Thinking out loud about past, present and future (#2) — Thoughts on growth, mastery and playfulness beyond the pool table

“I did that. I built that cathedral.” — Cutler Michael May, who makes pocket knives from his workshop in the city, is helping to lead a 21st-century revival of the craft. Thousands of ‘little mesters’ once made small tools and cutlery across Sheffield but the skills have almost disappeared in recent years. (Photograph by Christopher Thomond for the Guardian series The Artisans)

“The most fruitful and natural exercise for our minds is, in my opinion, conversation.” — Michel de Montaigne, Of The Art Of Conference

Eitan Reich: ”Art exposes principles in a way that gets directly behind your rationale.” — Mark Storm: “It’s showing people things on the basis of which they can have very deep conversations.”

On growth, mastery and playfulness beyond the pool table

“We need to have a much wider focus of what progress is. I don’t think growing bigger is necessary if you want progress around what an organization is. Growing better might be more interesting. Doing work that you’re proud of is terribly important. I think the most motivating thing for someone here, is to be able to point at something and say, ‘I did that. I built that cathedral.’”

“As managers and leaders, we need to rekindle our sense of magic, creativity and artfulness, whatever that looks like in our organisations.

As our professional environments become more pressurised and engagement rates continue to fall, artfulness at work is no longer an option, or a distraction.

It’s essential to who we are.”

The business of business has got to be society. That might make them much more ‘human’ places. People want a purpose in life. Making shareholders rich is not a really motivating purpose. Making a society rich is better.”

Artful playfulness or playful artfulness? — Composed of snaking pipes, dishes and horns, Sonic Playground at High Museum of Art, by Japanese sound artist, designer and electronic musician Yuri Suzuki, modifies and transmits sound in unusual, engaging and playful ways. (Photograph by Michael McKelvey)

“One of the hallmarks of the team is inquisitiveness, being excited about ‘being wrong’ because that means you have learned something new.”

The Analects of Confucius.

[7–6] 子曰。志於道、據於德、依於仁、游於藝。

[7:6] The Master said: “Set your heart on the dao, base yourself in virtue, rely on ren, journey in the arts.” — The Analects of Confucius, Book 7

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Helping people in leadership positions grow in complexity — with wisdom and clarity of thought

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Mark Storm

Helping people in leadership positions grow in complexity — with wisdom and clarity of thought