When was the last time you enjoyed photos and videos of an experience with friends, offline, in the same room?
How many photos make you laugh or smile when you are sat next to someone enjoying them together versus them popping up on an algorithm controlled newsfeed? Why did the same photo make you smile when you were sat next to someone?
I’d been pondering taking BV off social media for months when it came to our end of week media nights over the summer. We pile all the kids into a small dark room and play videos and photos take during the week.
The whoops, cheers, laughs, silliness, jokes and general good times fill the room instantly. And it lasts until we stop.
I’ve never experienced this with online social media.
Every negotiation skill was used to get him up the hill.
Then, he looked left as he saw what most might miss.
A wonderland. The most magnificent ‘softplay’, only harder, better and natural.
For the next 10 to 20 minutes I followed as all the benefits of outdoor play became vivid.
2 thoughts:
Softplays – I can’t help but thing they epitomize everything that wrong with play. And our disconnect with the natural world.
Adults. The failures may seem bigger, the wonderlands may be further away, the decisions may appear bigger, the problems my seem harder but I am sure the benefits are the same for anyone. Perhaps just more obvious in your 2 year old son.
I’ve always thought of kindness of more of a personality trait before.
Until recently I have never appreciated the braveness associated with an act of kindness. In fact, I feel it’s the biggest barrier to kindness.
If a nice act requires braveness, is that what makes it kindness rather than mere politeness?
I think all the opportunities for kindness that I have let slip by are due to being a little cowardly.
I’d like to appreciate this along side all the ‘adventurous brave’ things do on trip. Can conquering fear of climbing a cliffs help people appreciate conquer the bravery of kindness? I’ll be watching.
As small travel company grappling with impact of our customers travel and what best to do about it, I was filled with rage when I first saw this (image below) in The Economist. What a bunch of greenwashing rubbish. Flying more sustainably? Sort your language out Google. And take control of Greenwashing in your mag The economist.
I have since calmed down and *trying* to see the other side. Maybe there is some logic in it? Maybe it helps the airlines see a demand for LESS TERRIBLE fuel. If sustainable aviation fuel is going to be a thing then the airlines need confidence to invest?
After a quick play with Google Flights….
1. I couldn’t seem an example of a lower carbon travel option that wasn’t the cheepest/best anyway. Does that make it useless? 2. Nothing about off setting or similar 3. It DIDNT SUGGEST getting the train for flights from London to Birmingham or Geneva to Paris.
I am still calling greenwashing BS on it. Anyone got any thoughts?
Why some flights have lower emissions Carbon emission estimates consider the origin, destination, aircraft type, and the number of seats in each seating class.
Factors such as fuel-efficient aircraft and shorter routes usually result in lower carbon emissions.
The emission estimates are higher for premium economy, business, and first seating classes because the seats in these sections take up more space. They’ll account for a larger share of the flight’s total emissions.
Traveling by train When a train is available on your route, you’ll find it listed on your Google Flights search results.
Traveling by train may result in significantly lower carbon emissions compared to flying. Carbon emissions for trains are compared to the typical flight for that route. As such, train options are mostly marked with a badge indicating lower emissions.
A person just starting to learn a skill or take part in an activity.
A Beginner. Dictionary definITION
A beginner. Normally associated with being a novice. A newbie. One just at the start of the journey with little experience. I don’t think this is a very helpful definition.
One who begins things.
A better definiTION OF A BEGINNER ?
A beginner. Someone who starts things. Get’s things going. Begins things. One who thrives in the early stages where learning is strife and the path is more unknown.
One who is constantly beginning things.
A cereal beginner
A cereal beginner. One who is always learning. Always getting things off the ground. Thrives in uncertainty. Thirsty for more. Realises that to teach, you must be also be a beginner.
Adventure sports provide many opportunities to enjoy being a beginner in the traditional sense. They can also be used in the tweaked definitions put forward. In adventure education for school groups for example, adventure can be used to allow young people to just enjoy being a beginner when they don’t have to worry about outcomes (necessarily!) They are also a very visual and experimental way of displaying that everyone is a beginner at something!
I used to attach bungee cords around by kayak to create resistance whilst training for canoe slalom (admittedly not for long!)
When I took them off, the first blast through the water felt like the boat was filled with helium and that I could take-off (for the first few seconds at least). It was exhilarating.
I am trying to liken navigating BeVenturesome through these through times like having bungees wrapped around my mind, or at least the part of it that thrives growing an enterprise. They will be coming off very soon. And I’ll be stronger as a result.
I’ve been learning about mountain safety now I am living in Morzine so I can get more into backcountry skiing. Partly (ok mostly) for my own benefit but also because I am looking to create a winter trip for kids that is not just about getting 6 days skiing in without appreciating the mountains – more on this later.
It’s been fascinating seeing what I can apply from various other sports to winter mountain safety and I have literally only scratched the surface.
This poem from the legendary Semi-rad came at just the right time…
Incidentally, I can’t recommend enough the process of just rushing into creating a webpage to flesh out a business idea. I can (and have) scribble on pieces of paper and Googled things for eternity for (many) of my ideas. I am sure they are also countless frameworks, apps, websites, processes but what’s better than trying to articulate your vision in the medium your customers will see it?
I am trying to make ‘zoom out & chill out’ a near instant reaction to any tough news. As soon as you zoom out your can see perspective and even opportunity very quickly before the tough news festers and appears worse than it actually is.
– Signing happy birthday twice while washing your hands seemed to work
– Social distancing has been harder
Yes, washing your hands is easier than not seeing your friends but all things considered it was/is considered less successful.
Telling friends & family that you don’t want to meet up just wasn’t made easy enough for people.
How much would have changed if they called it ‘physical distancing’ with some of the following to back it up.
– Awareness and normalisation campaign on video calls (with support from tech firms)
– An emoji that means ‘I love you, so let’s Skype instead’
– A term or acronym for ‘thanks so much for delivering essential good to my house but just a reminder, let’s both ensure we follow best COVID practice’
‘Elbow Touch’ nearly took off as a fun & quirky term to normalise and break down social barriers of not shaking hands. It was never going to last as you each need elbows more than 1m long and it’s unnecessary.
We don’t have to wait till next time to learn from this. How can we go about making breaking social norms for good easy for friends, family and employees from today?
For many scenarios, I have found that it’s not worth trying to change behaviour.
It’s much more efficient use of resources to try and spot or create environments where you can install new habits or behaviour.
New office, house or classroom. New Year or new term. New class or job. Change of markets, exchange rate, opinions or needs. Wait for these to be right.
When the environment and time is right change is much easier.
If we can install habits and behaviour in teenagers that means they live a life that is truly sustainable then when they are business leaders, employees, CEO’s, citizens and politicians the necessary change should happen quite naturally.
Of course it might be too late by then and installing truly sustainable behaviours in teenagers is certainly not easy. Anything but leading by example would be hypocritical.