Posts feed
Comments feed

Category Archive for 'slow'

Three Men in a Float

This seems like very Slow travel to me…
Three Men In A Float.
Three men travel the width of England in an electric milkfloat - it travels at a maximum speed of 15 miles an hour, and needs an 8 hour recharge after every 30 miles travelled.
I do love books that look at the world from a […]

Read Full Post »

I’ve been thinking more about comments that I made in response to a post by Carl Honoré on his blog. Although sitting idly and wilfing might seem like something that the Sloth Ethic would thoroughly approve of, perhaps this shouldn’t always be the case.
There may seem like no better waste of time than an […]

Read Full Post »

Slow Planet

Slow Planet is now live.
The brainchild of Carl Honoré (author of IN PRAISE OF SLOW), Geir Berthelsen (founder of the The World Institute of Slowness), and Dale+Bang, (a Norwegian communications firm involved in social responsibility work in Third World development and music), Slow Planet is:
 …the global meeting place for all things Slow. It is an […]

Read Full Post »

“Besides the noble art of getting things done, there is the noble art of leaving things undone. The wisdom of life consists in the elimination of non-essentials.”

I have started this occasional series with a post about Lin Yutang. After all, he’s given this blog its tagline quote, (”If you spend a perfectly useless afternoon in […]

Read Full Post »

Kindred spirits

There are some excellent other places to visit which touch themes close to our heart, and I’d like to spend a little time in this article looking at them. We’ll come back and explore each of these sites in more depth in later articles.
The bible of the Slow movement is Carl Honore’s excellent In Praise […]

Read Full Post »

Is that the time? Really?
Ah well, eight months since the last post might be a disaster if this blog was concerned with maximising your productivity, or how to be a millionaire by the time you are twenty, or how to achieve a three hour work week (a simple plan: undercut the four hour work week […]

Read Full Post »

“In other words, what looks like wasting time from where you sit, could be a whirl of creative thought from where I sit. And, with due respect to Mr. Gilbreth, all the energy that’s been poured into trying to force everyone to work at the same pace and in the same way — it […]

Read Full Post »

The Long Now

The Long Now Foundation consider the attention span of modern civilisation to be pathetically short. Far better to take a view where the long term is measured in centuries, rather than by the publication schedule of monthly magazines and daily newspapers.
They have some projects on the go that transcend the now-now-now impulse.
Like a mechanical clock […]

Read Full Post »

There’s a worrying cult at work in the world. It proselytizes at seminars, and through innocent looking web sites. It spreads its insidious message through books that are shelved in ordinary bookshops, where even children could see them.
You can tell its adherents by their pallor, their bleary eyed thousand yard stare, the stains on their […]

Read Full Post »