Mayotte Archives - ZO Magazine https://zomagazine.com/category/zzc/mayotte/ Thu, 30 Dec 2021 01:21:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.3 https://i0.wp.com/zomagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Separator-circle-w.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Mayotte Archives - ZO Magazine https://zomagazine.com/category/zzc/mayotte/ 32 32 65979187 Collective https://zomagazine.com/collective/ Tue, 07 Jan 2020 04:39:32 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=8450 The post Collective appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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January 2020 | COLLECTIVE

Collective: The Art of Being Alone

By Tricia Stewart Shiu

“Beautiful People” – Jason Upton

Some people run from it, others crave it and for some it thoroughly nourishes their soul. Depending on how it’s viewed, being alone can be a blessing or a curse.

The inevitable truth is, at some point, we will all be alone. So what are you going to do about it?

Inevitable doesn’t have to be a bad word. In fact, many introverts find aloneness essential as a way to recharge their batteries. Moreover, as the bulk of the labor force has been outsourced or moved to a consulting category, a wave of entrepreneurial thought leaders have been born. Without the structure of a typical work environment, both business and personal independent sensibilities must be cultivated in unique and unconventional ways.

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But back to the burning question …

How can you maximize your “alone time“?

“The Pilgrim” © Nigel Cox – Oil on Linen

First of all, stop calling it alone time. Imagine instead that you were communing with a collective intelligence. By doing so, you are creating a foundation on which you can build an entirely new manner of receiving precious creative insights, intuitive hits, loads of resources and, most importantly, a reservoir of peace.

Who couldn’t use all of those things?

© Eric Cox

Einstein said some of the best ideas can come while in the shower. Makes sense, since when you are alone in the shower and hitherto occupied with any manner of ablutions, your mind is free to relax and allow the flow of ideas to pour forth.

So, while you are experiencing your newly found foundation, you can actually perform some self-care, in the process.

Imagine the freedom of having no one to judge, bear witness, or interrupt your personal process.

In “PMA the Science of Success,” Napoleon Hill says the following:

“Accurate thinkers never act on freely offered opinions without giving them the closest scrutiny; they permit no one to do their thinking for them. They obtain facts, information, and counsel from others, but they retain the right to accept or reject it in whole or in part.“

This type of process requires, no mandates, a separateness and clarity only offered by being alone. To think for oneself is one of the most precious gifts one can offer to oneself. Of course, it is always helpful to have other people handy for support or suggestions, but there is no substitute for taking time out to double and triple check with yourself.

It is only then that one can approach any situation with clarity and confidence.

“Out of the Fog” © Jaeda DeWalt

Hill also says, “Man, alone, has the power to transform his thoughts into physical reality; man, alone, can dream and make his dreams come true.”

Gender references aside, Mr. Hill’s point is timelessly accurate. To truly gain the power necessary to transform one’s thoughts, focus and concentration are required and, typically, experienced while one is alone and bringing dreams to reality, requires a deep relaxation and inward focus.

Finally, as for experiencing the collective consciousness, being truly alone is the only way to do so.

Depending on your desire and personal preference, dipping a toe into the quiet pool of self-discovery may be a challenge, at first.

The gift will come over time with practice and the rewards maybe surprising.

Perhaps you might discover a part of yourself you never knew? Maybe you will remember something, long forgotten? One thing is for sure, the stronger the foundation of personal fortitude, the more profound the outcome.

Being alone is truly a burgeoning artform — one that can connect you with a collective intelligence, create a foundation on which you can forge new pathways to receive precious creative insights, garner intuitive hits, gather many resources and, most importantly, a reservoir of peace.

Imagine if everyone took the journey of honing the art of being alone. Just imagine a world of presence, creativity and peace.

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Missing Civility https://zomagazine.com/tss-missing-civility/ Sun, 01 Sep 2019 20:00:41 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=6930 The post Missing Civility appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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September | ALL DRESSED UP

Missing Civility: Communication In the Age of Discourtesy

By Tricia Stewart Shiu

“Return to Innocence” – Enigma

A few years ago, I was helping a friend‘s son out, whose car battery had died. He was fresh out of college and needed a ride to a job interview. As we drove, I called Sears up and put them on the car speaker, so he could arrange to get a new battery.

A young woman picked up the phone and flatly delivered the companies greeting. After explaining that a new battery was needed and asking if they offered a pick-up service, The girl put me on hold.

After driving in silence for about a minute, waiting for the woman to return, I turned to my friend’s son and said, “What are the odds, that this woman never comes back on the phone to answer the question.”

