Monday, November 28, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #332

STILL TALKIN’ TURKEY
FOUR DAYS AFTER THANKSGIVING


Is there a turkey sandwich in your immediate future?

Or does the thought (or sight) of even more post-Thanksgiving turkey make you groan?

Either way, perhaps you should know about Gerry Thomas.

Although he died in 2005 at the age of 83, it’s particularly appropriate to revisit his claim to culinary fame on this Monday after a l-o-n-g weekend of coping with Thanksgiving leftovers.

Plus it provides us with a great life lesson.

Here’s the story: During World War II, Thomas was a U.S. Army intelligence officer and was awarded the Bronze Star for his work in breaking Japanese codes. After the war he went to work as a salesman for C.A. Swanson & Sons.

In 1953, the company overbought turkey for Thanksgiving.

You think you had leftovers? Swanson had 260 tons of “left-over” turkey.

What to do? They had no room to store the excess, so they loaded the half a million+ pounds of poultry into ten refrigerated train cars that had to keep moving continuously so the electricity would stay on.

Clearly, this wasn’t the most efficient solution.

So, as Gourmet magazine reports it, the Swanson brothers challenged their employees to come up with an alternate use for the meat.

Although there is some dispute about the depth of his contribution, for years Gerry Thomas maintained he came up with –

The solution: Package it with side dishes as frozen dinners in aluminum trays.

Swanson TV Dinner
circa 1954 
Talkin’ turkey: Thomas said he designed the company's famous three-compartment aluminum tray (the dessert didn’t appear until 1960) after seeing a similar tray used by Pan Am Airways. He also said he coined the name "TV Dinner" … brainstormed the idea of having the packaging resemble a 50’s-era TV set and … contributed the recipe for the cornbread stuffing.

Historical sidebar: Gerry Thomas abstained from the quickie frozen meals. According to the BBC, Thomas’ wife admitted that he was a gourmet cook (lucky for her) who never ate the dinners.

Thomas later said he was uncomfortable with being called the "father" of the TV Dinner, because he felt he just built upon existing ideas. In 1999 he also observed, “If it were today, we'd probably call it the 'digital dinner'."

In 1954 it was an immediate success: Swanson sold 10 million of the dinners -- at 98 cents each -- in part because they took "only" half an hour to heat up.

The company quickly expanded the line to other meals, which some say Thomas tested on his own family. In the late 1960s he reputedly helped adapt the meal to a new kitchen appliance -- the microwave oven -- which cut prep time to about 5 minutes.

Now, according to the American Frozen Food Institute, the average American eats 72 frozen meals a year, making frozen foods a $22 billion industry.

The Library of Congress says the history of the TV Dinner is murky, but notes that frozen dinners existed several years before Swanson made the idea famous. Pinnacle Foods, which currently owns Swanson, still credits Thomas with proposing the TV Dinner concept.

In an interview with the Associated Press news agency Thomas recalled, “I think the name made all the difference in the world … It’s a pleasure being identified as the person who did this because it changed the way people live.”

Changed the way people lived? If you’re not old enough to recall, that’s actually pretty accurate.

Due to Swanson’s brand notoriety, expansive advertising campaign, and catchy concept, Swanson’s TV Dinner altered the way people approached frozen food.

And that rippled out to have wider societal repercussions.

The great liberator: The TV Dinner gave women (who were predominantly the family cooks) more free time to pursue jobs and other activities while still providing a hot meal for their families.

IMO -- In My Opinion: Gerry Thomas was and is a great example of the EHFTB-FTWMIH credo -- “Everything Happens For The Best—For Those Who Make It Happen.”

TGIM ACTION IDEA: Confronted with a challenge, he drew on skills he had developed and observations he had made and applied them to the situation at hand.

TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: With a marketer’s “find-a-need-and-fill-it” mindset, he took apparently disparate information he had absorbed (perhaps even unconsciously) in his routine – air travel, kitchen skills, awareness of trends in popular culture, emerging social developments – and snatched victory from the jaws of defeat.

Then he brought the elements together and applied the Useful Rule of a Successful Product or Service: Be first, best or different.

Can you do the same?

Of course you can. The EHFTB-FTWMIH concept argues simply that you must take action for anything to turn out “For The Best.” You must be ever alert for opportunities to triumph in the face of adversity.

