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Archive for Ashley Cooper

Inexhaustable Sweetness

Walking through a friend’s rose garden the other day … this one opened to greet my lens:

Pinkrose

In my in-box this morning, a quote from my friend Liz:

"There is in all things an inexhaustible sweetness and purity, a silence that is a fount of action and joy. It rises up in wordless gentleness and flows out to me from the unseen roots of all created being, welcoming me tenderly, saluting me with indescribable humility."

~ from Thomas Merton‘s poem, Hagia Sophia.

 

Kindness

A colleague and I were having a conversation the other day, about human kindness and anonymity and how the latter can adversely effect the former, particularly in online environments.

The conversation made me aware of my own tendency to become irritated
with over-eager telephone marketers, or tech support people who don’t
seem to know what they’re doing. In fact, I’ve been close enough to
being rude in those circumstances (i.e. threatening bodily harm, in my
mind at least) that I have had to force myself imagine them in the room
with me. This allows me to access any residual good nature that might
be lurking beneath the bitch from hell I seem to be
channeling in that moment.

Over the years I have found it totally changes the experience if I think of whoever I’m irritated by in an anonymous situation in the room with me. Then I see them as a human being, with the day’s cares on their face, someone with children and a wife and mortgage, etc.

Here’s another example: I’ve been working with a designer I’d never met on a client logo for some months by phone and email without a satisfactory resolution. After a combined investment of about 50 hours the problem had become so acute that we were in danger of one or the other of us just giving up in frustration, which would have meant having to deal with a very messy financial situation.

Finally, I had the idea of meeting in person at my studio and seeing if we could reconcile our issues together over a shared flat screen. The result was almost miraculous. We were able to resolve things that had hung us up for months in a couple of hours. At one particularly exhilarating moment we talked about what had kept us connected to this process, even when things looked so bleak.

I said I’d trusted in his professionalism and ultimate ability to do what we’d asked, and he said it was the fact that I had been so kind. He went on to say that he rarely receives that level of courtesy in his work when things start going badly, and I’d been so patient with him that he’d have done anything to fulfill his commitment and not disappoint us.

That really made me think. How much more might we do together if we are aware of each other as full human beings, rather than just objectifications that exist to meet our needs? What kinds of conversations might we have online if we imagine each other as friends, and extend the level of care and patience we offer in ‘real life’?

GiGis in Mill Valley

The GiGis meet again, in Mill Valley this time, to support the world cafe’s emerging online presence.

The GiGis are meeting again, in Mill Valley this time, to nurture and support The World Cafe‘s emerging online presence. As part of our own personal nurturance & support, which we all agree is crucial to our external effectiveness, we created this manada as soon as we woke up this morning…

Gigigoddess

About the Beauty Dialogues

We were noticing how absolutely beautiful we found a particular tree, or perhaps it was the pattern on the ground made by the sun shining through its leaves that we found so moving…

The Beauty Dialogues came out of a conversation between myself, Ashley Cooper & Beth Alexander during a walk we were taking together during a Spring 2006 Summit of ‘Girl Geeks’ in Seattle.

We were noticing how absolutely beautiful we found a particular tree, or perhaps it was the pattern on the ground made by the sun shining through its leaves that we found so moving…  we started to wonder aloud about what it is that makes some things beautiful in that aching, haunting kind of way… what it is in that particular moment or material that evokes the ‘beauty!’ response in one or another of us.

What is beauty, anyway? Is it different for each person? Or is there some ‘objective’ measurement, like Christopher Alexander’s calibration of the amount & quality of ‘life’ in each element, to what we collectively experience as Beauty? Is it a pleasing surface symmetry, or is it some deeper indication of wholeness and pattern that triggers the awareness of beauty in our midst? What is the ‘essence’ of beauty?

And thus started an inquiry that has already blossomed into a thousand forms, including this blog; a conversation that I hope will continue to meander like a healthy river through our curious minds for some time to come (here’s one of the tributaries).

Something truly remarkable to me about that summit of eight women in Seattle was the way we all see Beauty at the center of our lives and work … this and the passionate belief we share in using the power of technology to enhance the sense of community and connection between people. Beauty in action, if you will. This perspective seems to be a particularly feminine point of view, and feels like something deeply needed in the world right now. It’s a perspective that brings balance and begins to restore wholeness, not only to the way we see and utilize technology, but also to our ability to face and respond to the larger challenge for humanity in today’s world.

And so we wind around to another layer of the conversation… what is our work with Beauty in service to?