Hey everyone! Happy Easter! Or if you don't celebrate Easter, then Happy Apocalypse. My desire to make little chocolate Jesuses has again gone unachieved, but there is always next year – it is good to have goals. What I have been able to do this Easter is slow down. When the Coronavirus hit and the … Continue reading Slowing down
Keeping a Coronavirus diary
A week or so back I started keeping a Coronavirus diary. I am posting it on the Student Health and Wellbeing Blog that I manage as part of my day job. You can access the entries so far here: https://blogs.flinders.edu.au/student-health-and-well-being/category/coronavirus/ As with many things I do nowadays there is a dual purpose to the diary. … Continue reading Keeping a Coronavirus diary
Chapter 7 of my book is up
The first draft of Chapter 7 - Principles of self-improvement has been posted and is now ready to read. When I was writing the chapter I had the mental image of a coach giving a team a pep-talk before the big final. The pep-talk isn't about tactics. It is about reminding the team of their … Continue reading Chapter 7 of my book is up
What art has taught me about incremental change
I like drawing. I am not very good at it. The best I can do are modestly complicated doodles. Abstract 2-dimensional representations of something going on in my brain. I tend to turn to art during times of high emotional arousal. It might be because I am very happy and I want to celebrate the … Continue reading What art has taught me about incremental change
Let’s talk about distress
A repost of a blog I wrote for my job. A week or so back my GP got me to fill out the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS). It is a common instrument used by GP’s and psychologists to get a measure of a person’s level of distress. I showed high levels of stress … Continue reading Let’s talk about distress
How much can you change your own happiness?
A repost from a blog post I wrote for the Student Health and Wellbeing Blog. So I read this article on the bus home the other day. It is called “Revisiting the Sustainable Happiness Model and Pie Chart: Can Happiness Be Successfully Pursued?” It is by Kennon Sheldon and Sonja Lyubomirsky. In essence, the article … Continue reading How much can you change your own happiness?
Try writing your life philosophy
For some strange reason, whilst I was in the shower the other day, I started wondering what my current answer to the question 'what is a good life?' would be. I imagined having only a minute on prime-time TV to trying to explain it, so I sat down over two separate occasions and tried to … Continue reading Try writing your life philosophy
Chapter 6 of my book is up
I can't say the writing process is as easy or fast as I would like, but let's face it, that was kinda predictable. That being said, content is being developed and added slowly. I recently posted Chapter 6 to the website. It covers the many areas (16 in total) of one's life where you could … Continue reading Chapter 6 of my book is up
What catching the bus has taught me about time
My partner and I own two cars. One of them is approaching the end of it's useful life. It is much loved but the costs to repair and maintain it now massively outweigh it's value. At first I contemplated purchasing a replacement car. But when I did the maths, even a conservative second-hand car would … Continue reading What catching the bus has taught me about time
Get a free month of the Waking Up app
I've been using Sam Harris' Waking Up meditation app for about a year now. I took up mindfulness meditation almost out of frustration from hearing about it constantly in the news and scientific literature. It gets marketed as a cure-all, and whilst I am aware there is some scientific literature to back up some claims … Continue reading Get a free month of the Waking Up app









