Pages

January 28, 2011

All of my good ideas are battles

Who profits off you being unhealthy v. healthy?

Jay Parkinson, MD 16 hours ago in reply to fran

  • Coca-Cola makes a direct profit off you behaving unhealthily. What are the companies that make a direct profit off your everyday behaviors that optimize health?Like Reply
Jon Christianson 13 hours ago in reply to Jay Parkinson, MD

  • This is a good question - much of the US economy clearly benefits from promoting unhealthy behavior (e.g, mainstream food industry, energy, health care, retail, etc.).

    I suspect most facets of tourism make a direct profit off of behaviors that optimize health.

January 20, 2011

Third Space

Inspired by Ray Oldenburg’s "Third Space" concept which states that society needs a place away from home (First Space) and work (Second Space). Third Spaces are "Anchors of Community Life and facilitate and foster broader, more creative interaction." Societies across the world have third spaces that manifest themselves as coffee houses, pubs, plazas, etc. The Summit is the ultimate Third Space.


The Summit SF

I've loved the idea of a "third space" since I learned of it only a year ago. I can't wait to go here.

January 14, 2011

There's no space for the extra space


ideasareawesome
:

There’s no space for the extra space. By Farhad Manjoo on Slate.

I saw this piece earlier in the day and loved it. We don't need two spaces after the period. It's just a convention that can be changed. Although, as I typed this I found myself double-tapping the space bar after periods and corrected it after the fact. Ugh.

Also, why do people put their hats on AFTER they get outside? You lose all that heat off the top of your head and then trap cold air inside. Put it on before you get out the door and you won't even feel the transition into cold weather.

January 12, 2011

via healthpopuli.com

What a revealing graphic. Practice Fusion continues to impress.

The joy of not being sold anything


I've been thinking a lot lately about useful ads, good ads, value-filled ads that inform us and motivate us. Ads about community events, blood donation, clean sidewalks, and healthy living. Ads that communicate the variety in our culture, the foods, the music, the arts, the people and their ways of thinking.

Ads that don't have to sell.

Why are we willing to believe things that are false?

Why, despite all the evidence to the contrary, do so many people remain adamant in their belief that vaccines are responsible for harming hundreds of thousands of otherwise healthy children? Why was the media so inclined to air their views? Why were so many others so readily convinced? Why, in other words, are we willing to believe things that are, according to all available evidence, false?

Newsletter: Winter 2011

This is a quarterly email newsletter with ideas, cool links, book
recommendations and a personal update. 

******
Read time: 2 1/2 minutes
******

-------------------------------
IDEAS
-------------------------------

1. Are you saying what you mean or is everyone listening to what they want to hear?

What's in our heads doesn't always translate verbally. Being bilingual,
I often wish I could use Hindi words to communicate what I'm trying
to say. Hindi has the ability to invoke various emotions with a single word.
I imagine Native American languages work similarly, exhibiting an emotive
quality that requires several English sentences to explain. English is far more
analytical, which is obviously its strongest quality. It reduces the strong cultural
and historical effects subject to shift meaning and clearly connotes a message.

Interestingly though, single words in English can have a different meaning
based on context. We may not think about word choice, but it has an impact
on how well we communicate with others. George Bernard Shaw said, "The
single biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
At work and with friends, I notice how much time and energy is spent on
correcting misunderstandings. Viewing language as variable and subjective
has made me much more attentive to whether I'm truly understanding what's
being said and whether I'm truly communicating what I want to say.




2. What will the internet look like in 10 years?

Every generation feels removed from the previous one and the
internet has widened the gap even more in the last 10 years. The
rate of growth, especially in social media, seems to have surpassed
the rate of adoption, with a few obvious exceptions; Facebook,
Twitter, LinkedIn, etc.

With no barrier to entry and an ubiquitous, open-source platform,
one would think the internet would allow very few people or companies
to rise to the top. The internet though is an enormous, real-time
sociological experiment that makes us either participants or observers.

Clay Shirky explains it brilliantly:

"In systems where many people are free to choose between many
options, a small subset of the whole will get a disproportionate
amount of traffic (or attention, or income), even if no members of
the system actively work towards such an outcome. This has nothing
to do with moral weakness, selling out, or any other psychological
explanation. The very act of choosing, spread widely enough and
freely enough, creates a power law distribution."




