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Hallozination | Hellocination (2009)



"Eine Hallozination ereignet sich, wenn sich ein kleiner Herumkrebs das Blaue vom Himmel träumt und nur ein lautes, strenges HALLO?! von aussen ihn wieder auf den trockenen Boden der Tatsachen holen kann."

June 23, 2009 | 4:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Neondackel | Neon Dachshund (2009)


June 8, 2009 | 1:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Waved Dancer (Dot Version), 2009


Eine aktuell neue Variante einer ganzen Reihe unterschiedlicher Versionen dieses Motivs, das mich nun schon seit einiger Zeit immer wieder beschäftigt und zu neuen grafischen Experimenten motiviert.





May 25, 2009 | 1:05 AM Comments  0 comments

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Geballt hilflos (2009)

Sich zu stark aufgeblasen und zu viel hineingepackt.
Es vielleicht zu gut gemeint und kräftig übers Ziel hinausgeschossen.

Weniger wäre mehr gewesen.

Zu viel ins Rollen gebracht - 
ohne Feingefühl und Bedacht.

Ein letztes falsches Wort trifft hart wie eine Eisenkugel.
Tiefes Schweigen legt sich über aufgepeitschte Emotionen.

Die Auseinandersetzung scheint beendet
und doch die Lawine rollt, unaufhaltsam, bedrohlich.
Selbst ausgelöst und nun mittendrin.

Geballte Hilflosigkeit - was nun?
Was tun?

May 13, 2009 | 3:05 AM Comments  0 comments

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Talentwagon auf Abstellgleis (2009)

Talentwagon auf Abstellgleis
Talent Wagon On Inactive Reserve

Was geschähe wenn ich meinen Talentwagon aufs Abstellgleis stellen müsste?
Wie hoch wäre der Verlust?
Zu hoch um ihn zu verkraften?
Oder doch - einfach nur ein Neuanfang?
Vielleicht fänden sich neue, andere Talente?
Neue Züge in mir - ein neuer Reisezug des Lebens?

Ein kleines Gedankenspiel, das mir zu diesem Bild in den Sinn kam.

March 16, 2009 | 6:03 AM Comments  0 comments

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Glück ist bunt | Happiness Is Coulored (2008)


Glück ist bunt

hell

doppelt mit dir

kostbar

flüchtig

oft selten

oft unerreichbar

erstaunlich

unfassbar

gesund

eine Triebfeder

göttlich

paradiesisch mit dir

freundlich

jederzeit willkommen

November 23, 2008 | 4:11 AM Comments  0 comments

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Glück ist bunt | Happiness Loves Coulor (2008)


Glück ist bunt

hell

doppelt mit dir

kostbar

flüchtig

oft selten

oft unerreichbar

erstaunlich

unfassbar

gesund

eine Triebfeder

göttlich

paradiesisch mit dir

freundlich

jederzeit willkommen

November 23, 2008 | 4:11 AM Comments  0 comments

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Glück ist bunt | Happiness Loves Colour (2008)


Glück ist bunt

hell

doppelt mit dir

kostbar

flüchtig

oft selten

oft unerreichbar

erstaunlich

unfassbar

gesund

eine Triebfeder

göttlich

paradiesisch mit dir

freundlich

jederzeit willkommen

November 23, 2008 | 4:11 AM Comments  0 comments

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Seelenfrieden - Seelenwut (2008)


Seelenfrieden

Gesundes Wohlbefinden
bei sonnigem Gemüt

Lebensfrohe Gelassenheit
in ausgeglichenem Gleitflug

Friedlich - innen wie aussen
Die Mitte stabil, der Halt fest und sicher

Zuversichtliche Vorausschau
bei zufriedenem Rückblick

Auf bestem Wege
in harmonischem Rhythmus
und klangvoller Farbe

Wenn es je so gewesen wäre - 
es hätte ewig dauern dürfen.



Seelenwut

Tiefe Aggression weckt
ein unbekanntes wildes Tier

Erschreckend laut 
betäubt es alle Friedlichkeit

Geballte Wut mündet in Raserei -
keine Angst vor nichts mehr

Manische Betriebsamkeit als Folge der
unkontrollierten Flucht vor dem selbst

Kein Anfang und Ende mehr vor Augen,
Ohnmacht in selbstgeschaffener Isolation

Nichts scheint wie es war,
alles Gewohnte verloren und vergessen

Hilfe! Wo ist der Weg zurück?
Zurück zur Normalität...

