A Personal Statement Mindmap

/ Thursday, June 19 /

 

Useful.  

A Day at the Dubai Airport, in One Minute

/ Wednesday, June 18 /

Credit: Stephen Wilkes/ Vanity Fair 

On Ambition ...

/ Tuesday, June 17 /

 

Credit: David Foster Wallace on Ambition | Blank on Blank | PBS Digital Studios

The Art of Franz Kafka

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Drawings from 1907-1917

Vienna

/ Monday, June 16 /

 

In the style of House of Cards. Good show, great acting by Kevin Spacey. Not watching any other shows as one a year seems enough. 

Credit: Film Spektakel 

Call someone you love ...

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This caught my attention this Monday morning: A Brooklyn pay phone with many “free" coins and a sign above it that read, “Call Someone You Love”.

No need to viber, whatsapp or facebook. Just call. Beautiful. Only in NYC. 

Credit: Matt Adams and Katie Sokoler

Football in Space

/ Friday, June 13 /

 


No need to watch the World Cup when in space. More fun, more space :) 

Summer.

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How to survive NYC

/ Thursday, June 12 /

Credit: NYC Basic Tips and Etiquette by Nathan W. Pyle 

The Eclectic Brilliance of Edmund Phelps

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By PAUL DEROSA

 

 

Credit: Martin Wolf (FT) 


Review of his most recent book 

Credit: Samuel Brittan (FT)


i remember speaking to Edmund Phelps often after we finished class and walked back to his office in the months leading to his Nobel Prize. Very original, no powerpoints and very humble was his style. He was teaching me and 5 others the day after he won the Nobel - didn’t even take a day off after his prize announcement. 

Back to the basics ...

/ Wednesday, June 11 /

Summer

/ Monday, June 9 /

20 Languages ...

/ Thursday, June 5 /

 

 

Insane. 

Only in Switzerland

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Kartoni: A foosball table made entirely from cardboard. 

Beautiful (and inspiring) Chalk Art

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At the Columbus College of Art and Design, two rogue college students - an anonymous duo called Dangerdust, sneak into a classroom each week and create a masterpiece out of nothing but chalk.

Amazing.

Credit: dangerdust - anonymous artists with a fondness for chalk dust

Best to-do list

/ Wednesday, June 4 /

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 By Johnny Cash. 

This for That

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A Tribute to Discomfort

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"At the age of 14, photographer Cory Richards had dropped out of high school and was technically homeless. His education, he says, was instead obtained through the observation of struggle. Through various forms of discomfort and adventure he would eventually become the first American to successfully summit an 8,000-meter peak in winter (Pakistan’s Gasherbrum II), and launch an incredible career in photography through the pages of National Geographic."

Credit - via Collosal

Secret Europe

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 Wanderlust. 

Details of the 50 places can be found here.

Credit: Lonely Planet 

Push (ups)

/ Tuesday, June 3 /

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Books ...

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10 social media facts

/ Monday, June 2 /

Becoming a Gym-Goer soon ...

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Class of 2014 - The Best Commencement Speeches continued ...

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Jeff Bezos, Princeton University, 2010

“Cleverness is a gift, kindness is a choice. Gifts are easy — they’re given after all. Choices can be hard.”

Conan O’Brien, Dartmouth College, 2011

“There are few things more liberating in this life than having your worst fear realized.”

Arianna Huffington, Sarah Lawrence College, 2011

“A key component of wisdom is fearlessness, which is not the absence of fear, but rather not letting our fears get in the way.”

Neil Gaiman, University of the Arts, 2012

“Be wise, because the world needs more wisdom, and if you cannot be wise, pretend to be someone who is wise, and then just behave like they would.”

Nipun Mehta, University of Pennsylvania, 2012

“Don’t just go through life, grow through life. Make it a point to acknowledge mystery and welcome rich questions.”

Drew Houston, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2013

“If you’re not swerving around and hitting the guard rails every now and then, you’re not going fast enough.”

Joss Whedon, Wesleyan University, 2013

“You do not pass through this life, it passes through you. You experience it, you interpret it, you act, and then it is different.”

George Saunders, Syracuse University, 2013

“Since your life is going to be a gradual process of becoming kinder and more loving: Hurry up. Speed it along. Start right now.”

