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When you know why you’re doing what you want to do, you do it better.  You can prioritize clearly, adapt when you need, and endure the inevitable setbacks. More importantly, you’ll know when you’re heading in the right direction. This sense of clarity doesn’t just magically happen to you. Fortunately, it’s pretty straightforward to get […] The post “Why is this important to me?” appeared first on Herbert Lui.
a week ago

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More from Herbert Lui

What the jellyfish knows: A compilation

Do most people get stuck with their creative work because they didn’t create momentum? Or do most people create momentum, but need more time to think out a breakthrough idea? Which direction sounds more correct to you? To me, it’s very clear the first direction applies to more people. Most people’s creative ambitions die from […] The post What the jellyfish knows: A compilation appeared first on Herbert Lui.

13 hours ago 2 votes
My new Q&A video practice

When I ran my editorial studio, business leaders asked me lots of questions. I wrote notes and jotted these questions down. A few months ago, I pulled all of these questions together into one document, just so I could see what themes emerged.  In the spirit of “Publish, don’t send,” I started posting the questions […] The post My new Q&A video practice appeared first on Herbert Lui.

2 days ago 2 votes
Don’t let AI determine your intentions

Intention is the determination to do a specific thing, or act in a specific way. When you’re being intentional, and deliberate, you are taking the first step to exercising your will into the world. Everybody else might accept what’s happening, but you won’t. At its finest, AI technology helps augment and amplify your intention. The […] The post Don’t let AI determine your intentions appeared first on Herbert Lui.

3 days ago 3 votes
The jellyfish knows how to survive uncertain times

A lion’s mane jellyfish can release up to 45,000 eggs per day. The jellyfish’s strategy is to lay as many eggs as possible and leave them to fend for themselves. Most of these eggs don’t survive, probably fewer than 0.1%. In ecology, this approach is known as a high reproduction selection—better known as r–selection. Fish, […] The post The jellyfish knows how to survive uncertain times appeared first on Herbert Lui.

4 days ago 4 votes
From research to imagination

You remember a fragment of a song that sounds like it’s from the eighties. You do some research, but you struggle to remember where you heard it, and when. Your guesses are more imagination than recall. No hints come to mind.  When this happened to Questlove, he was stumped. He decided to transform this research […] The post From research to imagination appeared first on Herbert Lui.

5 days ago 4 votes

More in travel

What the jellyfish knows: A compilation

Do most people get stuck with their creative work because they didn’t create momentum? Or do most people create momentum, but need more time to think out a breakthrough idea? Which direction sounds more correct to you? To me, it’s very clear the first direction applies to more people. Most people’s creative ambitions die from […] The post What the jellyfish knows: A compilation appeared first on Herbert Lui.

13 hours ago 2 votes
South Croxted Road bus shelter

This may be the heritage-nerdiest bus stop in London. It's the bus stop at the end of South Croxted Road, close to the foot of Gipsy Hill. It's very old, it's locally listed and it's served by buses on route 3. More to the point it has an incredibly detailed information board inside relating the story of the shelter, local roads and local bus routes, which if you're borderline obsessive will keep you happily occupied while you wait for the next bus to turn up. Southwark Local List old tram shelter, not that trams ever came anywhere near here, the Dulwich Estate wouldn't have stood for it. But after London's tram network was decommissioned some of the old shelters were shifted to alternative locations and so it was with this rustic beauty. We don't know precisely where it came from, only that it was relocated from elsewhere else in the borough of Camberwell. The acquisition of a bus shelter on this site was first discussed by the Dulwich Estate Board in 1959 in conjunction with negotiations about sites for new council housing. I hope you're getting some idea of the heritage-nerdiness here already. 110 Alleyn Road was contacted with a view to giving up some of her garden. Her name was Mrs Edwards and in October 1960 she agreed to relinquish a corner of her garden not in return for payment but for a five-year extension to her lease. Camberwell council then paid for surveyors' fees, legal costs, paving charges and the cost of setting back and reconstructing the fences. The current house at number 110 isn't the original, it was built in the mid-1970s on the site of Mrs Edwards', but you can still clearly see the shelter-sized indentation in her tree-filled garden. South Croxted Road is a late Victorian creation, the original road hereabouts being the parallel Alleyn Road. The new connection couldn't be built until the old Dulwich Manor House had been demolished allowing a fresh link from Park Hall Road. That wood and plaster homestead wasn't actually a manor house, it gained that name in error in the 1860s, and its final owner was a certain Mr John Westwood who was the Secretary of various irrigation and canal companies in India. The Manor House estate was then bought by Edwad Van Vliet, a builder from South Norwood, who added the final section of the new road in 1898. This wasn't initially tarmacked so before WW1 Camberwell Vestry had to water it in the summer to keep the dust down. I could tell you where they kept the water carts, but I'll save that nugget for those who go along and read the board in person. In early November 1908 the motorbus between Brixton and South Croydon was numbered 3 and this is still the route which serves South Croxted Road. In late November 1908 the route was extended north to Oxford Circus and in April 1909 it gained an extension to Purley on Sundays only. Following various wartime twiddles the 3's official route settled down to become Camden Town to Crystal Palace, with a shorter Brixton to Crystal Palace 3A variant operating between 1924 and 1934. The 3's northern end has since been sequentially cut back to Oxford Circus (1986), Regent Street (2015), Piccadilly Circus (2017), Whitehall (2019) and Victoria (2023), although the information board doesn't mention the latter because it's too recent. It does however mention various other changes which I haven't recorded here for reasons of conciseness and tedium. 2023 more than 70 residents nominated the South Croxted Road Bus Shelter. One of them wrote "The lovely wooden bus shelter only exists as a local resident gave up their garden to support the wider schools and housing expansion in this area", which suggests they too had read the information board. Another said "There used to be two matching wooden shelters here and this one survives", which is intriguing because the other side of the road would have been in the borough of Lambeth so administratively separate from Camberwell. The borough boundary still splits the road and the 3 still passes by, should you ever find yourself waiting for it in this splendid old tram throwback. If only more bus shelters had an information board inside how much more entertaining our journeys might be. Or perhaps not, depending.

22 hours ago 1 votes
My new Q&A video practice

When I ran my editorial studio, business leaders asked me lots of questions. I wrote notes and jotted these questions down. A few months ago, I pulled all of these questions together into one document, just so I could see what themes emerged.  In the spirit of “Publish, don’t send,” I started posting the questions […] The post My new Q&A video practice appeared first on Herbert Lui.

2 days ago 2 votes
Down the country lane

Down the country lane Scraped-out ditch Speed limit begins Table of eggs for sale Footbridge to the paddocks Customers for the swimming pool White sofa on the first floor landing Workmen making the garage habitable Nosey neighbour walking repeatedly past Once we're home shall we put the kettle on?

2 days ago 3 votes