
Yesterday I played chess with Roy. We sometimes meet up in a café overlooking the sea. He brings his chess set; I buy a pot of tea. We have a pleasant afternoon together.
I like chess. The move of each piece is predictable; there are rules. Problems can be solved by strategies and logic. Yesterday we won one came each, so Roy and I both went home happy.

Yesterday I chatted with Polly. Polly’s a young, single mum with two teenage daughters. She’s been waiting for a date for her hysterectomy; it’s just come through. She’s had her instructions – no driving for six weeks, two months off work.
Polly’s anxious; she has problems to solve. Polly’s also optimistic; with the support of family and friends she will get through this time, to a healthy, happy future.
French horn player Felix Klieser is playing in this year’s Proms. Born without arms he plays the instrument with his left foot. In a BBC interview he said:
‘The most important thing, when I grew up, is to learn to solve problems, I never knew what is possible for me and what is not possible. But when you have a way of thinking, ‘Ok, I can solve every problem,’ then you have many, many possibilities in your life.
And this is not a question of having a disability or not, because in the end all of us has something where he or she thinks ‘Ok, there is a limit’.’

On Sunday Lou talked about the prophet Haggai solving a problem… rebuilding Israel’s derelict, destroyed temple.
Haggai talked about their God’s instructions; God would motivate and inspire them. Haggai explained the strategy – going up the mountain, bringing down timber; it was then important to be committed to the job of building…

Musing on problem solving...
Roy’s chess… straightforward, objective, logical.
Polly’s surgery… personal, uncertainties, anxiety-inducing, optimistic.
Felix’s horn playing… achieving dreams, attempting the apparently impossible
Lou/Haggai’s temple building… God’s inspiration & involvement… just getting on with it.
Ha, i didnt do too well with my problem solving yesterday.
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But you did well to get on TV!! We look forward to seeing more!!
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I enjoy your format, Malcolm. Three vignettes with a closing summary of each. It all fits together like a tapestry. I especially enjoyed the lean thinker cartoon. It reminds me of my job. Blessings!
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Thanks David. I guess the format has evolved from my decision to write a daily blog where I ask such questions as ‘What was different about yesterday?’ ‘What did I learn from yesterday?’ Where was God in yesterday?’… So it often brings together different bits of my ‘yesterday’.
And relating to your ‘elevator pitch’ – my maximum is 330 words – in an attempt to be concise and help with focus.
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I laughed out loud at the Lean Thinker – I’d never contemplated the glass being the wrong size🤣
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I liked it too. You know me Lynn – when presented with two alternatives I like to find a third!
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Yes, I’ve realised that over the past months🤣
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