The person who wills the good in truth is the only freeĀ person.
Personal History, the remarkable autobiography of Katherine Graham was the best book I read this year. Itās part business strategy, part modern American history, part painfully candid memoir. Long, and worthy of the time. David Remnickās review from 1997 does it some justice.
There is no good way to know except toĀ try.
The Meyerowitz Stories was my favourite movie of the year. Hereās a good description of why:
With the internet, everyoneās so knowledgeable, everyone knows so much about music, everybody got a top five. But a lot of people donāt really digest the music and just be personal with it.āāāāVinceĀ Staples
Paul Kellyās live show in the Melbourne Botanic Gardens was a stunning memory. The highlight was the a capella āMeet Me In The Middle of the Airā.
I recommend listening to my summer holiday playlist:
Burialās epic āUntrueā turned 10 this year.
Tom Petty died. āDamn The Torpedoesā was the first album I fell in love with.
After first discovering him through āWhite Iversonā I dove right in to the Post Malone album āStoneyā. Heās a bizarro mix of rock, rap and country. His hero is Bob Dylan and when Dylanās grandson played him Maloneās music for the first time, Dylan apparently said he liked the music but thought Malone needed help with the lyrics. Which is about as perfect a summary of Post Malone as you could get.
My albums of the yearāāāFourtetās āNew Energyā, War on Drugsā āA Deeper Understandingā, and Julien Bakerās āTurn Out The Lightsā.
A part of good science is to see what everyone else can see but think what no one else hasĀ thought.
As a sports fan, you canāt ask for better than overhearing Cam Newton in this clip: āYouāve been watching film too huh? Thatās cool. Watch this.ā
NFL Turning Point is my favourite YouTube series.
The Orangutan Theory: If a smart person goes into a room with an orangutan and explains whatever his or her idea is, the orangutan just sits there eating his banana, and at the end of the conversation, the person explaining comes outĀ smarter.
The podcast that helped me the most practically was Ezra Kleinās deep dive with Cal Newport on deep work and maximising focus and attention.
Cal Newport on doing Deep Work and escaping social media - The Ezra Klein Show
I was asked recently to name a book that changed my life. The book I chose was Cal Newport's "Deep Work," and for theā¦overcast.fm
As a group we all shared our heroes, our greatest hardship and our lifeās greatest highlight. It was profound.
A wise old owl lived in an oak, The more he saw the less he spoke, The less he spoke, the more he heard, Why arenāt we all like that oldĀ bird?
Australia (finally) became the 25th country to recognise same-sex marriage.
When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be theĀ truth.
This summer, I canāt stop wearing: Patagonia Baggies, and Uniqloās Supima Cotton Tees.
I bought a 1000-piece puzzle for our beach holiday. What a way to 1/ get to know a painting and 2/ disconnect.
Portrait Mode on the iPhone X is my new favourite product.
There is no greater wealth thanĀ health.
I started Crossfit in the latter part of 2017. Whatās not good about Crossfit: insanely high-reps of technical lifts done by people not capable of them (me). Whatās good about it: constantly learning new movements, never boring, easy to see progress, a sense of competition and community thatās hard to find anywhere else in the realm of amateur exercise.
Melbourneās Ramblr was the best meal we had this year.
I discovered a new favourite food: pancakes with real maple syrup, cream and passionfruit.
The best articles I read recently:
David Foster Wallace: Seven days in the life of the late, great John McCain
Interview with Emmanuel Macron āWe Need to Develop Political Heroismā
In a year that took just slightly more than it gave, I loved getting back to the beach.
Beach holidays when you have little kids are the most extraordinary thing.
22 years since we first started going there, this little fibro house by the sea hasnāt changed.
For over a thousand years Roman conquerors returning from the wars enjoyed the honor of triumph, a tumultuous parade. In the procession came trumpeteers, musicians and strange animals from conquered territories, together with carts laden with treasure and captured armaments.
The conquerors rode in a triumphal chariot, the dazed prisoners walking in chains before him. Sometimes his children robed in white stood with him in the chariot or rode the traceĀ horses.
A slave stood behind the conqueror holding a golden crown and whispering in his ear a warning: that all glory is fleeting.
For past editions of this series, see: