There's nothing that's not immaculate in here. This is the place where being impeccable is the bottom line. Ordinarily that's above us, unreachable, even sterile. But in here it's the norm. In here it's the epitome of joy, radiance, and it defines and provides the platform for who we really are. This place isn't cleaned traditionally with brooms and mops. In here we clean by taking who we are and putting it into the space. That's the way this place stays pristine. There's a deep respect for the arts in here. The library is well stocked (and well read). Sensible works of art, many of them in the minimalist Zen style with sweeping thick bold brush strokes, strategically hang on clean bare walls. Occasionally Italian opera and the best of today's rock 'n roll resound from superfine Bose speakers. Even the log in the fireplace is carefully aligned. The shag rug is raked a certain way. That's right: raked! The pillows on the sumptuous leather armchairs are arranged exactly. And it doesn't matter why the pillows are arranged this way. Arranging them this way works. If you can't arrange pillows this way, you don't get to arrange pillows at all - at least, not in here. But what's more interesting than why shag rugs should be raked or why pillows should be arranged exactly is the way you have to be in here to rake rugs and to arrange pillows. There's no margin in here for expediency. There's no margin in here for going through the motions. In here you get to be impeccable and you get to be immaculate because the rules of this space have been set up to demand you be this way. In here, being impeccable and being immaculate aren't chores. They're opportunities. |
The first time I saw that car it wasn't in the garage. Here's what happened. I'm walking on Washington Street in San Francisco when a 1950 Jaguar Mark V Drophead Coupé drives by. A lover of classic cars, I'm instantly mesmerized. Scanning it's lines, it's white walled tires, it's sheer majesty, it takes me a while to notice a hand sticking out the window waving furiously at me. "He's waving at the wrong guy" I think, totally certain I don't know anyone who drives a car like this. Then the Jaguar turns at the cross street I'm stopped at to marvel at it, and I see it's Werner waving, the blazing smile instantly recognizable even through a windshield bright with dancing reflections of the San Francisco street scene. "That's so cool!" I think. "He's never too busy to be with.". |
| © Laurence Platt - 2007 through 2009 | Permission |