3. Is the economy shaping the job market or is it the other way around?

It's hard not to think about the job market right now. Unemployment
at 9% not only affects recent graduates, but also increases job lock
among current employees, shifts where we live, increases housing
prices, and diminishes productivity through long-term underemployment.

The soft side of unemployment is different though. While morale is
still low, people are finding creative ways to find work and companies
are responding with an increase in project-oriented work.




-------------------------------
BOOKS
-------------------------------

1. Daemon by Daniel Suarez

Fast-paced from the beginning, Daemon represents a whole new
thriller genre mixing technology and crime while staying out of the
sci-fi realm. Great summer/airplane/couch read.

Existential philosophy boiled down to two words that convey a
flippant yet energized attitude. The ability to fearlessly achieve
your goals is a strong theme in this book. A little bit of a
throwback to the 70's new-age, hippie motif (Parkin runs a retreat
called The Hill That Breathes), it's still a hilarious must-read.

3. White Noise by Dan Delillo
Strange and captivating, White Noise was written in 1985 and yet
eerily speaks of societal problems we face today, especially
media-induced fear. The writing is quirky, funny, and has a
lackadaisical style that makes tough vocabulary somehow easy to
understand. I felt like a better writer having read it.

-------------------------------
CONNECT
-------------------------------


-------------------------------
PERSONAL UPDATE
-------------------------------

Hi from NYC! My last year has been a thorough exploration of
restaurants and neighborhoods in NYC. I've expanded my horizons
beyond Manhattan into Brooklyn and I'm always amazed how the city
organically changes from street to street. If you're around, give
me a buzz and we can get together for coffee or dinner.

Cheers,
Akshay

January 10, 2011

Working Hurts Less

jingc:

On procrastination and how to think about the substitute activities that we do instead of dong work:

When you procrastinate, you’re probably not procrastinating because of the pain of working, because on a moment-to-moment basis, being in the middle of doing the work is usually less painful than being in the middle of procrastinating.

That is pretty useful to remember. And another tidbit:

I’m starting to think that […] you do not regain mental energy from [procrastination. Success and happinesscause you to regain willpower; what you need to heal your mind from any damage sustained by working is not inactivity, but reliably solvable problems which reliably deliver experienced jolts of positive reinforcement.

I think this is a pretty useful insight - when compelled to procrastinate, what you choose to do can greatly affect whether you manage to get actual work done later.

In October of last year, there was a great piece in the New Yorker about procrastination that convinced me to change my working habits immediately.

I took on exactly this philosophy that procrastination is a personal signal of unhappiness. Neal Stephenson once wrote, "Boredom is a mask that frustration wears". The usual precursor to procrastination was boredom, which told me two things; I was frustrated about something that was making me unhappy, which in turn was making me avoid what I was frustrated about.

I began looking for segues that would lead me back to productivity. If I had to read a long policy paper and I was procrastinating, I would read a novel instead, which would gear the reading side of my brain and get the right word-scanning juices flowing to ease into governmental policy.

If I had to analyze a report on work RVU productivity variations for five specialty practices, I would take a break from the computer, walk, and observe in detail my surroundings, exercising my analytical brain to see things I normally wouldn't see. When I got back to the task at hand, it'd be a natural transition to sit in front of the computer for a few hours comparing numbers.

As noted above, having self-awareness about how you feel when you're in the middle of something produces direct results in your behavior. I'd rather be in the middle of a good book or walk than surfing the web. Scheduled surf time is far more rewarding.

January 9, 2011

Bill Maher - Anti-Pharma Rant


“New rule, if you believe you need to take all the pills the pharmaceutical industry says you do, than you are already on drugs …” - Bill Maher

January 8, 2011

The Great College-Degree Scam

Here it is: approximately 60 percent of the increase in the number of college graduates from 1992 to 2008 worked in jobs that the BLS considers relatively low skilled—occupations where many participants have only high school diplomas and often even less.

How to land a job

"Here's how career changers are most likely to land a job: Make a list of 100 people who know you. They don't even have to love you. Let's take the worst case: a boss who fired you. He might be willing to give you a lead on a better-suited job. And that's the worst case. Chances are that if your list includes your relatives, your parent's and wife's relatives, your friends, your wife's and parents' friends, your past and present coworkers, bosses, customers, and vendors, your haircutter, accountant, lawyer, doctor, church members, co-volunteers, etc., you'll likely get leads to people willing to consider you for a project manager job outside of defense or refer you to someone who might. And you might hear about career areas you never would have thought of in a million years. Last week, I got a call from a client who got a job at a toy company monitoring plush stuffed-animal factories in China."

