Showing posts with label Austrian Writers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austrian Writers. Show all posts

David Steindl-Rast


"Impatience makes us get ahead of ourselves, reaching out for something in the future and not really being content with where we are, here and now."





















Austrian Writer / Catholic Monk


1926 - 











Many creative leaders don't live in the here and now.  They are always looking forward to tomorrow when they sell their first book or have their first gallery showing or have enough money to create their works of art full time.  They spend most of their time in the future and ignore the beauty around them.  They are not grateful for what they have and the people in their lives.  They want to be where they are not.  Then one day they wake up and life has past them by and they have grown old and there is no tomorrow where they can dwell.  





Are you living in the world of tomorrow?  Or are you living in the now?  Are you grateful for what you have and what you have been given?  Or are you seeking new opportunities, living in a time beyond time where only dreams exist?





I am not saying that one should not have goals or dreams.  Both are necessary for living.  We just shouldn't spend all our time there.  We need to appreciate where we are now and what we can learn from this moment in our lives.  We need to enjoy the people in our lives and appreciate their friendship and love.  Don't let your impatience for success keep you from enjoying the moment.





Take a few minutes to watch this video and listen to the words of David Steindl-Rast.











You have read this article Austrian Writers / David Steindl-Rast / Gift / Gratitude / patience with the title Austrian Writers. You can bookmark this page URL https://gem-vita.blogspot.com/2012/05/david-steindl-rast.html. Thanks!

Martin Buber




"Play is the exultation of the possible."











— Martin Buber


Austrian Philosopher/Writer


1878 - 1965














Adults often forget how to play.  We become too serious and think play is beneath us.  The truth is that play relaxes us and helps us be more creative.  So relearn how to play and have fun.  Create your own games.  Fantasize about the world.  Explore the possibilities.  Some of the best play is unplanned and spontaneous.  Be ready to follow the path of the unexpected.  Learn to be silly and goofy.  Be willing to be and look foolish.  
You have read this article Austrian Writers / Fun / Martin Buber / Play with the title Austrian Writers. You can bookmark this page URL https://gem-vita.blogspot.com/2012/04/martin-buber.html. Thanks!

Peter Drucker


"Here I am, fifty-eight, and I still don't know what I'm going to be when I grow up."












Austrian Writer/Management Consultant


1909 - 2005











We have all been asked the question:  "What do you want to be when you grow up?"  And we usually give the simple answers like teacher, nurse or fireman.  The first response that I remember making was architect.  My father was a general contractor and I was in the seventh grade.  





When I was a sophomore in high school I dedicated my life to the ministry.  By the time I was senior I had lost my faith.  While in college I decided I wanted to be a writer and I have spent more than thirty-five years writing.  And since life has a way of coming full circle, I also became a speaker.  Sometimes an audience member will tell me that I missed my calling — that I should have been a preacher.  I smile and in my heart I know that I have been a preacher, although I have no church and no gospel.





When I turned fifty, I wrote an article for my college alumni magazine entitled: What Do I Want To Be When I Grow Up? Or How I Found Myself!  I realized that I had grown up to be what I had wanted to be.  I had lived the life that I desired.  I had done what I wanted to do.  Here is a link to the article.









Have you become the person you wanted to be?  Or are you still wandering through the forest of uncertainty, not knowing what you want to do with your life?
You have read this article Austrian Writers / Decisions / Desire / Peter Drucker / purpose / Unfinished with the title Austrian Writers. You can bookmark this page URL https://gem-vita.blogspot.com/2011/11/peter-drucker.html. Thanks!

Oskar Kokoschka


"How do I define a work of art?  It is not an asset in the stock-exchange sense, but a man's timid attempt to repeat the miracle that the simplest peasant girl is capable of at any time, that of magically producing life out of nothing."












Austrian Painter, Poet, Playwright


1886 - 1980














The Bride of the Wind
(1914)


When I stop and think about it, the birth of a child is probably one of the greatest miracles known to the human race.  Although I must say that it takes more than a simple peasant girl.  A peasant boy is usually involved also.  Nothing we do as painters, writers or composers will ever equal the conception of a child.  But that should not discourage us.  What we create is our attempt at defeating death — to live beyond the few short years we are given.  And for some they work will survive hundreds of years.





How do you define the artistic work that you do?  Why do you do it?  What motivates you to create new pieces of work?  Where do you place creative work in the greater scheme of things?





Here is a video that displays some of the paintings of Oskar Kokoschka.  Enjoy.











You have read this article Austrian Artists / Austrian Writers / Birth / Child / Death / Ideas / life / Oskar Kokoschla with the title Austrian Writers. You can bookmark this page URL https://gem-vita.blogspot.com/2011/04/oskar-kokoschka.html. Thanks!

Viktor Emil Frankl


"Our greatest freedom is the freedom to choose our attitude."


















Austrian Psychiatrist/Writer


1905 - 1997











I believe that everything in life is a choice.  We choose how we get up in the morning.  We choose how we go to work.  We choose our attitudes.  I believe we have little or no control over what happens to us.  We can be in a car accident, be diagnosed with cancer or get fired from our job.  We have no control over preventing these things from happening.  The only thing we have control over is how we respond to what happens to us.  We have 100% control of our attitude.  As Frankl says, we have the freedom to choose our attitude.





What is your attitude to your life?  Your art?  What is your attitude to the people around you? Do you choose to be optimistic and positive?  Or are you grouchy?  Discouraged?  Negative?  Are you always finding fault with people and the world around you?  Do continually make sarcastic comments and put people down?  Or do you look for the good in people?  Even the worst of people have some good in them.  





As creative leaders we choose our attitudes.  Choose today to be positive, dedicated and inspiring.  Choose to find the silver lining in every dark cloud.  Choose to be a better you.  And then you will be a better artist.
You have read this article Action / Attitude / Austrian Writers / Beliefs / Choice / Creative Leaders / Gratitude / optimism / Viktor Frankl with the title Austrian Writers. You can bookmark this page URL https://gem-vita.blogspot.com/2010/12/viktor-emil-frankl.html. Thanks!