Posts Tagged ‘Michelangelo’
The Invisible Mentor Week in Review
This is what we talked about on The invisible Mentor Blog this week: Review of Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions by Guy Kawasaki, Leonardo da Vinci, Renaissance Man and Interview with Runa Magnusdottir.
Mondays at the Salon
After reading The Way of the Samurai by Inazo Nitobe, I extracted seven interesting quotes.
Seven Quotations from the Way of the Samurai
Booked on Tuesdays
This week we reviewed Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions by Guy Kawasaki. The book demonstrates how to enchant others by becoming likeable and trustworthy.
Review: Enchantment: The Art of Changing Hearts, Minds, and Actions by Guy Kawasaki
Wisdom Wednesdays
Leonardo da Vinci’s talent spread multiple disciplines. Though he did not complete many of the projects he started, he cemented his place in history because he was very curious and experimented a lot. Artists such as Raphael and Michelangelo adopted some of da Vinci’s techniques to improve their work. Da Vinci studied nature and human form which brought a lifelike quality to his work. Each figure in his paintings was very distinct and had its own personality. He is best remembered for his paintings The Last Supper and Mona Lisa.
Leonardo da Vinci, Renaissance Man
Perspective Thursdays and Workshop Fridays
This week we featured Runa Magnusdottir, founder of Connected Women. Runa shares her wisdom and reminds us to keep focused and to find our passions. Here are Part One and Part Two of Runa Magnusdottir’s interview.
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Review of The Angel Inside: Michelangelo, Il Gigante, and Creating a life of Power and Beauty by Chris Widener
The Angel Inside is a fun, yet thoughtful book that you can read in about an hour. This book is in the form of a fable, which makes it very easy to read. While reading The Angel Inside, I was processing the information presented and looking at ways to relate it to my life. The book is about finding that person of power and beauty, which is within every one of us.
The book starts off with a very disillusioned 30-year old Tom Cook, who travels from the US to Europe to find himself – to look for a new direction for his life. Back in the US, Tom was living an unfulfilled life. He was working in a job which he hated, trying to make his father proud of him. He was desperately trying to please his father.
The day before his return to the US, he is sitting on a bench in Florence feeling forlorned because he hasn’t found what he was searching for. A stranger, who looks to be in his seventies, and much later revealed as Mr. Bounarroti, enters his life and changes it forever. This stranger parachutes into Tom’s life and uses sculpting and Michelangelo‘s David – Il Gigante to teach him lessons in life and help him to find his way.
The stranger takes Tom to the Galleria dell’ Accademia to view Michelangelo’s sculpture of David. Tom learns the following life lessons:
- Find the angel inside you
- Follow your own passion
- Be confident in your strength
- Pay attention to details, you’ll discover beauty
- Your hands can create what your mind conceives
- Plan and prepare
- Every accomplishment starts with one swift action
- Embrace the stages of chipping, sculpting, sanding and polishing
- Be content because success sometimes takes years
- No one starts with the Sistine Chapel (Small successes lead to greater successes
Chris Widener uses sculpting as a metaphor for life in his fable. To expand on lesson eight, first, you have to chip away or get rid of what doesn’t work in your life. Second you have to sculpt or mold your life the way you want it to be. Third, adversity and negative circumstances often sand away the rough spots in our lives, which strengthen us and allow us to grow. And fourth, polishing allows our power and beauty to shine through.
The stranger instructs Tom and tells him “The tools of a sculptor are few, but the tools for sculpting a life are many. We are a product of the things that we allow to shape and influence our lives. Everything that we interact with will shape and mold whom we become. This includes both what we choose to involve ourselves with as well as what we choose to not involve ourselves with… Our business associates and our friends are people who we can choose at will. We should choose these people wisely for what they will help us become.”
Five Great Ideas
- People often have so much invested in what they are currently doing that they cannot start to live and fulfill their dreams
- Fear often prevents us from taking the first step
- Books give us the ability to converse with the author
- Have a network of people around us who act as a springboard to a better life
- Most people cannot create or accomplish great work that’s lasting until they have gone through the process of growing and learning from their experience
I recommend The Angel Inside
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