Monday, October 26, 2009

Mindful Minding Minds



Think about it: To thrive at work and life, we need to be mindful. You know, use our brains. We can’t be anyone or do anything, if we don’t put our minds to it. As they say, mind-over-matter. So, we need to feed our minds to their fullest - and hopefully, with good stuff.

And one of the best ways to feed our minds is to read with a committed purpose to really reading, not just to pass the time or go through the motions. Take the time to read, whether we’re reading fact or fiction, magazines, newspapers, cereal boxes, pamphlets handed to us on the street corner, and writing on the bathroom wall (hhmm, we need to be careful with that one).

When we find it, we should read it, whether we agree with it, or not. In fact, that’s one of the most important reasons to read everything: to challenge what we believe, as we assimilate an author’s opinions, ideology, and philosophy. If we only read what we’re comfortable with today, or what we’re told to read because “that’s just the way we think, and that’s just the way it is,” then how can we ever hope to be sympathetic, or at least empathetic, to viewpoints other than our own. What if they’re right, or just partially right? What if? We’ll never know what we might need to know, or should know, if we don’t try. That’s called willful ignorance. And ignorance is ignorant (and stupid).

On the other hand, if we don’t want to be ignorant, and instead, choose to learn, understand, and experience new things — the best and the cheapest way, other than being on the job or there in person, is by reading.

Another great way to feed our minds is to listen genuinely. This one’s not always easy, because unlike reading, where it’s only one person — the ability to listen in the give-and-take of a conversation requires much more work. Reading uses just the brain, eyes, and maybe the hands. Okay, sometimes we move our lips while reading silently and it can be kind of embarrassing. But it’s not a crime (at least I hope not; otherwise lock me up.)

Good listening requires a lot of energy and focus, unless we’re just listening to the TV, radio, or movies. I’m talking about in-person listening, which needs the brain, the ears, the eyes, the mouth, and the body. It requires “presence,” even when not personally present, like when we’re on the phone. Often, listening can be uncomfortable, because good listeners listen first and foremost to whatever the speaker has to say, whether we like it or not. That’s called active listening. Then we talk. In between listening and talking, we think. Concurrent to listening, talking, and thinking — we express interest through our presence, vis-à-vis our eyes, mouth, posture, and hands. That’s body language. We use active listening and body language to show the speaker that we care, and that we are actually listening. Sometimes it’s easier said than done. Good listening is hard.

Our ability to listen is either an attribute or a detriment. We can’t overemphasis the importance of good listening, and being recognized as a good listener. There’s an old adage about why God gave us two ears and one mouth, implying that we should listen twice as much as we talk. The fact is, being a poor listener is a hard label to overcome, just like it is with most labels. So be known as a good listener. More importantly, really be a good listener. Do it for you, and do it for others. Listening is good.

A third way to improve our minds is by trying new things, meeting new people, and seeing new places — as well as through writing, prayer, and meditation. We also improve our minds by doing the daily stuff that we often take for granted, like spending quality time with family and friends, listening to music, playing sports, fixing something, working out, cooking, and yes, even the ho-hum things, like vacuuming and doing the dishes. You know, as a busy adult, I now understand and appreciate why my dad enjoyed washing the dishes. As a kid, it never made much sense to me. Every night when he was home, he would do the dishes, quietly and deliberately. Now, every night that I’m home, I do them as well. For one, this is because I am my father’s son, and proud to be. Two, this is because it’s a great time to think and reflect. Reflection is good.

Mentally, we should strive to do everything that we can to make our minds better, with the ultimate, never-ending pursuit for wisdom, virtue and peace-of-mind. Don’t get me wrong — information, smarts, knowledge, know-how, skills, trades, common sense, and general competencies are important. While they’re good as individual assets, they’re even better when leveraged collectively, because that’s when we can start to approach wisdom, virtue, and peace-of-mind. That should be our objective, our aspiration, our dream, and our nirvana.

Mindful Minding Minds Are Good.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

It's Over, and It's Just Begun


When you think about it, much of the world ... and our existence in the world ... operates on a “it’s over, and it’s just begun” mantra. It's a rotational thing: The sun rises, the sun sets; the seasons come, the season go; we sleep, we wake; the Cubbies win, the Cubbies lose; the Cubbies lose; The Cubbies lose; The Cubbies win. (You get the picture).

On the other hand, there's lots of things that that we have to do and/or deal with that has a beginning, and an end - and that's that. No more. For example, jobs start, and they can end completely. Companies start, and they can end completely. Relationships start, and yes, they can end/end. Most profoundly of all: life begins and life ends, at least the physical form as we know it.

As the ubiquitous sound-bite goes … “It is what it is.”

