Posts Tagged ‘credit crunch’

Snow Business

Monday, February 2nd, 2009
Lost business for the UK economy today: £1.2 billion

Having a snowball fight with your kids:     Priceless

I look forward to the day when the media don’t focus on everything a nation loses when everything grinds to a halt due to the white stuff. Today is a day when people will have a well-earned rest. Today, millions of unforgettable memories are being created right now as kids take out pristine sleighs that have never seen the light of day. Even today, some of my fondest childhood memories are of school Snow Days.
There is something really magical about a snow-filled neighborhood. Walking the street, it’s almost deafening how peaceful it is. It’s like someone has pressed a mute button. The snow creates this lovely cotton-wool acoustic, and the nearby dual carriageway is almost silent. It helps remind us that there is another way, a million miles away from the hustle, bustle and rushing of “every day life”. In a way, the snow temporarily covers over the grayness we’ve created in our industrial lives in the same way we use correction fluid like Tipp-ex or Snopake to cover up over our mistakes. Maybe snow is trying to tell us something?

Our Greatest Teachers

Friday, October 24th, 2008

The financial crisis is one of the most profound teachers of our time. Whether in America, Iceland, the UK, the rest of Europe, Asia or beyond it is showing us that everything in this world is interconnected and we cannot survive without considering each other and pulling together. Boundaries, flags and the “me culture” ultimately count for nothing. The more important lesson is that greed created the problems, fear magnified it but neither play a part in the solution.  Although we are just students, as guardians of our planet, we should be inspired to know that we finally ready to learn from these lessons.

“Slow down you move too fast. You gotta make this moment last”

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

The credit crunch could be a good thing. We might start living life at half the speed we currently do, which means we would only be consuming the world twice as fast as we should.