Thoughts on Mono-tasking

Sculpting Group Thoughts on Mono-tasking Anthony Bloom (Medical Doctor/Orthodox Archbishop): “You can simply be completely concerned with the person or task that is in front of you, and when you have finished you will discover that you have spent half the time doing it . . . yet you have seen everything and heard everything.”…

Sculpting Project 9: Mono-tasking: Week 2

Sculpting Project 9: Mono-tasking: Week 2 The Drama: Five Minutes of Attempted Mono-tasking 1: I am attempting to mono-task, focusing on one thing: typing this page about multitasking. 2. My back is sore, (thought) ‘when an I going to take some time for stretching?’ 3: Thought, ‘the goats are hungry for lunch I should feed…

Sculpting Project 9: Mono-tasking: Week 1

Sculpting Project 9: Mono-tasking Week 1 Q: How can you be two places at once when you are not really anywhere at all? A: Multitask (Paraphrase with thanks to Fireside Theater.) I write #99 for the 1000th time, 401 more numbers to go. This was not my first plan, but hand numbering the gratitude journals…

Sculpting Week 18: R&R: Rest and Review

Sculpting Week 18: R&R: Rest and Review Small steps over 18 weeks and I can see a new horizon. I am so grateful to report that other sculptors in our group are also establishing a new way to ‘be’. Our sculpting projects, from historic and current Christian practices, are supported by research in Positive Psychology….

Sculpting Project Eight: Talking Back: Week 2

Sculpting Project Eight: Talking Back Week 2 Jill B. Taylor, a brain scientist from Harvard, suffered a stroke in a portion of her left hemisphere. Through eight years of healing she recovered the use of the affected brain regions and found her experience to be a Stroke of Insight. The ‘Story Teller’ is the name…