Japanese t-shirt folding technique



January 7, 2011

We carry all the power we need inside ourselves already

“If you choose to use your status and influence to raise your voice on behalf of those who have no voice; if you choose to identify not only with the powerful, but with the powerless; if you retain the ability to imagine yourself into the lives of those who do not have your advantages, then it will not only be your proud families who celebrate your existence, but thousands and millions of people whose reality you have helped change. We do not need magic to change the world, we carry all the power we need inside ourselves already: we have the power to imagine better.”

January 6, 2011

Hans Rosling: Visual Statistics


ideasareawesome:

The health & wealth of 200 countries over 200 years, in less than 5 minutes. Wait for the post-colonial explosion.

Via WaPo’s Ezra Klein.

Hans Rosling is amazing. If you like this, don't miss his TED talks.

January 5, 2011

livingasana:

my thoughts exactly. and by the way….shit happens.

Doubts can find no foothold

Doubts can find no foothold in our minds as we seldom concern ourselves with fleeting visions of failure.

January 4, 2011

Know what you eat


“Yet Americans watch 35 hours of television a week, according to a Nielsen survey. (Increasing amounts of that time are spent watching other people cook). And although there certainly are urban and rural pockets where people have little access to fresh food, about 90 percent of American households own cars, and anyone who can drive to McDonald’s can drive to a supermarket. But perhaps most important, a cooking repertoire of three basic recipes can get anyone into the kitchen and beyond the realm of takeout food, microwaved popcorn and bologna sandwiches in a few days.”

Cut-and-dry advice from Mark Bittman that seems sensible enough. The staple stir-fry, salad and rice/lentil combo are basically how I got started cooking again. In NYC, fighting the urge to eat out is difficult. It’s too easy to get great restaurant food and on top of that, grocery trips seem outrageously expensive and you wonder about the cost/benefit.

Bottomline: You know what you put in your food. Salt, oil, fat, and a clean kitchen is up for grabs at a restaurant. The peace of mind you get cooking at home is worth it.

Steve Pavlina On Leaving Facebook

"So I’ve crossed the threshold where Facebook’s value isn’t worth the hassle to use it. I concluded that the best choice was to simply drop the service altogether and invest my time elsewhere....

...From a subjective perspective, I’m not particularly disappointed. I’ve been wanting to spend less time online and more time connecting with people in person, so these problems may simply be part of the way that desire manifested."

-Steve Pavlina on Leaving Facebook

Steve's eloquent reasoning for leaving Facebook echoes my sentiments exactly. It's a clunky time-suck that doesn't add to the strong friendships I already have and creates an awkward resentment towards prior friends who I believe should have called when they got married, had a baby, moved and so on.

Snowpocalypse 2010




I'm sad to say I missed Snowpocalypse 2009 completely. But I still got some good shots. The city was a mess on Thursday so I can only imagine what Monday was like. That last shot truly is a burnt-out car, most likely set on fire from skidding its wheels too much.


January 3, 2011

Heat Source Matters

Having successfully weened myself off the microwave over the last 7 months, I'm now sensitive to the taste of heat when I do use the microwave. Microwave hot is sharp and sudden, as opposed to say stove hot, which has an even distribution and stays warm for much longer. Sensing the different quality of heat is most apparent in liquids, especially tea. If not for any other health benefits, gaining the ability to note the difference was worth it.

Similarly, another experiment I've been running in the winter is heating myself through exercise instead of turning up the thermostat. Coming in from the cold, blistery weather, my natural instinct used to be to turn on the external heater or crank up the dial on the thermostat. Over the next half hour, I warmed up, but the room felt like a sauna. You could smell the nutty odor of the heat. The rest of the time became a battle trying to find a balance between the ups and downs of fake heat.

Instead, I began doing 10 minutes of jumping jacks, high knees, butt kicks, and pushups. My muscles needed to move and no external heat source was going to make them truly heat up the way exercise did. At the end, I felt great thanks to the endorphins, and the feeling of warmth lasted for hours. If I did need to use the heater, I was more attuned to when I should turn it off.

Discovering alternatives to the usual wasn't planned. It truly just happened as a result of following my instincts or trying something new. Planning helps tremendously with a clear, task-based objective. I'm amazed though at the power of long-term experimentation and the unexpected benefits it can offer.

