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Tag: philosophy

  • A Day OUT

    A few days ago, South Florida was cold.

    Not metaphorically cold. Actually cold. The kind of cold that makes you retreat indoors, wrap your hands around a warm cup, and postpone the idea of being outside. The park benches were empty. The air carried a sharp edge.

    And then today happened.

    The sun returned like it had something to prove.

    It didn’t blaze. It flowed. Waves of warmth settle on skin, deliberate and steady. You could feel it — not just as temperature, but as energy. The kind that reminds you that seasons shift whether you’re ready or not.

    Sensei Yaniv Rosenberg gave us a simple assignment:

    Under the sun

    Go outside.
    No music.
    No distractions.
    Just be there.

    It sounded almost too small to matter.

    But the smallest disciplines often reveal the largest truths.

    So I walked.

    No earbuds. No podcast. No phone in hand, performing productivity. Just silence.

    And when you remove noise, something curious happens. You begin to notice.

    The birds were not background noise — they were conversation.
    A mother pushed her child in a stroller, moving at the unhurried pace of someone who understands that time is not the enemy.
    Children ran in widening circles, testing gravity and balance as if they had just discovered both.

    And then there were the trees.

    One in particular stood behind me — branches extended, but stripped. No leaves. Bare.

    Where are the leaves? I wondered.

    A few days ago, that same tree might have looked like it had lost something. Today, in the light, it looked like it was preparing for something.

    Sometimes you have to fall to regenerate.

    Leaves drop. Not as a failure. But as a strategy.

    Inside the trunk, invisible to everyone passing by, something is rebuilding. Energy is rerouting. Life is reorganizing itself for the next season.

    We mistake stillness for weakness.
    We mistake shedding for loss.

    But nature never confuses transition with defeat.

    As I walked, another thought surfaced — quiet but firm:

    Tough times do not last. Tough people do.

    It’s easy to repeat that line in a gym. It’s harder to feel it in the cold season. But standing under the sun today, feeling warmth where wind once cut through, it made sense differently.

    Weather changes.
    Circumstances change.
    Seasons rotate without consulting our preferences.

    The question is whether we rotate with them — or resist them.

    Being part of the One Percent Club isn’t about pushups. It’s not about supplements or reading ten minutes of Meditations by Marcus Aurelius, though we do that too.

    It’s about training perception.

    With my friend Marcus Aurelius

    Marcus Aurelius ruled an empire. But his greatest discipline was not external command — it was internal governance. He understood that the only true territory a man controls is his response.

    Walking in silence today, I realized something simple:

    Community changes your standards.

    Left alone, you might skip the walk. You might rationalize staying inside. You might scroll instead of observing.

    But when a leader says, “Go outside,” you go. And in going, you discover you needed it.

    When you are part of a community of men striving to be better — across South Florida, the Carolinas, Europe — you rise slightly above your default setting. Not dramatically. Just one percent.

    And one percent, compounded daily, becomes transformation.

    I felt gratitude rising almost involuntarily.

    Grateful to feel the sun.
    Grateful to see.
    Grateful to breathe.
    Grateful for a teacher who understands that discipline is not always loud.

    Sometimes discipline looks like silence in a park.

    We are a small part of something vast. A tiny element in a much larger design. The trees rebuild unseen. The birds continue their rhythm. Mothers push strollers. Children run. The sun returns.

    And somewhere in that ordinary scene, a man decides not to drift.

    Not today.

    If you want to grow faster than you would alone, join a community that expects more from you than comfort does.

    Sometimes becoming stronger begins with something as simple as standing in the sun — and noticing that it never stopped shining. Never.

