Monday, March 7, 2011

The Colour of the wind

Anyone who thinks that air is invisible is impaired by a sort of color blindness.  Indeed, the air is so alive with color that it could be likened to a rainbow that encircles the entire earth with pink, red, violet, gray, blue, and yellow.  

Ask a naturalist or a painter, and you'll hear descriptions of an airy spectrum that escapes the unobservant viewer.  Carried by swirling dust particles and refracted by the prisms of water vapor, the colors of the air are best observed in a mass.  

Mountaintop vantages, canyons, desert expanses, or deep valley views are recommended.  The warmer the temperature and the stronger the wind, the more colour will be detectable.  Rising heat carries finer dust particles deepening the air's hues, while high winds carry larger particles, brightening the coloration.

No more saying yes


I am a people pleaser. I’m more likely to be saying, “Okay”, “sure”, “maybe”, or “alright”, than “no”. I find it difficult to say no, because I know that no one wants to hear it, so I end up agreeing while silently stewing in resentment towards the person who put me in this awkward situation. So it was with great interest that I watched Jim Carrey’s movie Yes Man. He challenges himself to stop saying no to everything and vows to answer yes to every opportunity, request or invitation that presents itself.

He says yes to a homeless man and finds himself stranded in a park, no cash, an empty petrol tank and a dead phone. In true Carrey style the scene is hilarious and had me yelling at my TV, “You can’t say yes to everything. That’s ridiculous!” But as the movie progresses, his character has the time wrapping my head around the concept of someone being a “no man” and struggling to be a “Yes man”. My problem is clearly the opposite!

Too often we’ve got too much hay on our forks. In order to get ahead in our careers, to make our partners happy or to volunteer at our past schools “food fair” means that something else has to give.  I’ve regularly found myself agreeing to work assignments knowing that I will let myself down, but agree anyway because I think it will compromise my career if I say no. 

In the end nobody’s happy, buy does that mean I should be a “no person”? Actually not! I realized that Yes Man is bout opening yourself up to new experiences with an open heart. So I started thinking about all the times I had said yes and been pleasantly surprised. A commercial radio station had paid for interviews and these are the bane of any talk show host life. 

It is actually easy to say yes and not really mean it, but think of the opportunities and experiences we are depriving ourselves of. It is not practical to agree to every single request, but to mean yes when we say it could see us doing things with a very different attitude and being pleasantly surprised.