December 21, 2010

Is the process fun?

A serious approach to an endeavor doesn’t indicate a successful outcome, whereas, a lighthearted approach does, regardless of outcome, guarantee a positive process.

I jotted that down during an intense meeting about nothing. The air was really heavy and everyone was into making their point. Outside of that, there was no real value being produced.

Sitting there, I thought, “what if we paused and acknowledged that we obviously don’t care about a successful outcome”? Would everyone still be serious or would they lighten up a bit?

Because if we all decided to have fun in the making, even if we didn’t get anything done, guess what? We still had fun!

December 2, 2010

The Golden Rule


What's the Golden Rule and how does it apply to real life? That's how I started down this road and ended up at the Golden Ratio.

Turns out the Rule is "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you." A classic quote and philosophy found in almost every religion.

The Ratio, described in the picture above, appears geometrically in nature, music, architecture, art, and places you don't expect, like your face. It throws you for a curve just thinking about it, but look at any straight edge in front of you (a coffee table perhaps?) and start breaking it down with your hands the way the picture describes.

The idea has been around for centuries! Fascinating stuff.

November 22, 2010

Why Can't We Walk Straight?

http://www.npr.org/blogs/krulwich/2010/11/03/131050832/a-mystery-why-can-t-we-walk-straight

Click on the link for a fun video about why we turn in circles when blindfolded and told to walk straight. We still don't know!

They didn't mention testing blind people though, which is curious. The blind are known to strengthen their other senses, so they'd probably do better.

If we can see, so be it. If we can't, we train our other senses. So it's a conundrum why we'd study this at all. Still, the style of the video is worth watching.

November 16, 2010

What to do when you're feeling stuck

Try to let go of your resistance because whenever there is something we can’t see ourselves, it’s because we don’t want to see it. Try to listen with an open mind, and remember that you are always the final judge of what you need. Anything offered to us from an outside source will need to be processed within before its wisdom can take hold.

In all this, be kind to yourself and remember that we all get stuck sometimes. Think of it as a part of your process, a necessary step on your journey, rather than as a problem that shouldn’t be happening. This can help to keep your frustration at bay and give you the space you need to take a deep breath and really figure out what’s going on.

From: http://www.dailyom.com/articles/2010/26110.html

November 12, 2010

Flash Mob


Gut-wrenching but too astonishing to tear your eyes away.

I’m constantly amazed at what people enjoy and what they can do when they work together. I’ve been on top and been the base of several two man towers before when doing bhangra. Human instinct kicks in and your legs start shaking, not because of the weight, but because of the fear. It’s exhilarating working with a group of people to do a stunt like that.

What a thrill to see group work at this scale.

Casteller from Mike Randolph on Vimeo.

November 11, 2010

The Bucket List Lie

But, then make a List Of One.

A single, meaningful action you’re going to take before the end of the day to move you one step closer to a single, deeply meaningful quest.

From: http://www.jonathanfields.com/blog/the-bucket-list-lie/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JonathanFields+%28Jonathan+Fields+%7C+Awake+At+The+Wheel%29

The idea of focusing on just one thing is popular for

  • Presentations - one word/image/sentence/idea per page (think Steve Jobs, Garr Reynolds)
  • Agendas - discuss one topic that everyone can get their head around (think GTD)
  • Companies - one consistent theme that every employee echoes (think customer service, bottomline, efficiency, quality, etc.)

In all the above, concentrating on one has been shown to be a measure of progress, of eventual success.

Over the years, my daily to-do list has whittled down from 10 to 5 to 3 to just 1 thing. It’s easy to think of, easy to track, easy to accomplish and functions as a self-fulfilling reward.

Great example: working out. You go in knowing you’re going to do X exercise for a certain amount of time. Once you’ve achieved it, you’re done. It’s incredibly satisfying and motivating. You want to do it again because you know you can.

Jonathan Fields’ idea of a List of One works off the same mechanism. Start with one and take it from there. Great advice.

November 10, 2010

Social Entrepreneurship


It's great to see companies like AWeber helping to keep the internet community fun and social. I assume companies at their outset are more local and friendly, and simply due to size eventually become unreachable.

Few, like Zappos, Bungie and 37signals though have kept up their customer-centric attitude throughout.

Regardless of marketing strategy, I can't help but like this Thanks-giving attitude. October till New Years is such a beautiful time of the year.

