May 19, 2022 | Beauty of Beginnings, Current Affairs, Personal Development, Stewardship, Leadership, Entrepreneurs
Our silence is our acceptance I was listening to a story about a man in Ukraine who lost his parents, wife and two children, and his house, to a single missile strike. To the story of a 21-year-old Russian man who accepted full responsibility for the murder of a...
May 18, 2022 | Beauty of Beginnings, Personal Development, Stewardship, Leadership, Entrepreneurs
Practising detachment In the Syntropic Masterclass we teach that unity is plural, at minimum two. To the yin is the yang. Both need to be healthily present for life and existence. Neither subject to the other, both orbiting in love. To desire something with a force...
May 17, 2022 | Beauty of Beginnings, Current Affairs, Stewardship, Leadership, Entrepreneurs
It is a conundrum A riddle to be solved, where the answer in the moment seems impossible. A conundrum is inherently a threshold crossing. Right here, right now, the puzzle is impossible. There is no way forward that doesn’t come at a cost. Often what is needed is to...
May 16, 2022 | Beauty of Beginnings, Personal Development
Desire Long have I contemplated desire. For many years I ladened desire with guilt. To truly desire something was wrong – a sure relic of my Christian upbringing, where desire was presented as a sin, especially when it came to the desire for love, sex,...
May 15, 2022 | Beauty of Beginnings, Personal Development
Finding the sacred In the everyday. During times of intense emotional and physical pain. This is the task and challenge. When I was lost in the depths of my own disintegration, it was being present to the sacred that gave me the thread out. Witnessing a sunrise...
May 14, 2022 | Beauty of Beginnings, Bucky Fuller-Critical Path, Current Affairs, Stewardship, Leadership, Entrepreneurs, Syntropic Enterprise
I would rather be not understood than misunderstood “The limits of my language means the limits of my world.” Ludwig Wittgenstein “I would rather be not understood than misunderstood.” R.Buckminster Fuller ‘Use simple words. Make sure it can be understood by a six...