He looked puzzled and shrugged. I didn’t hang up and we sat in traffic and chatted for about 15 minutes, before, finally, I ended the call.

What could possibly have caused such a massive shift in public consciousness—or rather conscientiousness?

The answer could simply lie in the interpretation of a single word—civility.

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Apparently, I’m not alone. In a recent CBS Sunday Morning segment, “Chasing the Dream,” a 23-year-old, pro tennis player, Noah Rubin, had a similar experience. The morning show piece, which aired on August 25, 2019, followed Rubin on his travels on the Pro-Tennis tournament circuit, included a moment where he called his hotel just after landing at the airport and asked for a ride:

“Hi, this is Noah Rubin. I was wondering if a car can possibly pick me up from the airport?”

The hotel put him on hold. “I’m not sure if they’re getting back,” he said.

They didn’t.

He called them back, “Hi, I was just on the phone with you guys. I don’t know if I lost you or something …”

What could possibly have caused such a massive shift in public consciousness—or rather conscientiousness?

The answer could simply lie in the interpretation of a single word—civility.

our self-serve, automated,

AI world is creating inhuman humans

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For decades, the word languished in dusty history books and long-forgotten elementary, middle and high school classes. Yes, there actually used to be required classes in “Civics.” The focus of those classes was to hammer home the idea of civility, educate students on civic processes and to create good citizens.

However, just as vaccines seem to have lulled the US population into a false sense of security about just how immune we are to disease, the definition of “good citizen” as well as “civility” has taken the same slippery, slide downhill. After all, shouldn’t being an attentive, voting and conscientious citizen be automatic? It would seem that the assumed automaticity of civility has been grossly overestimated and perhaps replaced with a more reactionary form of existence. Instead of remaining informed, alert and aware, most of the population has fallen asleep—only to be jarred awake by sudden events like school shootings and embassy bombings. All the while, our interactions are doing the same. They have slipped into a neutral, disconnected and nonchalant nothingness. In other words, our self-serve, automated, AI world is creating inhuman humans who are becoming devoid of civility, as it is no longer required for most interactions.

The Ringer, even has an entire section dedicated to the ever-changing vernacular, Lexicon. “When a word or phrase suddenly and (sometimes) unexpectedly hits our collective consciousness, you cannot stop hearing or reading it.” Civility is one of those words.

Kate Knibbs a writer for The Ringer surmises that teaching children to avoid hot button topics like politics and religion is creating a generation of people who are unable to discuss challenging topics, might have something to do with our slip in civility. In “How ‘Civility’ Became a Buzzword—and Lost All Meaning,” she says, “While politicians and pundits invoke “civility” to call for a return to decorum, they fundamentally misunderstand the original concept of the word, instead glomming on to a more shallow and recent definition.”

Knibbs cites a 2010 Johns Hopkins article in the “Dallas Morning News:” “Here is a possible definition of civility for our times: The civil person is someone who cares for his or her community and who looks at others with a benevolent disposition rooted in the belief that their claim to well-being and happiness is as valid as his or her own.”

The trouble is that the word civility is now being weaponized against anyone who speaks up against the majority and Knibbs continues, “Over time, “civility” became more associated with order than justice.”

In a 2014 article for the New Yorker, Hua Hsu addresses the twisting definition by saying, “The language of civility has always been a code of sorts, a way of holding life’s quotidian messiness up against lofty, sometimes elitist ideals of proper behavior.” In answer to the current state of societal unrest, Hsu continues, ““Over the past decade, however, civility has come to assume a more prescriptive dimension. At a time when our ideological divides feel wild and extreme, civility has become our polite-sounding call to fall back in line.”

Perhaps, we are looking in the wrong direction in regard to our missing civility. The collective culmination of experience and wisdom may answer our yearning for a kinder and clearer way of understanding each other in an unexpected way—by pausing and using that inner “space” to listen to ourselves and each other. It may seem idealistic, but listening to ourselves costs us nothing but time and listening to each other might offer an unexpected consequence—humanity.

Light of Reason

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Curiosity Created an Empire https://zomagazine.com/tss-curiosity-created/ Mon, 01 Jul 2019 01:24:36 +0000 http://zomagazine.com/?p=6492 The post Curiosity Created an Empire appeared first on ZO Magazine.

