They Like Us, They Really, Really Like Us

For a couple of months now there has been a situation at my office, a lack of clarity around how certain projects should proceed. The (all male) sewing circle of managers, Directors, Executive Directors, Senior Vice Presidents, have pussy footed around the issue. Discussing it here and there, the options, the choices and not agreeing, then adjourn with no decisions. This, of course, has no impact on their days, only on the days of the people who do the actual work. Did I mention months this has been discussed? Months.
Finally yesterday there was a meeting where one of these master minds finally asked the people who do the work what they think, then gave them an action item of writing up a proposal. Yes, he did it because he thought the proposal would be close to what he wanted and yes, he took advantage of the fact that one of the other management types with a different opinion had a conflict for this meeting, but he let the people speak. So the people (both women) agreed on a proposal, wrote it up in under an hour and sent it out. What happened? The management type who asked for the proposal responded, saying this is great. Then all the boy management types responded in kind, saying it was great and everyone agreed. Sunshine, rainbows and unicorns ensued.

And the two ladies thought: what the what? Oh, yeah.. management types.

Yes, it was all political theatre, yes only one male management type got what he wanted, yes the people who do the work got what they wanted, and yes, it was a monumental waste of time. What are the lessons? That it takes two ladies to get something done? That male management types have too much testosterone to stay out of their own way? I’d like to think the male management types saw the very clearly laid out proposal as the message it intended: stop fucking around and let’s get some shit done, but I’m not optimistic they will remember the incident for more than a day. On to the next battle.. insert war cry.

The Little Things That Get You Through the Day

Yesterday the most interesting thing I did was dream up an acronym based on the word sarcasm (one of my favorite words) to entertain someone who had created an IM icon that amused me, well more than amused me, sparked me to do something minorly creative. How is that for a run on sentence? Am I already boring on Day 2?

Doing Something Interesting

I recently watched a TED talk by Cesar Kuriyama called One Second Every Day, in which he describes that is recording 1 second of his life every day to better remember his life, good and bad.  How many of us can’t remember whole chunks of time in our lives?  Honestly, what did I do last year in February, I have no idea.  Maybe if I looked at my calendar…
Anyway, one part of his talk struck me.  He said something like ‘If I want to record something everyday, I need (or want) to be doing something interesting’.   How often we fall into ruts:  clean the house, pick up the dry cleaning, work late at the office and suddenly a week or two (or more) goes by, you don’t know where it went (as the Talking Heads say: Letting the days go by, water flowing underground).  I don’t want to be like that.

Later, in the car, I was listening to the Writers on Writing Podcast (thank you Barbara DeMarco-Barrett) with Melissa Bank.  Yes, this isn’t a new cast, I do what I can.  In the cast they discuss the quote “If you want to change your voice, change your life”.   Wow.  I’m not really sure what my voice is now or if it needs changing, but I decided I want to find out.
 Both of these discussions made me think.  I want to do something interesting at least once a day and I want to discover my voice.  So here is this blog.  My goal is to write something every day and hope it will be interesting.  In the process, perhaps I’ll discover my voice and force myself to find something interesting out of each day.

 

References

Cesar Kuriyama:  One Second Every Day

http://embed.ted.com/talks/cesar_kuriyama_one_second_every_day.html

Cesar begins this talk by describing how he had watched another TED talk on the Power of Time Off and how that inspired him.  He wanted to take a year off to work on his own creative projects, I think most people wish they could do that, I’d be ecstatic with just a month.  In any case, it pleases me that a TED talk sparked him and his TED talk in turn sparked me.  If you’re not watching TED talks, give them a whirl, see what sparks you!

 

 Writers on Writing with Melissa Bank