September 26, 2008 | 7:09 AM Comments  0 comments

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mfurdyk   mfurdyk Michael Furdyk's TIGblog
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Getting my genes mapped...
About this category: Technology


We all know I'm a big fan of technologies and gadgets... so when I read last week in the New York Times that one of the more innovative genetic mapping companies (23andme) had reduced the price of its Genetic Mapping service (which many companies sell for up to $2-3,000) from $999 to only a few hundred dollars, I decided it was an amazing amount of information and education to be able to get access to for that amount, so I took the plunge and signed up.

A day later, FedEx delivered a Spit Kit to my house, which requires about 10 minutes of spitting into and mixing together with a solution, and your DNA sample is ready to send back! And off it went to Los Angeles, California to a laboratory today. Funny enough, the FedEx Pak they provide specifically says "do not send liquids" on it :)

So in 6-8 weeks, I'll know where my ancestors are from, whether I'm genetically lactose intolerant, whether or not I love broccoli because I can't taste the bitterness in it, and whether or not I'm a bit more likely than average to get certain diseases or be susceptible to certain conditions in my lifetime, along with dozens of other interesting facts. For less than the price of a university course in genetics, I can view and learn much of the world's most up-to-date knowledge on the relationships between genes and personal/medical conditions personalized to my specific genetic data. How cool is that?

You can make a case against "messing with your life" this way (I had an interesting discussion about this with someone just the other night), but I think that given the great power we have as humans to be intelligent and understand life in a way that no other species can, we then have a responsibility to use it to maximize the potential of our lives. Right? I guess it's also just a bit of an extra motivation knowing that you're slightly more at risk than average to do something about it! (from 1-2 times more or less likely than the generally population, in most cases)

I'll check back in with the results in a few months!

September 22, 2008 | 8:45 PM Comments  11 comments

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mfurdyk   mfurdyk Michael Furdyk's TIGblog
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The Second Half: TIG in Australia

I headed off in the morning to the Australian Science and Math School, hosted at Flinders University. The school is only a few years old, and is built with an open concept -- no classrooms, but instead a number of large spaces with desks and chairs that reconfigured in many different ways to foster teamwork and collaboration. We had a large group - about 50 teachers and school leaders, and had a really interesting day -- when I showed the "Are you listening?" video, a whole bunch of students gathered upstairs in the area overlooking where I was speaking to watch - I think they were really curious that so many teachers were learning about their way of using technology!

After a fantastic dinner by the water with a group of curriculum developers, I headed to sleep -- because I had to catch a 6:40am flight to Canberra!

I made it to the nation's capital early in the morning, and it was freezing! 0 degrees but it warmed up as the sun rose... I had a few hours to fit the gym and have lunch before heading to Canberra University -- the group in Canberra decided to have an evening workshop (4-9pm) with dinner. Although everyone had a full day of work before showing up, we still had a lot of active participation, and after wrapping up at 9 and getting back to the hotel around 10, it was time for sleep for another 6:45am flight back to Sydney for the last workshop of the trip!

Arriving in Sydney in the morning, with my 32kg on-the-dot bag faithfully appearing on the carousel, I headed off to Parramatta right on time, and arrived 3 minutes before the workshop was to begin! We had the biggest crowd of any session -- around 60 people, and so a lot of the interactive sections took a lot longer than usual, but they had great ideas and a large group of schools approached me after and wants to deeply engage their entire district with TIGed, which is exciting! After wrapping up and chatting with a bunch of the attendees, I was off to one of my favourite hotels in the world -- the Westin Sydney, to relax, enjoy their great gym, and have dinner with Jenny, who had the whole series of workshops organized, to debrief on the experience (yum, Tasmanian lamb!). After that, I met up with Jarra and Nick, and headed to Micky's for dessert (Banana Pancakes and Ice Cream!) to catch up and for me to celebrate the completion of 10 sessions in 11 days in 5 cities!

I'm writing this now on the flight to Vancouver -- I managed to get right to sleep after lunch on the 10am flight, which will hopefully mean I can work through the North American day and head to sleep at a proper time tonight. Saturday, we head to Quebec City for the World Youth Congress to meet TIG members from all over the world. I've also agreed to head to Brisbane on the 19th to speak at the Queenland Government's e-learning summit, and after that, I'll be ready to just settle down at home and enjoy the rest of the summer in Toronto :)

August 7, 2008 | 10:58 PM Comments  0 comments

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Conquering the Tasman Sea and other Australian adventures...