But wait. Before you think I’m being fatalistic or cavalier, I want you to know that I really do appreciate the fact that some beginnings, and endings, are much more difficult than others, requiring special appreciation and mindfulness. The more we value (in context), that things begin and end, the more we need to enjoy the here and now. If we can successfully harness what we learn through life’s beginnings, endings, and in-betweens … the better we can navigate and manage the new beginnings, endings, and in-betweens. Does that make sense?

(By the way, fate and destiny have nothing to do with anything. They’re an excuse disguised as rational. After all, Darth Vader was wrong: it wasn’t Luke’s destiny to go to the dark side. Was it? Our destiny is what we make of it).

That said, I do believe that God has a hand in things; but He expects us to show up, and do the work. And do it as best we can. And thankfully, as George Eliot said, “It’s never too late to be who you might have been.” (Cool way to look at it, no?) Really, unless we just want to give up and disappoint ourselves, and those who need and love us every time something comes to an end; or unless we’re afraid, for whatever reason, to take on new beginnings and blame it on fate or destiny —we have to understand what’s at stake. We have to discern what we have or have not, and appreciate what we could win or lose, depending on our choices.
Then we need to do what we need to do; get ready, and go.

In other words, get to work.

With every new challenge, we should be better, stronger, and wiser; appreciating that work takes work, and hard work takes hard work. As an added bonus, the reward for our hard work and determination will help us know so much more in many different ways: intellectually, physically, emotionally, and spiritually.

The experience we earn, is never insignificant. It’s experience.

Experience is Good.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

When Judging and Being Judged


Can you smell it too? You know, that opinionated, oh-so-unfancy, party-foul scent of wrongful judgement, that gets passed by a "know-it-all", then fumes up the place, pollutes the air, clogs our nostrils, and challenges our ability to stay cool. And heck with the cool - because sometimes those stinkers foul up the place so bad - that you just have to send back a reactionary, yet equally opinionated, oh-so-unfancy, "well-take-that-you-know-it-all" counter judgement!

So much for the high road, right?!

Maybe its just me, but it seems like lately (let's blame it on the economy, of course), that more people than usual are stinking up the place, by inappropriately judging this and judging that, and making judgements with little appreciation to context, reality and facts (let alone the other side; 'cause there's always two) - so that these judgements more often than not are ignorant, and quite possibly, wrong ... or at a minimum ... suspect, superficial, inadequate, and challengeable. How's that for judgement!

No doubt, we are all "programmed" to a degree - and have our opinions based on so much stuff, from so many places. And no doubt that opinions are like belly buttons: we all have them. Be that as it may, some folks are so misappropriately hard-wired coded, that they need a serious reboot and/or a complete systems overhaul when it comes to their judgements.

Now, to help "judgementalists" junkies kick their bad habits, and jump-start their rehab - here's a smattering of some pretty good quotes, from some pretty smart people, with some pretty good thoughts with regard to judging and being judged.

Use them as you see fit; they're on the house.

"How dreadful it is when the right judge judges wrong." - Sophocles

"Hear the other side." - Augustine

"For to err in opinion or judgement, is human." - Plutarch

"How much easier it is to be critical than correct." - Disraeli

"You will be damned if you do and damned if you don't" - Dow

"Principles, opinions and assumptions - may and must be flexible." - Lincoln

"New people and their opinions are always suspected and usually opposed without any other reason but because they are not already common." - Locke

"Nothing astonishes men so much as common sense and plain dealing." - Emerson

"He who knows only his side of the case, knows little of that." - Mill

"To doubt everything or to believe in everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity to think and reflect." - Poincare

"He who can, does. He who can't, takes issue with he who can." - Shaw

"Nobody likes the man who brings bad news." - Sophocles

"Criticism comes easier then craftsmanship." - Zeuxis

Admittedly, those quotes are pretty heady, and somewhat heavy - but still absolutely, positively, nodoubtaboutitly, spot on. So, to lighten things up just a little bit - let's end with a joke, and a fitting one at that. (BTW: I'm pretty sure that my priest, Father Kevin, thinks its funny and fitting too; you'll see why that matters).

A smelly drunken man, sat down on a subway next to a priest. The man's tie was stained, his face was plastered with red lipstick, and a half-empty bottle of gin was sticking out of his torn coat pocket. He opened his newspaper and began reading. After a few minutes the man turned to the priest and asked, 'Say Father, what causes arthritis?' The priest replies, 'My Son, it's caused by loose living, being with cheap women, too much alcohol, contempt for your fellow man, and lack of a bath.' The drunk muttered in response, 'Well, I'll be damned,' Then returned to his paper. The priest, thinking about what he had said, nudged the man, and apologized. 'I'm very sorry. I didn't mean to come on so strong. How long have you had arthritis?' The drunk answered, 'I don't have it, Father. I was just reading here that the Pope does.'