It’s not easy. You can’t be a passive bystander. You must be always preparing for the future. And, when challenges arise, you must rally that preparation and confront them. It isn’t enough to want the best. Continually challenge yourself to know what you’re going to do to get to where you want to be. Effort makes achievement.

Talkin’ Turkey—and makin’ the effort to make it happen.

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373

tgimguy@gmail.com   

P.S. Dining with the TV on? “I find TV very educational. Every time someone switches it on I go into another room and read a good book.” Groucho Marx said that in 1984. And speaking of viewing habits --

Watch this: A. C. Nielsen recently determined that the average American watches about 34 hours of TV per week -- practically a full- time job's worth of hours. I’m not clear how much of that is time shifted or on computer screens or via other not-purely-“traditional” viewing. If you want to dig deeper, feel free. As for me, the unadulterated statistic alone is enough to get me to start my list of –

TGIM 2012 Resolutions: Be very discriminating in TV viewing in the New Year.

Monday, November 21, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #331

PARTAKERS IN PLENTY --
WHAT ARE YOU THANKFUL FOR?
Maybe you don’t much feel like a “partaker in plenty” as Thanksgiving approaches this year.

 Times continue to be difficult, no argument. And from many points of view, the outlook is cloudy, at best. So it wouldn’t be surprising if you felt there was less to be thankful for this Thanksgiving season.

But …

You could have been at Plymouth Plantation in 1620.

The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth.
By Jennie A. Brownscombe (1850-1936)

Jennie Brownscombe’s popular interpretation of the First Thanksgiving has become a symbol of the holiday for many Americans. It reached a wide audience and influenced the national understanding when it was printed in Life magazine.

Thumbnail history review: Despite the pictures of colorful turkeys and stiff colonists in pristine white collars and brightly buckled shoes we recall from our early childhood, the reality is quite different.

I'd like to take this opportunity to recount a little Thanksgiving history -- a bit more than I remember learning decades ago. Then let's see if we can find an empowering lesson in it.

Thanksgiving as it was NOT taught. In August of 1620 a band of Puritans left the relative comfort of their European homeland to pursue the freedoms of life in the New World.

They set sail on two small ships, the Mayflower and the Speedwell. Not long into the journey the Speedwell proved unseaworthy. Most of her passengers and crew then transferred to the Mayflower.

The intended destination was Northern Virginia.

They missed by hundreds of miles. After months of rough sailing, the 102 travelers making the voyage sighted land (Cape Cod) on November 9. After some exploration what was thought to be a suitable site was settled at what is now Plymouth, Massachusetts. (The port of embarkation had been Plymouth, England.)

There was nobody they knew there to greet them. There were no homes to move in to, no stores where they could buy supplies.

Ill-prepared they endured a winter of great hardship. At one point only six people were well enough to care for the sick and dying. Half the settlers died of scurvy and exposure. It’s been calculated that in that first year they made seven times more graves than huts.

The Mayflower sailed back to England in the spring of 1621.

Despite the hardships of the winter, none of the 53 remaining “pilgrims” returned with the ship.

And the following October the settlers managed (with the help and participation of the Native American neighbors – the Wampanoag -- with whom they peacefully coexisted) a "Harvest Home" celebration.

This was the precursor of the Thanksgiving we now commemorate and emulate.

Here’s a description of that first celebration. It comes from one of the only two primary sources for the events of the autumn 1621 in Plymouth; a letter colonist Edward Winslow sent to a friend in England.

It was first published in London in 1622 so the Elizabethan-era English can be a bit difficult (so I’m giving you a modernized spelling). But the message -- especially the second paragraph -- is a wonderful articulation of what we celebrate even when times are “difficult.”

THE FIRST THANKSGIVING

Edward Winslow
(1595 - 1655)
"Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, so that we might, after a special manner, rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labors. They four in one day killed as many fowl as with a little help besides served our company almost a week. At which time amongst other recreations, we exercised our arms, many of the Indians came amongst us, and among the rest their greatest King, Massaoyt, with some ninety men whom for these three days we entertained and feasted; and they went out and killed five deer, which they brought to the plantation, and bestowed upon our governor, and the captain and others.

"And although it be not always so plentiful as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want, that, we often wish you partakers of our plenty."

TGIM Takeaway #1: Few of us will know the degree of hardship that small band of freedom seekers endured. It's difficult to even imagine what those days in 1621 were like.