Now that I've been away a full week, I forced myself to carve out some time to reflect on the intensity of the time so far before kicking off the second stretch.

As always, our summers at TakingITGlobal are quite busy -- generally for the education "industry", most conferences are held during the summer when teachers have school holidays. This summer, as a follow-up to my keynote at last October's ACEL (Australian Counsel of Educational Leaders) conference (which was apparently quite good even though I was quite sick at the time), I was invited to be a "Traveling Scholar" for ACEL, presenting 5 full-day workshops on TakingITGlobal to school leaders and teachers across Australia. In addition, I started off the trip by keynoting a leadership conference at Melbourne Grammar School, and today keynoted the International Middle Years conference in Adelaide... so I've made quite good use of two weeks!

Sunday - Wednesday: Melbourne

After the trek from Toronto to Vancouver to Sydney to Melbourne, I knew the first thing I needed to do to keep my sanity was to spend a good amount of time at the fitness center at the Westin. What a great idea - it helped me refresh, have a fantastic swim in the beautiful infinity pool, and after a brief stroll that was quickly canceled when the rain started, I got to sleep at a reasonable hour.

On Monday, I woke up nice and early and arrived at the charming greened campus of Melbourne Grammar, one of Melbourne's oldest and most respected private schools. To their enormous credit, they had invited students from a broad cross-section of Melbourne to attend the conference, in addition to a grade of their students. I was brilliantly introduced by one of their capable students, and my keynote was well-received - with more questions from students than we had time for. Following the keynote, a panel including a futurist, scientist, and Aboriginal leader Patrick Dodson, who cited my presentation several times as they discussed issues of leadership in the 21st century and challenged students to act on the issues they felt challenged by. In the afternoon, I ran several hours of hands-on workshops guiding a small group of students through the TIG site and beginning the Guide to Action as a tool for action planning.

Tuesday morning, I visited Kilsyth, a suburb of Melbourne, and ran a 3 hour workshop with a group of teachers across that region looking at TIG and especially with an interest in Health education... it was a good challenge because we didn't have Internet except for a very slow 2G connection, so I was able to get well prepared and experiment with some activities for the following days' sessions!

That evening, I traveled to Mooney Valley Racecourse (home of Australia's best race - the Cox plate, worth $3 million!) and presented our work at TIG to about 150 principals, who also had some great questions, and I enjoyed meeting a teacher who grew up in Mississauga and had spent his recent years enjoying and exploring Australia's wilderness.

On Wednesday, I spent from 9 AM to 3:30 PM with an enthusiastic group of teachers and principals learning about TIG, exploring global issues, and understanding how to fit our programs and ideas at TIG into the curriculum and everyday use in their classrooms. I also shared our Best Practices on Global Education resource with them... and then I was off to the airport, heading to my next destination: Tasmania!

Thursday - Saturday: Hobart, Tasmania

On Thursday, I woke up and did it all over again, in a beautiful setting amongst Lemon trees at Lateare Gardens in Hobart with a fire burning to keep us all warm and cozy from the cold outside! I think the goals of what we do at TakingITGlobal really connected closely with some people - one teacher was literally in tears sharing how wonderful she thought what we did was... it's really a special opportunity (as exhausting as it is) to be able to share our work with people that are also dedicating their lives to helping young people develop. I think sometimes we all forget the power and opportunity we have to impact the lives of others - and I feel like a few people really felt reconnected to that opportunity, which is really an amazing opportunity to be able to stimulate.

After a short 2 hour break to refresh and do some e-mail, I headed off to the Hobart Yacht club, where I addressed about 50 high school principals, who weren't able to attend the day's workshop because they were having a leadership retreat. I had to pack 90 minutes into a 30 minute before dinner speech, so I think it was overwhelming, but many of them were quite excited by what we do... and I had delicious local Salmon which was a bonus!

The next day was my main day off. I decided not to head off to my next destination right away, but to stick around in Hobart and see some of the beautiful wildlife Tasmania has to offer. So I signed up for a Tasman Island Eco Cruise - having no idea how much of an adventure it would be! After a scenic bus ride to Port Arthur, one of the main convict colonies from the 1800s, we boarded a powerful boat (675 HP) that they describe as a 4x4 of the sea. Initially the ride was quite smooth - and we discovered some caves and amazing rock formations on the coast. The "swells" were only about 1 meter, and so it was just like jumping waves on a boat at home.

