The new de Young Museum is a visual feast. Laura and I took Friday off to hang out there. Please take a look at de Young and Golden Gate Park (April 21, 2006) , some of my pictures from the day at the museum and at Golden Gate Park.
Last Saturday, Laura and I performed an important rite of passage as a married couple: we filed joint federal and state tax returns. We continue to learn more and more about each other. It was certainly interesting to see how we work together on filling out paperwork....


This period of my life is highly reminiscent of the last years of my Ph.D. program during which I was setting up to make major changes in my professional and personal life. Almost a year ago, Laura and I got married, already bringing about major personal changes. On the professional side, as I have previously alluded to in Back to blogging, many, many things are also changing.
When confronted with change-inducing circumstances, I fluctuate between clinging steadfastly to the status quo to dreaming of a utopian life revolution. Since I currently feel optimistic about the future, I am taking some good time right now to fundamentallly re-examine and redirect my work. Times such as this also call me back to books that have been my past companions and guides. I pulled Carol Lloyd's Creating a Life Worth Living off my shelf a couple of weeks ago, carried it around with me, and finally started re-reading it in earnest several days ago. I've already become re-acquainted with very helpful notions, including the ""daily action", which Lloyd describes in this way:
The daily action is fifteen minutes of a focused activity performed every day at the same time of day. Choose an activity that creates an empty, space where your creativity can reassert itself. Let the action be solitary, and process oriented. You are giving yourself fifteen minutes of emptiness within the blur of living. Some examples of daily actions are dancing alone in your living room, meditating, walking, writing in a journal, drawing without purpose, singing improvisational melodies, doing yoga and gardening.
I have experienced how such seemingly small disciplines as the daily action can set one free to be creative. (Isn't the intertwining of discipline and freedom paradoxically fascinating?)
This morning, I lingered over Chapter 4, in which Lloyd presents a typology of creative modes or profiles that she splits between "collaborative" and "individualistic" (p. 65):
Collaborative creativity
Leader
Teacher
Realizer
Healer
Interpreter
Individual creativity
Generator
Inventor
Maker
Mystic
Thinker
This chapter reminds me to honor the particular creative predilections that I do have, whether or not they are held in esteem in various contexts in which I participate. For instance, I am much more of a generator than a maker. I need to find a place where I can generate ideas and be valued for doing so. Those places might be rare, but this is the time to look for them.
Yesterday evening, I learned about Find It:
Here are some of my pictures of the game:People of all ages will enjoy the hunt for the hidden objects buried within the layer of recycled plastic pellets. Alone or with friends, everyone will enjoy spinning it, shaking it, and twisting it until all the objects are found. Can you find the hidden penny…?





I'm currently reading Parker Palmer's A Hidden Wholeness : The Journey Toward an Undivided Life. He is writing about a crucial and timely theme for me -- the need for and challenges of living a whole, integrated life.
Tomorrow at First Pres Berkeley, we will be encouraging folks to send postcards to President Bush urging him to take further action on Darfur. I just read the lastest weekly news update. Great fors ome encouraging news. What should we be asking of George Bush? The wording to the president on A Million Voices for Darfur still stands:
After posting Hypotyposis on a Good Day: countdown -- the book, I found and listened to The Connection.org : Beautiful Minds about the Mathematical Olympiad.
I'm not the only one having problems uploading pictures to Flickr this morning: Flickr: Forums: FlickrBugs: New Uploads Hang on "Processing".
Count Down : Six Kids Vie for Glory at the World's Toughest Math Competition.
I'm attracted to books such as this since I did ok but not super at math competitions such as the Mathematical Olympiad.