Understood, Rationalized, Objective Judging is Good.

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

The Brainer No-Brainer


If it's true ... that what F. Scott Fitzgerald said (and no - he's not the guy in the picture: that guy's just some guy who looks puzzled - which is thematic to this blog; I think) - in that, “The ability to hold two opposing ideas in mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function, is the sign of an intelligent person" ... well then, pop the bubbly baby, because news flash, I must be one relatively smart dude. (Oohh: I knew it! If only those persnickety SATs would've known that as well - I'm talking Harvard man! But I digest.)

So you ask: What are you getting at Scott? Well, here's what I'm getting at. If you've been playing along with my last umpteen blogs, you'll know that I've been on a bit of a "brain bender" - in that I've been harping on the importance of using our brains, and embracing/promoting all of those brainiac words/actions like thoughtfulness, mindfulness, smarts, intelligence, thinking, no-duhs, etc, etc, etc..

But now, I beg to differ with myself. (Well, maybe not differ entirely, but certainly challenge that 24/7/365 brain game. )

Here's what happened. I just finished the best-selling book, "The Power of NOW; A guide to Spiritual Enlightenment" by Eckart Tolle. Believe it or not (and frankly, I struggle with the believe it part), this book has sold over 2 million copies, and my guess is - helped propel the bottled water industry, as it was as bone-dry as the Sahara - in August. And while it may have parched my thirst, it quenched my assumption of always thinking mind-over-matter.

You see, according to Tolle, "the brain/mind" is our problem. It's what messes us up, and inhibits our ability to be the best that we can be. To be one with the universe. To "Being."

To paraphrase Tolle: not only are we NOT our mind, but our mind is the obstacle to enlightenment (aka: to Being). To be in harmony, and to really see/experience/feel/be - we need to disengage the brain; set it aside; leave it alone; put it in time-out.

Now, for those into and capable of meditation (yea, I try, but that darn brain gets in the way) - you get it, and know what this "Being" stuff is all about. Its about achieving "consciousness" which comes from being basically, unconscious. But hark ye meditators who think (proverbially speaking, of course) that me don't get it - I do now. And at the risk of coming off as some new age, hoity toity, Mensa intellectual, wheat-grass slurping, ummmm to the world, meditative expert - which I clearly am not - I get it too, now, and more so, agree.

Hence - my ability, and declaration - to beg to differ with my over thinking self.

Yea, the brain is good. Thinking is good. Smart is good. Mindfulness is good.

At the same time - it's good to put the brain away, and just let the body be.

In other words: I think, AND, I don't think - therefor I am.

By doing both ... thinking, and not thinking ... we're better at "being."

Being is Good.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Purposeful Busyness



Thomas Edison was not only an inventor - he was a scholar.

Yes, the very same man that invented the phonograph - which is like the Marlin to the Nemos of CDs and iPods; the motion picture camera, which is like the Mufasa to the Simbas of DVDs and YouTube; the light bulb, which is like the Triton to the Little Mermaids of lamps and porch lights; and more than 1,000 other things, which is like the Pongo and Perdita to the 101 Dalmations of civilization - was also a brilliant thinker, observer, and author. (And unlike me, I'm sure, wouldn't use Disney characters to connect his creations.)

As proof of Edison's multi-faceted talent ... and more specifically, to his gift of thought and penmanship ... check out this awesome display of insight, and wordsmithing. Edison wrote:

"Being busy does not always mean real work. The object of all work is production or accomplishment - and to either of these ends there must be forethought, system, planning, intelligence, and honest purpose, as well as perspiration. Seeming to do is not doing."

C'mon now: tell me that's not one of the greatest, spot-on, you-got-that-right, quotes you've ever read!? It's also timely, given the dynamics of today as it relates to the assumption of "entitlement." You know - people thinking that they deserve things because, well, they just deserve them because they think they're "busy"- regardless of having the right busyness and the right perspective, attitude, aptitude, mindfulness (i.e. PAAM).

In other words, it's imperative at work, and for the most part, at life - that we have tangible purpose behind our busyness. Work and life are too important, too valuable, too short, too special, and if I may, too God-given - to just "dial-it-in" or just "go-through-the-motions." That type of busyness is not only a waste - it's wrong, and detrimental.

Busy for the sake of just being busy is bad.

Purposeful busyness is good.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Smiles, Giggles, Laughter, and Happiness


I don't know about you, but doesn't it feel good to smile, grin, giggle, and laugh. Yea, you bet ... it feels good, to feel good. Now, before you give me one of those "no-duh, like, that's not an epiphany" rebuttals, let's just let this one play out for a bit, okay (humor me, if you will ;)

While I realize most humans love a good laugh, and appreciate the upside of positive repartee - the fact of the matter is we take these gifts for granted. We do; it's true; and we know it.