Breathing thought into existence

When we hold a thought in our mind without being distracted, we have achieved pure thought. When we have a positive emotional response to that thought, we enable it to dance and move and breathe itself into existence.
From: http://www.dailyom.com/articles/2010/26028.html

Just because...

Just because that’s how it’s always been done doesn’t mean that’s how it should be done.

A Final Cocoon - Dying at Home - NYTimes.com

“He said: ‘It’s O.K., everybody has to die. I’m here with you, let’s just focus on the now,’ ” she recalled. “He also said one of the things he had to do was finish this house, to put the windows in. We talked about going to Hawaii. He said, ‘Let’s go to Hawaii and be with God.’ In Bernd’s eye, God was beauty, God was nature, God was the flowers, the mountains, the moon and the stars, so he wanted to be outside all the time. He was not one who was going to lie in bed and die, that’s for sure.”

Fascinating and articulate read. We carry a sense of home imprinted since childhood with us from apartment to studio to house, wherever we go.

How we externalize it through design is up to us, our unique touch on an old recipe that will continue to be passed on.

Home doesn't have to be filled with just material reminders. The FEEL of a place, the essence that only we can know, is much more important. Nature, buildings, colors, woodwork, noise levels, the general hum we hear when we close our eyes. These are the elements that matter.

We reproduce in more ways than through the genes perpetuating our lineage. A sense of self carries on simply because of our presence.


From: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/11/garden/11dying.html?pagewanted=3&_r=2

April 9, 2010

Freedom from desire...

Freedom from desire for an answer is essential to the understanding of a problem.
-Krishnamurti (via blogosophia)

March 17, 2010

Jiddu Krishnamurti - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

All authority of any kind, especially in the field of thought and understanding, is the most destructive, evil thing. Leaders destroy the followers and followers destroy the leaders. You have to be your own teacher and your own disciple. You have to question everything that man has accepted as valuable, as necessary.

Having realized that we can depend on no outside authority … there is the immensely greater difficulty of rejecting our own inward authority, the authority of our own particular little experiences and accumulated opinions, knowledge, ideas and ideals.

From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jiddu_Krishnamurti

I was completely unaware that such a thorough biography of Krishnamurti was available on Wikipedia.

It’s absorbing.

Having read most of his works, I’m curious about the process that caused him to estrange himself from the people who found him. Maharshi, Nisargadatta, and so many other gurus-who-don’t-want-followers went through something similar, resulting in a series of talks and writing that lasted a lifetime.

Their message; focusing on the now, self as teacher, and lifelong curiosity is also extremely similar.

My sense, when thinking of them together, is people who served as conduits for a powerful message. Did they have personality? Only in so much as their message would be heard. It’s hard to call it devotion. It feels more like a need when you read them. They would not be without their mission to build awareness.

January 31, 2010

Impersonal Understanding

Understanding that people are driven by innumerable motivations can help you learn to see their actions as a product of their inner selves rather than taking their behavior personally. Not taking people’s words and actions personally frees you from the need to react to them. You no longer have to perceive any negativity on their part as ill treatment, nor do you have to see their responses to you as a reflection of whether or not you said or did something wrong. Other people’s behavior and reactions cease to be a benchmark of your worth. When you choose not to take the words and actions of others personally, you can feel positive today even when surrounded by negativity.

September 18, 2009

November 3, 2008

To be continued...

Blogging will resume. When and where even I don't know yet. Thanks to all who followed along. I've learned a lot through blogging and hope to learn a whole lot more and contribute back in the future.

October 8, 2008

Will the financial crisis make you more or less healthy?

Almost every issue has two sides to it. Its enlightening when you see both at the same time and get to figure out which side you fall on. For example, you would assume that the financial crisis is negatively affecting our health. Jane Sarasohn-Kahn agrees and just yesterday posted stats on the key sources of stress and how to manage them.

Opening up my RSS reader this morning, one of the the first articles I saw was by Jason Shafrin talking about how the bad economy may be good for our health. This is mainly because people eat out less, drink less and go to the doctor more. There are more interesting details in the post.

Overall, I believe what the source of the financial crisis argues for is more real value. Building on equity not debt, growing our savings acccounts, holding others more accountable for their actions. Just as there was a free-riding debt-laden groupthink surrounding the nation prior to the crisis, now there's more agreement around growing a solid foundation for the country.

Bottomline: Recognizing we're stressed and why lets us handle it better. Realizing the benefits of stepping back from the rat race and taking time out for ourselves and our families is equally as beneficial. Perspective will make all the difference in the coming years.

