Posts Tagged ‘creativity’

Live More Superconsciously

Monday, January 25th, 2010

by Haridas Blake, excerpted from “Live More Superconsciously”, from the proceedings of the 40th National Convention of the Indian Society for Training and Development, 11-13 February 2010, Bangalore. Haridas also lead a pre-conference workshop, “Energizing the Trainer: Tools to Increase Your Magnetism and Impact”.)

Everyday, we experience living on many levels of our being. Our energy lifts up and drops down. Our awareness brightens and dims. Most people consider these experiences their lot in life! They may reason that some are born happy while others less so—there’s not much one can do but squeeze the most out of life and forget the rest. The art and science of yoga takes a more energetic approach to the challenges of life’s constant ups and downs.

The formula is simple and straightforward: practice inner stillness and you will know your center. (more…)

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Knowledge, Inspiration, and Energy (Part 1)

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Listen: Download Audio MP3 (5 MB).

(Excerpted from Swami Kriyananda’s Knowledge, Inspiration, and Energy, Lesson 3 of Success and Happiness through Yoga Principles)

For those who want to follow well-worn paths, familiarity with what has been done before is important. This is the path of tradition, which to a great extent means a path of imitation. To follow this path, one needs knowledge, but doesn’t particularly need inspiration or energy. For success in any tradition, one needs the necessary education taught by people competent to instruct others in the basic “rules of the game.”

I remember the organist at the church where my mother’s funeral was held. The purpose of the ceremony was to comfort the bereaved and to send blessings to the departed. The organist’s job was simply to play a piece of music for the event. What I asked her to play was a composition of my own. She was graceless enough to tell me that she wouldn’t play it because, as she pointed out firmly, “This melody doesn’t end on the tonic note.” In fact she was right according to the “rules of the game.” Had she played the piece first, however, and listened with her heart, she would have seen that, in this case, she was wrong. (more…)

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Leap In and Try Things: Interview with Brian Kernighan

Saturday, October 24th, 2009
Referred to as K&R

Referred to as "K&R"

Brian Kernighan (pronounced ker-ni-han), Professor of Computer Science at Princeton University,  co-authored The C Programming Language, which has sold millions of copies and has been translated into 27 languages.

C is one of the most popular computer programming languages, and it has influenced nearly all languages in use today, including C++, C#, Java, Javascript, Perl, PHP, and Python.

Before becoming a full-time professor at Princeton, you had a long and brilliant career at AT&T Bell Labs. But let’s go back further. Can you tell us about your childhood and early interests?

Professor Brian Kernighan

Professor Brian Kernighan

I was born in Canada and grew up in and around Toronto.  My father was a chemical engineer, which gave me a bit of exposure to some kinds of science and engineering.  I went to the University of Toronto in a program called “Engineering Physics”, which was meant for students who were pretty good in math and science but didn’t have any idea what they wanted to do.  It was extremely tough because there was a heavy workload and a lot of material — academically, I don’t think I have ever worked as hard since.  But it was a very good foundation for all kinds of later studies, and of course the experience of just working hard full time was good (though painful at the time).  I didn’t really encounter computers until I was nearly done with my undergrad education, but when I did first start to play with computers, I found them great fun, and of course still do.
(more…)

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