Arianna Huffington – Smith College, 2013

Don’t buy society’s definition of success. Because it’s not working for anyone. It’s not working for women, it’s not working for men, it’s not working for polar bears, it’s not working for the cicadas that are apparently about to emerge and swarm us. It’s only truly working for those who make pharmaceuticals for stress, diabetes, heart disease, sleeplessness and high blood pressure.

 J.K. Rowling — Harvard University, 2008

The knowledge that you have emerged wiser and stronger from setbacks means that you are, ever after, secure in your ability to survive. You will never truly know yourself, or the strength of your relationships, until both have been tested by adversity. Such knowledge is a true gift, for all that it is painfully won, and it has been worth more to me than any qualification I ever earned.”

 Oprah Winfrey – Stanford University, 2008

And how do you know when you’re doing something right? How do you know that? It feels so. What I know now is that feelings are really your GPS system for life. When you’re supposed to do something or not supposed to do something, your emotional guidance system lets you know. The trick is to learn to check your ego at the door and start checking your gut instead.

 Ursula Burns — Columbia University, School of Engineering, 2012

Doing good is not an “add on” but central to leading a rewarding life. As my Mother used to tell anyone who would listen, we all have an obligation to “put back” more than we “take out.” Leave more than you take — not a bad formula for true success.

 Michelle Obama – University of California, Merced, 2009

“When times get tough and fear sets in, think of those people who paved the way for you and those who are counting on you to pave the way for them. Never let setbacks or fear dictate the course of your life. Hold on to the possibility and push beyond the fear.”

Sheryl Sandberg – Barnard College, 2011

Women almost never make one decision to leave the workforce. It doesn’t happen that way. They make small little decisions along the way that eventually lead them there….So, my heartfelt message to all of you is, and start thinking about this now, do not leave before you leave. Do not lean back; lean in. Put your foot on that gas pedal and keep it there until the day you have to make a decision, and then make a decision. That’s the only way, when that day comes, you’ll even have a decision to make.

Angela Ahrendts – Ball State University, 2010

So with the world at your fingertips, have you learned to listen to your heart, your intuition and your instincts?…Your heart is your guiding force, teach yourself to listen to it, nurture it, and let it guide as you start this next exciting chapter of life.

Hillary Clinton — New York University, 2009

There is no way to stop change; change will come. Go out and give us a future worthy of the world we all wish to create together.

Article   

10 Things Your Commencement Speaker Won’t Tell You

Film Museum Wien

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What a great discovery in Wien. I can’t wait to get the annual membership. 

Right now the Film Museum is having a retrospective on Hou Hsiao-hsien. I didn’t know much about him or his native-country Taiwan, but the following has been written about him - 

"Hou Hsiao-hsien is a singular phenomenon in modern cinema: a master of elliptical storytelling, silence, concentration – and, at the same time, a national poet and chronicler whose work often deals with the blind spots in the history of his country, Taiwan. While the former characterization provides links to the "quietists" of our era such as Béla Tarr or Pedro Costa, the latter places him in a rich cinematic tradition that reaches from John Ford to certain European auteurs of the 1960s and 1970s (e.g. Fassbinder, Wajda, or Saura). In the end, however, Hou cannot be compared with any of these: he is too discreet, while also robust and grounded – even in those moments when we can sense the wind of the world's creation and destruction blowing through his works."

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Movie watched: Beiqing chengshi / A City of Sadness (1989)


"In the first part of his gigantic trilogy about the history of his country, Hou told the fates of four sons and the decline of a Taiwanese family - by the end of the Japanese rule (1945) over the retreat of the Kuomintang Chinese to Taiwan, which is tantamount to a conquest, up to the popular uprising in February 1947 (a topic across touchy over decades). Cinema conventions are no matter how "historical fresco" or "Melodrama" Hou. What interests him is much more subtle and mysterious: branching and connecting lines in the flow of human life; the opposition of languages; the interaction of people and history thrusts, social forces and coincidences; the parallel between the conflict of the individual and the disruption of Taiwan's. And finally: the emerging and ending, the holes, tears of death. What amounts to life in the end?"

I thought the movie was too long - still, it transported me into another world that was in transition and small events shaping a family and a small island after occupation old and new. 

 
Copyright © Gaurav Monga