September 25, 2008

A Scraped Knee

The scenario is you go into your doctor to get a scrape on your knee looked at, cleaned and bandaged. The nurse sees you and sends you on your way. Your visit is over. The doctor's office submits a bill to the insurance company, gets paid for the procedure and care under the nurse's ID and everybody's happy. Perhaps.

What if the nurse probes further into how you scraped your knee (assuming a simple fall)? Maybe you tell her you've been having back problems lately or haven't been getting much sleep at night. Maybe you offhandedly mention an ear infection or she smells a hint of alcohol on your breath. There's a multitude of possibilities. The above could result in a referral to the orthopedist, a sleep specialist, an ears/nose/throat doc (ENT), or a social worker, respectively.

The way care is delivered right now though is very incidental. Patients are rarely looked at from a holistic sense of "what else is going on in their lives?" A lot of it has to do with how doctors are paid (fee for service) and the medical home model is one effort to correct that by getting insurance companies to pay additionally for coordination of care. This is what PCPs have been doing pro bono till now. Paying for a central model though builds in many other benefits:
  • Pooled resources
  • Central point of contact
  • Change in perception
  • Enhanced communication
  • Better monitoring
  • Standardized Best Practices
I'm a big fan of the shift in thought processes around care, incorporating both allopathic and holistic approaches and figuring out what works long-term as opposed to what gets the patient out the door. Other externalities that will emerge with this and other similar models are support services becoming involved, increased patient education and advocacy and assistance on the financial end. Its a mission statement that a whole lot of parties can converge around. A scraped knee is not always what it seems. Health and well-being has many layers. Exposing them is the first step to making them work for the person, not necessarily the patient.

September 23, 2008

Are You Your Job Title?

Titles mean little.  When you meet a professional in a casual context, a simple "doctor", "lawyer", "mechanic" suffices.  It seems to explain who they are at once.  Someone in sales, management or consulting doesn't get the same benefit.  Both parties though are liable for describing their life project.  One just has to think about it harder than the other.

For example, doctor A may seek to maximize the number of patients seen to improve income potential and doctor B may seek to maximize the number of patient seen to improve the health of the community.  Both have the same potential end result; increase in income as well as an improvement in community health, but their reasons are remarkably different and provide a much better insight into their psychosocial persona.  

Bottomline: I doubt professionals with definitive titles put as much thought into their life project as people with generic job titles.  With accountablity comes transparency of one's passions, ideas and thought processes.  That can be scary and the fear only goes away if others open up in the same way.  I've certainly pored over it quite a bit myself and while its still being tweaked, my own personal life project is to find the happy medium.

September 21, 2008

See What's Behind the Curtain

In America, we tend to hear about work in the form of results.  I started a company, I fought x number of cases, I fundraised x amount of money and so on.  Well-rehearsed 30-second spiels touting one-sided stats. The process in the background is rarely shelled out; leaving the listener in the dark about the "how?".  

These achievements could be weighted by multiple factors such as how much time was spent on the project or on a different judgment level, how much time was spent with one's family during the project.  By not weighting and thereby standardizing such accomplishments, we lose the real perspective.  And I wager we also lose a sense of the person's values, priorities, and overall purpose.  The same goes for companies and nations as well.  

Bottomline: The means and ends debate is never-ending.  In the midst of major financial institutions collapsing, you have to wonder just how all this happened.  What was the process behind all this acquisition of wealth and why wasn't it protected better?  Making a million dollars sounds fantastic.  Asking provocative questions as to how one go to that million will really lets you know if their priorities jive with yours.  Don't hesitate to get a perspective.  

September 14, 2008

A Tribute to Patience

Patience is a practiced skill.  It deserves particular mention because it serves as the backbone and precursor to many other positive character traits - kindness, compassion, respect, honesty, etc.  When you're on the road and get cut off, or waiting in a long line to check out, or in the midst of an argument, patience provides a balanced perspective from which to take further action.  

Prioritizing respect (towards others), for example, isn't going to do much when you feel disrespected in a heated argument.  Your view of respect is totally subjective.  So when someone disrespects you, how are they to know you'd feel that way?  Knowing this puts you on shaky ground to begin with.  You end up fighting back with what you for a fact know will be disrespectful to the other person.  All of a sudden you've lost your original priority.  And on top of that, you eventually feel guilty about your actions.  Same goes with kindness, compassion or even honesty.  They're all subject to, well, subjectivenes.