And that's the problem, and why we need to take silliness seriously, and not just in a goofy hat/fake mustache/funny glasses wearing kinda way; although that'll work. For proof, check-out the August issue of Ode magazine. (If you don't subscribe to this wonderful, genuinely exceptional magazine - you must - you simply must, must, must!) In it, they share some incredible stories (all real, and all with factual information) of how laughter and happiness heals, unifies, empowers, inspires, motivates, educates, cleanses, and purifies the body, mind, heart and soul.

It's true. The empirical data is there; the facts are real; there is no debate: Laughter is good medicine. And as important, its critical for our social evolution. Example: Two Neanderthals walk into a bar, order drinks, sit down, and listen to the chattering, laughing crowd. Suddenly, one turns to the other and whispers. "Try to stay cool, but this is one of those Homo Sapiens joints." For those keeping score at home, the punch line stems around how would a Neanderthal know that he was in a Homo Sapiens joint? Well, because of the laughter, and good cheer.

So, unless you're a Neanderthal (sadly, we still have 'em) - you'll appreciate and embrace that to enlighten up, we need to lighten up. And for all of you negative pundits who may not agree with the importance of smiles, laughter and good cheer - I'll let this picture say it for me (so there!)






Susan Sparkes - an acclaimed author, comedian, and pastor of the Madison Avenue Baptist Church (her sermons are often humorous, like "Lord Grant me Patience, and Make it Snappy" ) - says that, "Laughter is the GPS system of the soul. Humor offers a revolutionary yet simple spiritual paradigm. If you can laugh at yourself, you can forgive yourself. And if you can forgive yourself, you can forgive others. Laughter heals and grounds us in a place of hope. It fosters intimacy and honesty in our relationships with each other, and with God. And isn't that what grace is all about?"

Indeed.

Smiles, Giggles, Laughter, and Happiness Are Good!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Information Rules & Economics Wins


Excuse me while I let this out: ARRRGGGGHHHH!!!!!!

So, why the angst, you ask? Well, for one, thanks for asking, and two, in doing what I do, I often get asked to evaluate new and existing companies. Looked at 3 just today. The problem is that lots of these companies fail to deliver on the two most fundamental truths:

Information Rules and Economics Wins

Yes, and it's also a requirement to have good products and/or services - that people want to buy. And good operations - that can deliver, service, and support the products, services and customers. And most of all, good people - that get their jobs done with smiles, and effectiveness. But ... that's just common sense, right? (Although like dad says: common sense is not so common.)

Seriously, I look at way too many businesses that just don't give me the information, nor the math, that I need to make a rationalized opinion, let alone a decision. Now, of the two issues, the one that gives me the most heartburn, and literally drives me nuts, bonkers, looney tunes - is the math part. I mean really, I'm starting to feel like Jack Nicholson dealing with Nurse Ratched in the movie, One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest.

Here's the deal: In business, we need to do the math. (Most) everything needs to be explained, measured and justified through math. If we can’t do the financial analysis; measure and show proof-positive results (or expected results) using real numbers that establish and prove true profit - than we don’t do the business, unless we’re willing to take big risks. At the very least, we have to modify our thinking. And if we can’t do the detailed math to rationalize and justify new investments, or new products, or new strategies, or new employees, or new equipment - then we don’t. We save our money.

Companies cannot be started, managed or grown on just theory and speculation. They can’t just be built on good intentions, well-written strategy, or eloquent business plans. I don’t care if you’re a tiny, home-based business - or a small, mid size or Fortune 1000 corporation – you’ve got to do the math. At the same time, numbers don’t always tell the whole story. While numbers shouldn’t lie in-and-of-themselves, they’re not always accurate and don’t always tell the truth (it’s been said that 62% of all stats are worthless, and 20% suspect.) Numbers aren’t always black or white, or fit neatly into rows, columns and spreadsheets. They may need in-depth explanations because they can be interpreted in many different ways - depending on the view, expertise and background of the reporter, and the interpreter.

Net/net - information rules and economics wins.

But you know that already, right!?

Speaking of math, let's play a counting game. Goes like this:

1) Pick your Favorite number between 1- 9,
2) Then multiply that number by 3,
3) Then add 3 to that number,
4) Then multiply that number by 3,
4) Now you should get a 2 digit number,
5) Finally, add those two digits together

Now, take your final number, and match it to the number below, to see how it assigns you with the appropriate "old-school-playground-name-calling" (yea, I got some growing up to do).

1. You're a goof 2. You're a dork 3. You're a dweeb 4. You're a scatterbrain 5. You're a freak 6. You're a spazoid 7. You're a goober 8. You're a bonehead 9. You're awesome 10. You're a bozo

So - how'd you do? Don't tell me, I know the answer. 

Awesome is Good (and so is good information, and good math)!