of the game is to write a 50,000 word novel during the 30 days of November (even if they’re 50,000 bad words). It started in 1999 with 21 people, and this year is looking like 75,000 will be writing feverishly all month. This is such a fun way to start a powerful ritual and relationship with your unconscious mind. I encourage everyone to do it, especially non-writers or people who think they have very little to say. Just the commitment of writing 1,500 words a day starts so many valuable habits.
- NaNoWriMo gets that inner editor/critic out of the way and you just let things pour out fast and furious – this helps with any kind of writing or speaking your mind or meeting deadlines, totally engages your unconscious mind in the process
- even if the first stuff you write is complete dribble, if you keep going it gets better, so by the end of the month you rock! (at least more than you used to!)
- NaNoWriMo makes you better at managing time – usually you have a life to fit this around, so you might get up an hour earlier, or write at lunch time – and after November you can dedicated that well-defined timeslot to some other meaningful project, like exercising, or reading, or playing and instrument, or building that ship in a bottle you’ve always been dreaming of
- NaNoWriMo engages kids in meaningful fun. Last year over 100 schools participated with entire classes as young as grade 3 writing every day. This year they’ve launched the Official NaNoWriMo Young Writers Program. My son and I already alternate bedtime stories – sometimes we’ll read one, other times we’ll write one
- Even though it’s totally free, they still raise bucketloads for brilliant charities each year – the 2006 target is $200,000
- It’s a cool forum to make new friends – online and off
- And at the very least you’ll have a novel (or part of one) to give everyone for xmas!
If you come join in the fun, let us know. I’m jadeee and my son is ozzyazza. The WrimoRadio podcast last year was stellar, I actually referred back to it during other projects throughout the year.