    #oss


  • Leadership, philosophy, clear thinking, and living a good life with simplicity

    Philosophy professor Marietta McCarty, and New York Times bestselling author questions one of her college students about “what is a good life”.
    “Good living means having the time to actually think…”, said the student as reported by Marietta McCarty in her book “how philosophy can change your life, 10 ideas that matter most”.
    Good living is about investing time to produce ideas which are the building blocks of our lives.  Thinking produces ideas which help us to find our way and know what really matters.
    marietta1Clear thinking is a lasting benefit of quiet introspection, solitude, and good conversation which cultivate our sense of wonder.
    The first idea developed in this book turns around the concept of “Simplicity.”
    McCarty gives us food for thoughts about simplicity. She develops this topic based on ideas of ancient philosopher Epicurus, and modern thinker Charlotte Joko Beck.
    Epicurus, 341 BCE, a citizen of Athens, decided to lead a private life for his tranquility. He decided that public life and politics in particular made tranquility impossible.
    Charlotte Joko Beck is an American pianist who delved into the study of Zen Buddhism after assuming the responsibilities of a single mother of 4 children.
    With the conceptual framework. and the ideas of these thinkers, McCarty invites us to reflect and hold conversations on simplicity, prudence, needs, wants, independence, and freedom from our own ego and self-concern.
    Charlotte Joko Beck calls life “a very simple matter”. What is simplicity? What is a simple way of living? It is as simple as having the basics that we must have for good living.
    We need to leave behind complicated lives to “savor a life spent enjoying the simple pleasures which feed our essential selves.
    Our first priority is to be a mental and spiritual well-being. We do not need much to satisfy our material needs. We overlook “ordinary” joys when we overextend our reach into the world of things. We are moving fast to acquire things and lifestyle. Debt conquers our peace of mind. We become “multitasker”. We are not in the center of our lives. Our energy is scattered and depleted. Epicurus
    We are racing to nowhere. This prevents us to think and produce ideas. Clear thinking is impossible if material concerns remain our priority and our goals.
    This endless race of materialism and acquiring stuff is a dead end of anxiety and sadness.
    Simplicity is a prerequisite for thinking clearly. It clears the mind as a dust cloth, and as the mind brightens, clear thinking is possible, and the fountain of ideas and simple pleasures is open.
    Charlotte Joko Beck agrees with Epicurus on living a life’s simple pleasures.
    “Go slow to go fast”, said Best-selling author Chris Brady in his acclaimed book “One month in Italy and Rediscover the art of Vacation.”
    Epicurus in his “Letter to Menoecus” said “Pleasure is the end…. Freedom from pain in the body and trouble in the mind.”
    His philosophy evolved from his life experience: pleasure is the main ingredient of a good life and simplicity is the key to obtaining pleasure and minimizing pain.
    Extravagance has consequences, he said inviting us to discover the freedom that comes from needing little.
    Prudence vs Desire
    Epicurus is known for his accent on pleasure as the aim of life. But, in my studies of his philosophy as mentioned by McCarty, his central virtue is prudence. This requires a rigorous examination of the circumstances of our lives.
    While pleasure is the goal of life, we must be very smart in how we go about achieving it. Desire is a powerful fuel. Prudence can keep desire in check with its sensible detection of the true needs in our lives.
    Epicurus made a critical distinction between needs and wants. Some desires are natural, other desires are vain, he said.
    We have the power of discernment and we can figure out what is essential for a pleasurable life and what is not.
    Just as Epicurus departed from public life in Athens, Professor McCarty invites us to shift- not necessarily physically, but surely mentally and spiritually- away from the roar of mainstream culture’s advertising and media glitz.”charlotte

    Bestselling author Orrin Woodward invites us to “escape the financial matrix” which is a web of debt which brings control and profit for the elite, stress, debt,  and anxiety for the masses.
    Epicurus is optimistic. His idea is we have the ability to deal with mental disturbance using our reasoning power to adjust our lives accordingly. He elevates mental pleasures over physical pleasures. Mental pleasures are more numerous; more easily controlled, and rarely have painful consequences.
    We can temper our desire by disciplining ourselves to need less.

    Beck said desire causes suffering. We have to let go our ego by avoiding to manipulate life to suit our expectations. We need to be our own measure of success, and grow confident that an unadorned life is also full of pleasure and lasting satisfaction.

    philosophyPhilosophy is the act of asking question. I invite you to reap the rewards of hearts and minds by reflecting, and sharing your personal experiences on the following questions.

    -What are some of your life’s simple pleasures? Why do you forget them?

    – Do you confuse what you need and what you want?

    – Describe what you need for a satisfying life? Are you surprised  at the things that you do not include?

    -Are you “too busy”?

    – When was the last time you just sit and do nothing?

    If you have a good appetite for food for thought, I invite you to read Marietta MacCatty’s book “How Philosophy can save your life, 10 ideas that matter most”.

    Roosevelt Jean-Francois