Our modern lives seem easy. Our small successes pale in the light of their perseverance. In the abundance of our contemporary culture, we often forget that we have so much for which we can be thankful.

Or perhaps, because we have so much, we forget to be thankful.

TGIM Takeaway #2: The Pilgrim lessons of Thanksgiving are still relevant – maybe even more so when times are tougher. They had, in a phrase that’s probably been over popularized –

“An Attitude Of Gratitude”

They were grateful for survival. The winter had been desperate. Many had died. Whether they could continue and support themselves in this New World was a real challenge. Yet they remained optimistic.

They were grateful for the kindness of strangers, the original inhabitants of the land, whose generosity and wisdom, knowledge and intelligence were vital to their survival.

They were grateful for the potential of the land that was now their home. They were grateful for the hope in their hearts.

They were grateful for their community and the ability they had to work together to help each other to survive.

They were grateful for the qualities of character – the willingness to work hard, courage, emotional and physical strength, resilience, persistence, ingenuity – that had helped them survive.

They were grateful for freedom and the right to govern themselves – the search for which drove them on their dangerous and trying journey far across the sea.

Thanksgiving Day is not a religious holiday. Although in the USA we reference its Puritan origins, it is a national holiday observed on the fourth Thursday of November.

But while crowds will gather for a parade or to experience a football game in a stadium, the spirit of the day is realized as most of us gather together on a more personal scale around a harvest home table and –

Give Thanks

What are you thankful for? The Pilgrims were grateful for the many things that give life meaning and joy … the things that matter no matter what our economic or social circumstances … the things that bind us together as –

A human family. I trust -- no matter how difficult current circumstances seem -- that Thursday you will find some of the First Thanksgiving spirit. I certainly don't imagine most of you will busy yourself with e-mail. So I’ll take this TGIM opportunity to –

Thank YOU, one and all: For your generous acceptance of these TGIM e-mail/blog post messages. Thanks for sharing the ones you like with folks you think will enjoy them or benefit from them. We're pleased to make their acquaintance.

And thanks for your feedback, both critical and favorable.

I appreciate your views and the effort you make to convey them. I learn from what you have to say and hope that TGIM can continue to be a conduit for sharing that wisdom and understanding.

I hope this message finds you far from want ... that life is always plentiful for you ... and that once again on Thanksgiving Day you will use the occasion to resolve to be thankful every day of the year.

Thankfully,

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373

tgimguy@gmail.com   

P.S. “Thanksgiving Day comes, by statute, once a year; to the honest man it comes as frequently as the heart of gratitude will allow.” Humorist, journalist, essayist, writer, and editor Edward Sandford Martin (1856 – 1939) said that.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #330

WHO WAS THAT MASKED MAN?
A CREED TO LIVE BY

OK, Ke-mo sah-bee. Granted, it’s been a while since The Lone Ranger was in regular circulation. But it seems The Legend of The Lone Ranger has –

Staying power. In casting about the World Wide Web lately, I keep encountering references and images (perhaps because it was announced that a Disney/Johnny Depp movie is on track with a projected 2013 release date).

But it’s the early (1949 – 1957) television iteration I recall most vividly and fondly. And my memory of those days is that, in addition to the action depicted in those “westerns”—

Worthwhile life lessons were being conveyed. So I backtracked a bit and here’s some of what I came up with:

The Legend began in 1933 -- the heyday of radio serials, at station WXYZ in Detroit. The show aired three times a week, 52 weeks a year, for 21 years.

Clayton Moore as The Lone Ranger
Jay Silverheels as Tonto
There were also 221 television episodes produced.

These, coupled with several big screen movies, cartoons, serials, video games and a variety of ink-on-paper-products and tie-ins represented The Lone Ranger as a rugged individualist who triumphs over evil.

With the help of his trusted Indian companion Tonto, and trusty white stallion Silver, the masked man uses courage and cunning to right wrongs … never shoots to kill … and leaves a silver bullet behind as his mark.

The long-running appeal of the character and his adventures can be linked in part to radio station owner George W. Trendle and the writer hired to create the stories, Fran Striker. Together they drew up guidelines which embody who and what the Lone Ranger is.

