Making the World Too Small cover art

Making the World Too Small

Making the World Too Small

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

The Time Academy Podcast with Tom O'Leary is a time management podcast that asks questions of our relationship with time.




Welcome to Episode 13 - Making the World Too Small


The Episode at a Glance

* The idea of making the world too small is inspired by the poet David Whyte and yet the concept is eternal.


* It is about the conversations we choose to have with ourselves and others, and equally importantly the conversations we choose to avoid.


* So what conversations are you avoiding?


* Where are you refusing to look?


Further Inspiration

If you are looking for further inspiration, treat yourself to the poem Sweet Darkness by David Whyte (text and audio): https://onbeing.org/poetry/sweet-darkness/



If you find the reflections useful, please share them. I would also love to get your feedback and hear your stories so please feel free to email me at hello @ tomoleary.ie


A full transcript is available here: https://www.tomoleary.ie/time-management-podcast/the-time-academy-podcast-episode-13-making-the-world-too-small/



About Tom O'Leary

Tom's focus is on building bridges to regenerative futures.


His primary offering – through a process he calls Ecological Coaching – is about supporting leaders as they transition their organisations.


It involves expanding mindsets, enhancing skillsets and evolving organisational structures all in service of life.


In working with clients, Tom realised that a key enabler of any transition is reimagining our relationship with time.


Busyness limits our ability to imagine what might be.


And unless we create space to imagine what might be, we will certainly never build it!


If any of this resonates, please reach out to Tom at hello@tomoleary.ie or learn about his vision for possible regenerative futures.



This episode was edited by Podlad

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

No reviews yet