Not so with patience.  It's independent of one's idea of it.  Why?  Because there's no real beginning or end point, no benchmark for comparison, no real action that can be taken to refute it.  To be exact, impatience isn't disturbing to those who are patient.  They're willing to wait it out.  

September 6, 2008

My Project Is To...

American Express has a wonderful ad out (see below) with various celebrities such as Robert DeNiro, Martin Scorsese, Jim Henson, Ellen DeGeneres and others boiling their life achievements down into one sentence. The sentence always starts with, "My project was to". For example, for Academy Award-winning director Martin Scorsese, the sentence is "My project was to...tell unforgettable stories".

While this is an after-the-fact statement, I bet each of these celebrities would've stated something siimilar even prior to their success. They had a very clear idea that encompassed and drove their personal philosophy, career goals and family values all in one.

This project statement can serve as a great personal tool for anyone; as a daily reminder of why you wake up in the morning, when in doubt of your ability, and when someone asks you, "what do you do?" Take a little time out to figure out what your goals are and narrow them down into one or two sentences, starting with "My project is to...". It can't hurt and I bet it'll make you think differently about what your life focus is.


September 5, 2008

You think you know, but you don't

Even for a second, if you tune your ear to the radio these days you'll hear something about the upcoming elections. Inexperience, age, gender, family values are all up for debate and personal opinion has amazingly transformed into experiential wisdom.  We all seem to have an idea of "what it takes" to be the next president/vice president of the U.S.  But in fact, we don't.

Ability is measured in layers.  Its the same old "peeling an onion" analogy, where the complexity of a job and candidate's matching skill set lie deep beneath the folds.  From our own daily work/leisure perspective, we only see the superficial; the face, the job description, the relative difference from the last 8 years.  We don't see the inhuman stamina necessary to function at peak levels through all hours of the day, the sacrifice of personal time and family life on a campaign trail, the burden and responsibility of knowing how every decision you make may change the lives of millions of people.  Our day-to-day lives are nothing like that of the candidates.  We can't possibly understand the layers beneath such a career choice.  Just by getting to this stage of the game, the candidate has revealed their ability.  

Bottomline: On a more grounded level, think of how you felt right out of college coming into the work world.  The language of business, science, technology, or whatever career you chose to venture into was the same then as it is now with very minor modifications.  Five, ten, twenty years later, you simply understand that language on a much deeper level.  

Think of any concept you were familiar with in your 20s, say "community".  The mental connections you've made over time, through effort and in seeking knowledge give that word a lot more intrinsic meaning now than they did before.  You have layers of personal growth associated with your vocabulary.  Translate that to the presidency and you get the smallest hint of "what it takes" to be at that level.   

September 3, 2008

A Visual Web Stroll

NYTimes graphic on risks associated with 10 different causes of death:























Google's venture into the browser business; Chrome:




















Be a teacher, find a teacher - The eBay of teaching:

August 27, 2008

A Ubiquitously Useful App

Scobleizer recommends a lot of apps. Recently, Robert's had somewhat of an epiphany on why he started blogging and what PR really means to him. I love his passionates v. non-passionates debate. He drives home some really great points about the influence of early adopters on advancing new technology.

His most recent recommendation, a Firefox add-on called Ubiquity, is universally useful and deserves mention. Check out the video below.


Ubiquity for Firefox from Aza Raskin on Vimeo.

August 24, 2008

Weekend Quotes

The report's authors "estimate that in order to provide services to these medically disenfranchised Americans, as well as current patients, health centers will need up to 60,000 more primary-care professionals, and up to 44,500 additional nurses."


-National Association of Community Health Centers (article link)

If pure thought is a body, it is our emotions that supply the heart that can really bring it to life. Our thoughts and feelings exist in relation to one another, and they form a feedback loop through which they communicate and empower each other.


-Daily Om: Undistracted Energy

“Redefining smoking not as a behavioral habit but as a pharmacological addiction may sound like good public policy, but it works against the public health when it reaches people that it is impossible to quit. Indeed, instead of having the intended effect of steering potential smokers – that is, children – away from cigarettes, demonizing cigarettes via nicotine reinforced smokers’ feelings of pharmacological enslavement and undermined their will to quit.


The tobacco habit should be characterized as an habituation rather than an addiction…”


-Smoking, A Behavioral Analysis, published in 1971