For example:

  • The Lone Ranger is never seen without his mask or a disguise.
  • With emphasis on logic, to avoid his being unmasked, The Lone Ranger is never captured or held for any length of time by lawmen.
  • The Lone Ranger never uses slang or colloquial phrases, but instead uses perfect grammar and precise speech.
  • The Lone Ranger never drinks or smokes. And what in other westerns would be saloon scenes, are usually interpreted as cafes, with waiters and food instead of bartenders and liquor.
  • Criminals are never shown in enviable positions of wealth or power, and they never appear as successful or glamorous.
  • Adversaries are never other than American to avoid criticism from minority groups.
  • His adversaries are usually groups whose power is such that large areas are at stake.
  • Names of unsympathetic characters are carefully chosen, never consisting of two names if it can be avoided, to avoid even further disparaging association. (Often a single nickname is selected.)
  • When he has to use guns, The Lone Ranger never shoots to kill, but only to disarm his opponent as painlessly as possible. (He uses only silver bullets to remind himself that, like his silver bullets, life, too, is precious and not to be wasted or thrown away.)
  • The Lone Ranger never wins against hopeless odds; i.e., he is never seen escaping from a barrage of bullets merely by riding into the horizon.
  • Even though The Lone Ranger offers his aid to individuals or small groups, the ultimate objective of his story never fails to imply that their benefit is only a by-product of a greater achievement—the development of the west or our country.
And, because The Legend originated on the radio, the creators also created someone for their good guy to talk to; someone who could ferret out wrongdoing, present it for action, and help develop the plots – the faithful Indian companion, Tonto. Despite being criticized for speaking broken English, this Native American was portrayed as an intelligent character, almost an equal partner to the Ranger in his work.

From the early going, “premiums” were developed as a connection to sponsors of the broadcasts (often bread companies).

Among the fan club enticements such as badges, masks, photographs of the Ranger and secret codes, was a document written by Fran Striker – slightly sexist in focus now, but don’t be distracted by that – that spelled out principles that would serve us all well, even today.

It was called –

THE LONE RANGER CREED
I believe...

That to have a friend, a man must be one.

That all men are created equal and that everyone has within himself
the power to make this a better world.

That God put the firewood there, but that every man
must gather and light it himself.

In being prepared physically, mentally, and morally to fight
when necessary for that which is right.

That a man should make the most of what equipment he has.

That “this government of the people, by the people, and for the people”
shall live always.

That men should live by the rule of what is best for the greatest number.

That sooner or later ... somewhere ... somehow ...
we must settle with the world and make payment for what we have taken.

That all things change but truth, and that truth alone, lives on forever.

In my Creator, my country, my fellow man.


TGIM ACTION IDEA: Actors Clayton Moore and Jay Silverheels who starred in the TV episodes I remember so fondly both took their positions as role models to children very seriously and tried their best to live by this creed.

TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: Maybe we can, too. Be inspired by “the daring and resourceful masked rider of the plain.” As the announcer used to intone, “Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear.”

"Hi-yo, Silver! Away!" (Imagine the William Tell Overture playing.) Let’s you, Ke-mo sah-bee, and I make sure The Lone Ranger rides again.

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373

tgimguy@gmail.com   

BTW: Ke-mo sah-bee (or any of various other spellings) is a real Indian word. It originated in the show because Camp Ke-mo-Sah-Bee was the name of a boy’s summer camp owned by a relative of the director of the early radio program. That, in turn, is linked to the language of the Potawatomie Indians who lived in and around Michigan. It is said to mean “faithful friend” or “trusty scout.”

Monday, November 7, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #329

SHAKESPEARE & CO.
CAN THE BARD BOOST YOUR BOTTOM LINE?

The new movie, Anonymous, presents – once again – an argument that Shakespeare wasn’t the author of all things Shakespeare.

Rest easy. I’m not going to go into that issue today (sighs of relief all around) other than to say, the idea in all its variant forms has long been debunked.
Shakespeare's funeral monument
in Holy Trinity church, Stratford-Upon-Avon.
Installed after his death, it is,
along with the Droeshout engraving from the First Folio,
the only officially accepted face of Shakespeare. 
Created by Gerard Johnson, it pre-dates the First Folio of 1623,
since it is referenced in the Folio as 'thy Stratford Moniment'. 
Rendered in modern English the poem beneath it reads:

Stay, passenger, why goest thou by so fast?
Read, if thou canst, whom envious Death hath placed
Within this monument: Shakespeare, with whom
Quick nature died, whose name doth deck this tomb
Far more than cost, sith all that he hath writ
Leaves living art, but page, to serve his wit.

