#best09 Book

What book – fiction or non – touched you? Where were you when you read it? Have you bought and given away multiple copies?

While my favorite Rushdie book is by far, The Ground Beneath Her Feet, I have a special place in my psyche for Haroun and the Sea of Stories. I used it once to ignite a fire under a talented and inspiring friend who, like a stack of dry firewood rife with potential, just needed a little spark to get him going. For those who haven’t had the pleasure, you will find this a rare, highly visual reading experience…just begging to be turned into…a play? A painting? Another story? Something. The theme of silence present in the book is something I struggle with, as both threat and solace…silence like time (as the Sufi saying goes), is a sword.

This little story is dedicated to my friend, rife with potential:

While Rushdie was writing The Satanic Verses his 9 year old son Zafar (who lives with his first wife Clarissa) said it was wrong that he didn’t write books that children could read. Rushdie made a deal that the next book he wrote would be one his son might enjoy reading. The germ of the story was bath-time stories he told Zafar. Rushdie says: “I would have these basic motifs, like the Sea of Stories, but each time I would improvise–not only to please him but to test myself, to see if I could just say something and take it elsewhere.”

He began to write the novel in the summer of 1989, a few months after the fatwa.

I make a point to give away Rushdie, every chance I get!







Energy: To be inspired

“The price of awareness is awareness.” From Skin of Glass

So, I’m a business person, a language person, a south american person, even (a stretch) a dance person…I suppose none of those really qualifies me to talk about ‘energy’ between people, but I think most of us -students of life- find lessons that are worth sharing from time to time.

Wishing Tree, Tokyo

Wishing Tree, Tokyo

I’ve recently experienced a radical shift in the energy that surrounds me. In a few short months I went from a quiet existence of prolonged dissatisfaction and truth be told, an oppressive and constricting energy to one of complete freedom, greater awareness of my own needs and a constant state of inspiration.

Inspiration? Yes, big word. But it’s a big, bad world and if you aren’t careful, you might find yourself racing (or sulking) through life not seeing all the spectacular people and stories that are right there, under all of our noses. Worse, you might find yourself not tapping into that unending well of good energy that is just waiting to ignite you.

While it seemed cataclysmic when it happened, this tectonic shift has lifted the fog that prevented me from looking beyond my own misguided experience and drawing from the spectacular things that surround me. All I can do is feel gratitude; gratitude for the contrast and the ugliness that sometimes has to show itself, for us to awaken to beauty. If we don’t know darkness, how can we see light? If you’ve never experienced sadness, can you really say you’ve felt deep happiness? Contrast, I contest, is what makes life worth living. Color, is what keeps us from the monotony of life lived exclusively in the grey.

When I felt I might drown, forward stepped a story about grace and keeping ones head above water under impossible circumstances. When I felt the pangs of death, death came to visit me; death of a husband, death of a child. These stories stepped up and crept into my skin, stories of surviving the unthinkable. These are the stories of my friends, my lost (and recently found) loves, my family and in some cases, my house cleaner, my architect, the chap next to me on the plane…the list goes on.

What I’ve learned? Don’t underestimate the energy you’re putting out there. Even more importantly, never doubt it’s power to bring back to you a vast and powerful fountain of goodness and INSPIRATION.

I did this recently…try it!

  1. What energy surrounds you?
  2. What are the stories that inspire you?
  3. What energy are you putting out there, and what are you getting back?
  4. Have you told the people that inspire you how grateful you are?

Peace