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Category : Inspired

Life Teachings From Noah’s Ark

1. Don’t miss the boat.
2. Remember that we are all on he same boat.
3. Plan ahead. It wasn’t raining when Noah built the Ark.
4. Stay fit, when you’re 600 years old, someone may ask you to do something really big.
5. Don’t listen to critics; just get on with the job that needs to be done.
6. Build your future on high ground.
7. For safety’s sake, travel in pairs.
8. Speed isn’t always an advantage. The sails were on board with the cheetas.
9. When you’re stressed, float a while.
10. Remember, the Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.
11. No matter the storm, when you are with God, there’s always a rainbow waiting.
12. Bring a raincoat…

Inspirational Video

A Quote for Motivation

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A Quote for Motivation

I read this today and I found it to be inspiring, so I thought that I would share it with all of you:

“The very first thing I remember in my early childhood is a flame, a blue flame jumping off a gas stove somebody lit…I was three years old…I felt fear, real fear, for the first time in my life, but I remember it also like some kind of adventure, some kind of weird joy, too. I guess that experience took me someplace in my head I hadn’t been before. To some frontier, the edge, maybe, of everything possible…the fear I had was almost like an invitition, a challenge to go forward into something I knew nothing about. That’s where I think my personal philosphy of life…started, with that moment…In my mind I have always believed and thought since then that my motion had to be forward, away from the heat of that flame.”

~Miles Davis

The Olympic Creed

“The most important thing in the Olympics Games is not to win but to take part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well.

~The Olympic Creed

Visceral Bodies and Leonardo da Vinci, The Mechanics of Man

So for the full two weeks of the Olympics the Vancouver Art Gallery was giving free admittance to their exhibits. Two of these exhibits included one entitled Visceral Bodies and the Other was a collection of piece called The Mechanics of Man by Leonardo da Vinci.

I had been wanting to go to the exhibits the entirety of the 2010 Olympic games but the lineups for the entrance were completely ridiculous. I figured that I would wait until the craziness of the Olympics died down, and the tourist made their way back home. Good idea, because the gallery was a tad busy but there were times when I was looking at some of the pieces alone. I really enjoyed the being alone with the art and words part. It gives you a better perspective of the piece and your brain can think about it and take it all in without any external noise.

I chose to see the Visceral Body exhibit first. This is mainly because I was more interested in The Mechanics of Man exhibit. However I was amazed at the abstract way some of the artists perceive the human body.

First let me give you a run down on the Visceral Body exhibit. The pieces were a collection made up of many different artists. Some of the exhibit I loved because it was the artists interpretation on where technology is taking the body? It makes you think and see through the artists eyes how we are changing the human body with engineering, prosthetic, pharmaceuticals, and transplants. Some of the pieces make you think about what are the social impacts of medicine and technology? How do we perceive each other based on gender alone? What if a man was to be pregnant?  What kind of hybrid human body are we creating for the future? ARE WE ALTERING WHAT IT MEANS TO BE HUMAN?  

I think that one of my favorite pieces from this exhibit was called “Deep Throat.”  I know that you are thinking dirty but don’t. This piece shows a table and chair setting, complete with a fork, knife and plate. However, when you look onto the plate you can see the throat of a human via a video screen on the plate. It’s pretty interesting to think about what happens once you swallow your food.

I also enjoyed some wax interpretations of decaying human limbs. Very interesting and accurate looking.

After taking some time viewing all of the pieces of the Visceral Body exhibit I decided it was time to move on to The Mechanics of Man. To take a look how the interpretation of the human body was before the modern day interpretation of where we are and where we are going with it.

The exhibit is pretty impressive because according to the Vancouver Art Gallery says that the works are graciously loaned by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II from The Royal Collection, Windsor.
 
As we all know Leonardo was a man well before his time in his thinking. He created a lot of experiments and was continually creating inventions. He was also a great artist. Da Vinci’s group of drawings, referred to as the Anatomical Manuscript A. It concentrates on the structures of the body and the movements of musculature as well. 
 
Apparently the exhibit here in Vancouver is the first time that it has ever been shown for the first time as a complete group. The art galleries site says that “The Manuscript A includes 34 of Leonardo’s pen and ink anatomical drawings on eighteen sheets of paper, rendered during the winter of 1510-1511. Included are the first known accurate depictions of the spinal column and two magisterial sheets depicting the musculature of the lower legs and feet.”
I’ll tell you one thing. This exhibit was astounding and inspiring. It made me want to go home and brush up on my anatomy. It also motivated me because it made me think that Da Vinci was so ahead of his time in searching for what the human body was in its entirety. He had to have been ridiculously driven to create and be so determined  to create such great works. This makes me want to aspire more for myself. It reminded me that anything is possible. Also one of the quotes on the wall of the exhibit read Nosce te Ipsum – which means “know oneself” — This is sooooo true. Not only should you know yourself on the outside but on the inside….mentally and physically. I also now want this saying as a tattoo.


A Return To Love by Marianne Williamson

Our Deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond all measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that frightens us the most. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, famous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small doesn’t serve the world.
A Return To Love by Marianne Williamson

Brian Mckeever An Inspirational Story

I was watching the Olympics this morning and a VISA commercial caught my eye. So I decided to do a bit of research.

Brian in the past has won seven medals at the Paralympics that were heald in Salt Lake City and Turin.

Olympian Brian Mckeever has less than 10% vision, but he has done more in sport than most of us could ever dream about. McKeever has about 10 per cent vision, all of it peripheral, due to Stargardt’s disease, an inherited form of macular degeneration.

Brian is a legally blind cross country skier from Canmore, Alberta, Canada. He is 30 years old and, was one of six men and five women named to the Canadian Olympic for Vancouver 2010. This made him him the first athlete to EVER compete in both the Winter Games and the Paralympics. He’ll also be the first Canadian – winter or summer to do so in the same year.

Brian qualified by racing int he cross country ski 50m, he did this by winning the Canadian trials. To do this he beat out a huge field of able body athletes with full vision.

This is truly amazing and inspirational. GO BRIAN GO!

A few Motivational Commercials

Tell me that this isn’t someone you’d like to know!

“I have an extreme passion for Mind, Body and Spirit connection. I love to challenge my physical limitations only to recognize them one day and surpass them the next. There is nothing more empowering than self development, whether that be physically, mentally, or spiritually.

That being said seeking knowledge is also something very important to me. Philosophy and political literature has helped me have a greater understanding of both the world around me and myself. To not know yourself is to know nothing. I implore you all to seek knowledge and improve your mind on a regular basis.

As for spirituality, an awareness for the grandeur and infinite space around us and respect for the world and life around me is something that charges my own spirituality. We are all driven by a soul and that soul is our identity in its purest form. How you choose to engage it is entirely up to you, mediation, going to church or simply living by a set of principles that guide you. Sometimes the best conversations had are those ones with yourself to the core of your very being.”
 

The above quote is my friends profile. Choose your friends wisely and surround yourself with positive people.