However (uh, oh) --

Let’s take this opportunity to consider the question posed in today’s headline:

Can the Bard of Avon reveal some “new” strategies you can use to boost your bottom line?

No lesser authority than the son of the late, great Shakespearean actor Sir Laurence Olivier thinks so.

Richard Olivier, at one of the UK’s major business schools, Cranfield School of Management, teamed with Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre and taught a course that mines the playwright’s work for advice on climbing the corporate ladder. (Should work for entrepreneurial types as well.)

The Olivier-led workshops at the Globe were two-day affairs, focused on one particular Shakespearean play. Also included were some basic acting lessons.

Speak the speech, I pray you “This is not about teaching people to speak in verse … but simply about the power of speaking well,” Olivier was quoted as saying in an Associated Press report.

Participants learn to make rousing speeches and project confidence, useful life and leadership skills.

“Business leaders are, more and more, having to manage companies like kings and queens were managing nation-states 400 years ago,” Olivier adds. “Shakespeare’s plays deal with people in positions of power and responsibility. They explore how human nature copes with those stresses.”

For example? Olivier suggests that newly promoted leaders can find parallels with Shakespeare’s Henry V, who struggles to gain respect in his new role as king.

To weather acts of betrayal, you might turn to Julius Caesar, writes reporter Mara D. Bellaby.

The Winter’s Tale might be just the ticket for coping with midcareer changes.

Macbeth cautions about becoming obsessed with power for its own sake.

Hamlet can provoke discussions about the harmfulness of indecision and the necessity of action.

IMHO: Perhaps one of the greatest historical leadership feats recounted in a Shakespearean play is the triumph of Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt.

The play tells us Henry’s forces were outnumbered five to one on that St. Crispin’s Day – October 25, 1415. Yet, again by the play’s counting, 10,000 opposing forces were slain while Henry’s losses numbered fewer than 30.

Wow! Can it be so? More objective historians don’t dispute the triumph in the face of overwhelming odds. They do say that Henry’s success was due mainly to the superiority of the English longbow men over heavily armored knights on horseback, and this victory demonstrated the obsolescence of methods of warfare thought proper in the Age of Chivalry.

TGIM ACTION IDEA #1: Don’t say “C'est la guerre.” Translated as “This is war,” the sense of the phrase is a shoulder-shrugging attitude of resignation and inevitability; that “this cannot be helped.”

TGIM IDEA #1 IN ACTION: Say “C'est le V” -- Henry V, that is. Follow the Shakespearean leader and be like Henry V. Luck favors the technologically prepared. Are you keeping up? Or are you chivalrously clinging to strategies that will lead to your downfall?

Getting back to the Bard. In Shakespeare’s version of the Battle of Agincourt events, it’s the speech that Henry makes to his troops before the battle that inspires the victory.

Of course it’s the speech. That’s what plays are about. It begins with Henry suggesting that their small force is not a great disadvantage.

“The fewer the men, the greater the honour,” King Harry tells the assembled.

TGIM ACTION IDEA #2: Even if you and the Bard didn’t have the best of relations when you were supposed to read him, don’t be put off.

TGIM IDEA #2 IN ACTION: Read just the speech (Act IV, Scene III) with an eye to understanding the skills the king displays in just a few lines.

Known as the “Band of Brothers” speech, it acknowledges the difficult battle before them, envisions their triumph, and concludes inspirationally:

This story shall the good man teach his son;
And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by,
From this day to the ending of the world,
But we in it shall be remembered-
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he to-day that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition;
And gentlemen in England now-a-bed
Shall think themselves accurs'd they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.

Or, Take Five. Minutes that is, and enjoy Kenneth Branagh’s inspired and inspiring presentation here: Band of Brothers speech.

Putting it all together: Let’s give Shakespeare -- whosoever he may be -- the last word:

King Henry V: All things are ready, if our minds be so.  
Westmoreland: Perish the man whose mind is backward now!

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373

P.S. Hey! It’s Monday. There’s a week full of opportunity ahead.
                               Now, soldiers, march away:
                               And how thou pleasest, dispose the day!

Monday, October 31, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #328

MAKE MAGIC ON HALLOWEEN

The countdown to Halloween 2011 finalizes today – although, for a great many kids, as well as some adults, and certainly for all those retail establishments that sell candy by the bag, the “observance” has been going on for quite a while.

