The first kids book I wrote was about the global water crisis; I love that I still get texts and messages from people who have purchased the book, picked it back up for some reason, and who’ve found it helpful in having a meaningful discussion with their kids about water.
100% of what we make from each purchase is donated to water projects on GlobalGiving.
If you’ve got kids in your life, and you want an engaging, light, but meaningful way to talk to them about this pressing global, social, and environmental issue, you can find this on Amazon. #iamgrateful and #iamthankful for the experience Dream Village, Where Kids Build Better Tomorrows writing this story gave me. I’m happy and hopeful it’s worthwhile to those who read it.
PS – Started working on my fourth book this past weekend. Like each book I’ve written, it came from a deeply personal experience that moved me to tears first, and then, to words.
Good smart comedy is taking a simple concept and working through all the layers. Extracting laughs from the story you bring to life that people shift from hearing to seeing in front of them to actually feeling immersed in.
I love this bit by Gary Gulman. It’s not new by any means but any time I see state abbreviations in an unplanned way, I play this back. And #iamgrateful#iamthankful for it to fall back on. Smart stuff. #holidaysauce
The text threads on the RU men’s basketball game are tough. Everyone is focused on it being a tough loss.
For those who don’t know, Rutgers in many ways, gave away the game. It was textbook playing not to lose by changing sets, approaches, all the things that had given them what should’ve been a strong lead going into the final minutes.
People look at this chart (texted by a neighbor, empathetically I assure you!) and focus on the precipitous drop from a near certain probability of winning to the ultimate loss.
And I get it. We normalize things so quickly that by the 4 minute mark of the 2nd Half everyone had forgotten about where we started and locked in a new baseline probabibilty of winning.
Maybe I’m crazy. But I still say, if you told me going into this game we’d have a chance to beat the #2 team in our bracket, with what could have been the final possession, I’d have been blissful.
So I go to bed happy. The team played great. And the program learned a ton. #iamgrateful and #ismthankful for having the chance.
I love questions. Why is the most important question. The first question. To ask.
But how, I feel like in this day an age, where information is abundant (so you can understand why quickly), “how” is the most powerful.
How shifts from understanding reason to understanding opportunities, approaches, pathways.
It’s my favorite question at work as well.
Watching Anaiya with a KiwiCo Crate is entrancing. She’s relentlessly focused on testing, learning, troubleshooting. #iamgrateful and #iamthankful for these times.
Priya and I are here, watching, reading our own books, asking her what she’s up to periodically but mostly, she addresses us and gets back to being engrossed in her Kiwi Crate.
Spring is all about growth, flourishing. She’s doing just that. In front of our eyes. Ain’t she wonderful?
The NCAA Men’s Tourney js my favorite sporting event of the year. #iamgrateful and #iamthankful for how it’s started out and, that I was able to sit down and watch the whole darned game. And then some.
I only recently turned on to David Attenborough thanks to my binging documentaries and his library on Netflix.
Saw this in my feed this AM and it hit the spot; on a rainy day, lots going on, both kids surprisingly home, and … then this to bring a smile to my face.
The NCAA Tournament is my favorite holiday. I was notorious for setting up multiple workstations, viewing parties, etc wherever I worked or was. I’m excited for it this year.
As a Rutgers University—New Brunswick and a Duke University alumnus, I have it best — as my streak of consecutive trips to the NCAA Tournament continues. This year, with the first time in decades that Duke hasn’t made it substituted near perfectly with Rutgers first trip (men’s basketball, the women are always fly) since 1991.
If you are looking for a team, and a person to root for, look no further than Myles Johnson. The “anti-procrastinator”. #iamgrateful and #iamthankful for this tournament coming to life.
I’m also excited to honor a friend, almost 20 years gone from here, but always in our hearts. To NG, RU’s biggest fan. LFG!
For a few years after grad school I didn’t have an address (a little over 3 years). It was great because any stuff I had, I had to shed and dispose of. And any stuff I wanted, I had no place to store.
No way to accumulate. I’ve always had a bit of an aversion for stuff. Moving around so often will give you that aversion because few things suck like packing and unpacking.
With Spring upon us, Spring cleaning is around the corner. It’s my favorite kind of cleaning. And for the good things we find and donate back to those who will make better use of it,
One thing I’ve tried to do more of during the pandemic, and even more so in 2021, is read. The screen that’s dominated my non-work life, it’s fair to say, is my Kindle.
Not all the books I’ve read have been worth the time; I enjoy prose, I fall in love with language, stories told and images and experiences brought to life. In that way, no book is wasted on me. I find things to love about everything I read.
Winding my way through Fiction, Business, Motivational, Biographical, Graphic Novels has been fun thus far. (Bonus: I love “Kindle Insights” which gamifies my reading in the. most positive of ways, sharing streaks of consecutive weeks, days read, and even, progress toward my goal for books to be completed in 2021 — it has positively affected and given momentum to my reading).
After two otherwise forgettable attempts at Fiction this year, I landed on Less. I’ve wanted to read this for some time. I was looking for something light, funny, and generally just well received. A way to reduce the risk of reading in a way.
Maybe it’s because I’m in my mid-to-late 40s? Maybe it’s because I’m a struggling writer? Maybe it’s because of the nature of his travel experiences? Maybe it’s because I love winding, parallel stories and I really love when a story lives up to its expectations with how it closes, and when how a story closes satisfies its narrative.
Less. Did that. The characters, even when only appearing in a chapter, felt more dimensional than characters meant to power full books. And though you can fly through the book like a bucket of popcorn, there are clear, deliberate moments that catch you. That stop you. That make you think. And then, propel you forward.
Surprisingly so.
#iamgrateful and #iamthankful I chose Less. Perhaps it was just timely. With my stalled writing and with my middle aged manhood on display.
Or maybe, it was just a good book to read. As all its reviews and awards so indicate.