- @gmclean
The truth is out there, solve a way to surface it and... likely drowned out by all the noise anyway? Ugh. Disconcerting and disheartening, no wonder I spend less and less time on social media.
Timely reminder of a world we don’t all live in but desperately need to be aware of, and fight against. I am very aware of my own privilege (a white man), and shudder to think of any other human facing these thoughts just to go for a walk. Horrifying.
Feels like I’ve read this article many times. Interesting but nothing new.
One to re-read, several times. Glorious.
If only common sense was common. Here’s hoping, and presuming, that we get past these prejudices at some point.
Heartening to find the movement of science towards positivity and compassion, much needed.
File under: how I learned from my mistakes? See also: retrospectives and how to take forward good behaviours.
I like the idea behind this, not always gonna be easy to apply but that’s the point!
Clear advice but nothing new. But I guess that’s what the book has? Let’s presume I’ve done all the easy/simple things, well what’s next? That’s the productivity guide I need, this article isn’t it.
So easy to fall into these things. I recently did a scrub of all my subscriptions and dropped a few, not just physical ones but these days apps fall into this category. Why was I paying £3.99 a month for a calendar app I rarely used?
There is some level of irony in the subtle “subscribe to Esquire” message that appears halfway through though