However, once we got out to the Tasman Sea, things got a lot more interesting. The waves and the winds were coming strongly from an unusual direction, and 2-3 meter waves and swells gave us quite a ride! I had chosen to sit in the 4th row (moved from the 2nd) and for close to an hour, we jumped waves and it felt like we were on a roller coaster as we plunged down after riding a wave.... but I stuck with my seat - a once-in-a-lifetime experience!

We arrived at two areas with Australian and New Zealand seals, and at a cove where dolphins chased our boat around until we had to leave - amazing to lean over and watch them at the water and bow of the boat jumping up playfully! A number of albatross with their huge wingspans also provided us with an amazing show - watching them fish and gracefully glide across the sky with nothing around us but huge rock and menacing water... or what looked menacing in my book. In 1998, however, the water was so rough that in the annual Sydney-Hobart race, five boats sank and six sailors were killed.

On Saturday morning, before heading to the airport, I spent a few hours enjoying the Salamanca Market, with hundreds of stalls offering delicious local treats and art and coffee and everything needed to pass a few hours and take in the culture of a place!

Sunday - Monday: Adelaide, South Australia

Now I'm here in Adelaide, where this morning I keynoted the International Middle Years of Schooling conference, and was again introduced by a fantastic student duo! I gave out dozens of bookmarks afterwards, with many many people promising to check out the site and connect their students into TIG. I was also followed by an excellent presentation by Professor Erica, who gave a talk on creativity that linked really perfectly and built on top of many of the themes I covered.

Tomorrow I'm off to the Australian Science and Mathematics School to do another day-long workshop, and then heading to Canberra the next morning... I'll be sure to check in soon with more! And I'll be editing this entry in about 2 hours with photos once they upload.

G'day for now, Mike

August 3, 2008 | 6:04 AM Comments  3 comments

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Multicolored Temptation (2008)

 

"Du kamst in meinen Garten.
Er war dunkel.
Meine Verzweiflung muss dich gerufen haben.

Du klopftest vorsichtig an.
Zeigtest mir lebendige Farben von unglaublicher Schönheit.
Wolltest mir sagen, dass du da bist, dass da mehr ist.

Ich war fasziniert. Ich war erschrocken.

Mein Herz war nicht offen.
Mein Herz ist winzig...deine Liebe zu groß.

Ich kann Menschen lieben und Gefühle aber nicht die Liebe selbst.
Du kannst mich lieben wie ich bin.
Ich könnte dich lieben wie ich wollte
aber das erscheint mir unerreichbar.

Deshalb bleibe ich in meinem Garten,
in meiner überschaubaren Welt.
Klein und begrenzt.
Mal hell, mal dunkel
und so farbig wie es geht."

July 6, 2008 | 2:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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mfurdyk   mfurdyk Michael Furdyk's TIGblog
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First Day @ PUSH 2008

I'm speaking tomorrow at PUSH, an interesting conference here in Minneapolis, MN

The first session that just wrapped up was quite interesting - Chandran Nair took us through a look at the world's problems and how many misconceptions there are about what can solve them. What I found striking was the comparison of world problems to spending on trivial/much less meaningful things:

Health & Nutrition ($13B) : Petfood Spending in the USA ($17B)
Water and Sanitation ($9B) : Ice Cream in Europe ($11B)
Education ($6B) : Cosmetics in the USA ($8B)

Jonathan Greenblatt, one of the co-founders of Ethos Water, also gave us a compelling look into the world of Water and how simple and cheap ($25/person) it is to solve. The one thing I don't get - on a $1.79 bottle of water, Starbucks (which acquired Ethos) donates 5 cents (10 cents in Canada oddly). They were founded on the basis of donating 50% of profits... I can't believe profit on that bottle of water is only 10 cents! (considering how much cheaper other bottled water is). Anyway, he now works with a new magazine - GOOD - which has a unique subscription model of giving away the $20 subscription fee to a charity of your choice.

June 16, 2008 | 11:49 AM Comments  1 comments

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We are the ones

How can this not inspire you with hope that the messages that captivate our friends in the U.S. voting this fall can be positive and not just negative? Messages that excite with the possibility of a positive future, not try to cast fear and uncertainty as the reason to select a person.



I'm very proud of them for ending the video with the simple message of "vote" - resisting the urge to squeeze it beyond need towards the candidate.

May 12, 2008 | 2:59 AM Comments  3 comments

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