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July | DISCOVERY

Curiosity Created an Empire: How Tim Ferriss Made a Career Out of Self-Experimentation

By Tricia Stewart Shiu

“Pastel” – Kevin Kern
Julia de Boer / The Next Web [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)]

Julia de Boer / The Next Web (Creative Commons)

“With a decrease in the number of pirates, there has been an increase in global warming over the same period. Therefore, global warming is caused by a lack of pirates. Even more compelling: Somalia has the highest number of Pirates AND the lowest Carbon emissions of any country. Coincidence?”

Timothy Ferriss, The 4-Hour Body: An Uncommon Guide to Rapid Fat-Loss, Incredible Sex, and Becoming Superhuman

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There is something inherently confusing about a curious person. The constant questioning, never ending stream of thoughts and, worst of all, the looming potential for catastrophic change. In one action, curiosity can both attract and repel attention. After all, it is only by putting a hand too close to a hot stove that we truly discover what happens.

For Tim Ferriss, curiosity (and perhaps obsession) has not only meant big business, but has also become a way of life. His self-experimentation has open doors, jangled nerves and—yes, saved a few lives along the way.

After discovering the “The 4 Hour Body: An Uncommon Guide to Rapid Fat-Loss, Incredible Sex, and Becoming Superhuman” (Random House. December, 2010) I was beyond curious. The title alone, is enough to infuriate and incite the most open-minded scientists into a chorus of “what qualifies you” and “uncontrolled variables!”

“The 4 Hour Body,” was published just one year after Ferriss’ popular, yet controversial book, “The 4 Hour Work Week,” which was published in 2009.

When I first read “The 4 Hour Body,” in 2010, initially driven by a desire to lose weight, I was completely transformed by something altogether different— Ferriss’ relentless curiosity.

Photo: Time Ferris — Tea Time with Tim — How to Find Mentors, Decrease Anxiety Through Training, and Much More (#363)

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Critics might argue differently, but there is no denying the results of self-discovery. When you are both the experimenter and the “lab rat,“ self-experimentation creates a visceral, dense and more emotional connection to the subject matter, as well as the result. Reading Ferriss’ material is, all at once, inspiring and terrifying and creates a one of a kind motivation—an obsession to know more.

According to “How Tim Ferriss Has Turned His Body Into a Research Lab” in KQUED Science, Ferris started out as a competitive wrestler in high school, where he would regularly lose up to 30 pounds in a week in order to compete.

His curiosity about his own conditioning and weight loss, led him to some unusual practices and eventual experiments over the years. For example, “hanging upside down with gravity boots for a few minutes before bed to help with back pain, to a diet of only mixed nuts and meat.” His methods, by his own admission are quite simple: “testing is just like any academic research study, have a baseline, form a hypothesis, test it and write down the results.” The only difference between Ferriss’ work and a traditional study, is that he wears every hat during the experiment. This can cause some conflict, as it is virtually impossible to be entirely objective. However, Ferriss seizes that opportunity to maximize the potential for results by being deeply honest. This honesty is a thread that, not only, runs through Ferriss’ books and articles, but also throughout his brand. Trustworthiness and a no-limits approach to his experiments are the core of his brand and success.

Ferriss took his extreme forthrightness to an entirely new level in a 2015 post on his own blog. He wrote: “These are stories I’ve kept secret from my family, girlfriends, and closest friends for years. Recently, however, I had an experience that shook me — woke me up — and I decided that it was time to share it all. So, despite the shame I might feel, the fear that is making my palms sweat as I type this, allow me to get started.”

Ferriss detailed his plan and, thankfully, subsequent failure at attempting suicide. Not only did Ferriss prove the importance of self-evaluation, but hammered the point home with the imperative nature of sharing.

During a book signing, Ferris was approached by a young man who asked for a book to be inscribed to his brother. It wasn’t until after the event that the young man shared his reason for getting his book signed for his sibling. His brother had, at the age of 22, died by suicide.

“He looked up to you,” the young man explained, “He loved listening to you and Joe Rogan. I wanted to get your signature for him. I’m going to put this in his room.” He motioned to the book.

Ferris saw tears welling up in the young man’s eyes, and began to feel the same way.

We all have stories to share—some include incredibly dark chapters in our lives—that are filled with abuse and could easily be buried for a lifetime. However, by sharing the results of what we’ve lived through, observed and culled from our unique experience, can actually save lives. Even if it saves one life, it is well worth getting over the fear of judgement.

What was once considered a light-hearted, off the cuff albeit deeply personal journaling exercise in self-experimentation, has taken on a much more profound meaning. In fact, we could all use a lesson following our curiosity by having a baseline, forming a hypothesis, testing it and writing down the results.  After that, run your race!

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