Coming to Grips with Spirituality

As many of you would know, after resigning as CEO of an electricity generator, I pursued a career as an executive coach which I found extremely rewarding. Whilst I mainly worked in organisations where I was encouraged to enhance the personal development of executives, I was sometimes also asked to coach executives that were deemed […]

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On Ageing

Being now in my eighty-first year, I thought it might be appropriate (but more likely patronising) to give you young folk some ideas about what ageing is about. I can’t pretend I’ve got it all right, but I’ll give it a shot!   There are many impacts of aging, but let’s start with some of […]

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Stacks of Energy Issues

When I graduated from university with an engineering degree I felt decidedly incompetent compared to those who were my peers. I have tremendous admiration for engineers.  They deal with and master technical complexities that leave me baffled. But, as Jordan Petersen has alluded, their competence is dealing with the Physical world and they often lack […]

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Parliamentary Contrast: Labor Cynicism vs Jacinta Price’s Courage

We recently endured budget week. There were no surprises as such because, as seems usual nowadays, everything of consequence had already been leaked to the press. But some of the detail turned out to be alarming Labor has recently found another hook to hang its profligate spending on – it’s called “intergenerational equity”. But it […]

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In Praise of Altruism


The French geneticist and Buddhist monk, Matthieu Ricard has been the French translator for the Dalai Lama and has written extensively and convincingly about altruism. Ricard quotes the Dalai Lama as stating, “My religion is kindness. And the essence of my teaching is that every sentient being, even my enemy, fears suffering as I do […]

September 5, 2015

Whither Labor?


I write this essay with a sense of some sadness. In it I will relate how the Australian Labor Party has lost its way. You see, even though as you have detected from reading my essays, I have some conservative views, I come from a family that have largely been Labor supporters. My father was […]

August 30, 2015

Educating for Victimhood


Trigger Warning: This essay, among other things, discusses trigger warnings in a way (somewhat intentionally) that may offend some poor sensitive souls. It does so not to intentionally offend them but to engage them more realistically with the world! _______________________________________________ It is easy to be impressed with the constant march of technological progress. We all […]

August 22, 2015

My Revelation


I was ensconced in my office, (which is really my den,) on this particular Sunday evening. My well-being was at a particularly high point. I had just partaken of a magnificent curry and was indulging myself with a wee dram (as is my wont) whilst listening to a glorious Mozart piano concerto. Then all of […]

August 16, 2015

Taking Stock


Often when we are absorbed in meeting the exigencies of everyday life we lose our broader perspective. We “can’t see the wood for the trees”! Consequently we fall into the trap of feeling insecure and convincing ourselves that our lives are somehow threatened by modernity. I suppose reading the newspaper doesn’t help. Bad news dominates […]

August 9, 2015

Ordinary Happiness


It is an admirable thing that people assume responsibility for their own well-being. Heaven knows there are so many who want to take on the mantle of victims or expect the state to provide the largesse or the escape mechanism to extract them from their misery. But even those with the praiseworthy ambition to deal […]

August 1, 2015

Accepting the Negative


There is a tape running in my head of a song I remember from my youth. As I recall the words exhorted us to “accentuate the positive; eliminate the negative.” It is certainly in our nature to strive for happiness and avoid pain, discomfiture and negative emotions. But in this essay I want to convince […]

July 19, 2015

A Few Comments on Current Issues


There is a lot happening in the world, and this week, instead of devoting my essay to a specific topic I am going to indulge myself by making a few comments about current issues. Let me first make a comment on the Recognition Referendum debate. The Prime Minister and Leader of the Opposition joined this […]

July 12, 2015

What’s Happening to Work?


Thirty or more years ago I became involved in a couple of organisations that were trying to get a handle on the future. In particular I was interested in the future of work. Over the next ten or fifteen years I was invited to attend many national conferences and presented papers on the subject. At […]

July 4, 2015

The Confessions of a Conservative Environmentalist


Most of us when we are younger are more idealistic. We see the world embodied in a framework of rights and wrongs, black and white with very little grey! With little understanding of how the world works we believe our idealistic stances will change everything and then all will be well. I was little different. […]

June 27, 2015