Despite the commerciality, scary movie tie ins and adoption of All-Hallows’-Eve naming rights, the origins of the observance comes down to us from the pre-Christian era Celtic festival of Samhain, held on the last autumn night in the northern hemisphere.

On this night – considered Celtic New Year – the Druids believed that the supernatural world drew closer to the physical world, so human beings were more susceptible to the influence and power of the unseen.

Making magic. Magic spells could be cast more easily. Divination was more revealing. Dreams held special significance.

This capsule history is adapted from Sarah Ban Breathnach’s book Simple Abundance. She continues:

 "I believe that Halloween is the perfect reminder that magic flows through us, mystery infuses every encounter of every day.

“We conjure up the shoe that cannot be found anywhere in the house … transform leftovers into a feast … coax a bounty from the barren earth … banish fear … heal hurts … make money stretch till the end of the month.

“We do all this and much more.

“But most (people) aren’t aware of their tremendous power for good.”

TGIM Takeaway: What a success-minded approach to an occasion that’s become so overcommercialized and even subject to criticism!

As Breathnach suggests, isn’t magic what we perform daily?

Don’t we – as leaders in our families, communities and in the business world shape forces with creativity … bring into the physical world something that existed only in the realm of imagination?

TGIM ACTION IDEA: If this can be done virtually unconsciously, how much more might we accomplish – how much more success might we achieve – if we remain fully attune to our “magical” powers?

“I am sure there is magic in everything …” observed Frances Eliza Hodgson Burnett (1849 – 1924). She was a playwright and author best known today for her children's stories, in particular The Secret Garden and Little Lord Fauntleroy (which, although an anachronism now, was the Harry Potter of its time and made her essentially the J. K. Rowling of her day; wealthy, celebrated and influential).

“I am sure there is magic in everything’” she said –

Only we have not the sense to get hold and make it do things for us.”

Maybe now we do.

As the co-creator with Eric Taylor of the Best Year Ever program, I support the concept that a “New Year” begins whenever you say it does. And I intend to observe and celebrate every cultural “New Year” occasion, official or otherwise.

TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: With a New Year insight on Halloween/Samhain, consider all the lives you touch. Commit to using your magical powers most wisely and effectively – today and every day.

Catching the Halloween spirit. Trying to be a little less Muggle and a little more magical.

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst

Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com   

P.S. Top 10 Signs You May Be Too Old to Be Trick or Treating
Life-like, life-size sculptures
created by contemporary artist
Gilles Barbier
for his work
Super Hero Nursing Home
10. You get winded from knocking on the door.
  9. You have to have another kid chew the candy for you.
  8. You ask for high-fiber candy only.
  7. When someone drops a candy bar in your bag, you lose your balance.
  6. People say, "Great Keith Richards mask!" -- and you're not wearing a mask.
  5. When the door opens you yell, "Trick or..." and can't remember the rest.
  4. By the end of the night, you have a bag full of restraining orders.
  3. You have to carefully choose a costume that won't dislodge your hairpiece.
  2. You're the only costumed super hero in the neighborhood with a walker.
  1. You avoid going to houses where your ex-wives live.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #327

WHAT IF THERE ARE NO UNIVERSAL RULES?

So I’ve been getting a little flack lately about the “Rules” we’ve been sharing here.

Not grievous, harmful, stop-me-dead-in-my tracks flack.

Quite the contrary actually.  Starting with TGIM #235 I characterized them as “Universal Rules to Live By.”

But since then a number of folks have engaged me with their thoughtful input on whether what we’re posting are “Rules” or “Secrets” (like the popular program The Secret), or “Laws” or “Guidelines” or “Wisdom” or similar descriptions.

And …

There’s been some questioning of just how to characterize them: Universal …, First … Immutable … Undeniable … or maybe just Useful Rules. (If most things in life were “just useful” imagine how far ahead we’d be.)

And, finally …

Some have commented on the scope of their influence: Rules of Life, … of Success, … of Survival, … of Attraction, … for Getting By.

So --

First of all: Thank you for your input. I appreciate it and hope you’ll stay engaged in such a thoughtful way.

Second: I’ve tried to process all you’ve told me and, now that I have, I’ve formulated what I hope is a satisfactory response.

TGIM Takeaway: You’re right.

You are correct. Whatever your position on what we’ve posted so far, your characterization and interpretation of these – uh, let’s just call them Useful Rules – is absolutely correct. For you.

There’s even a rule for it, sort of. Remember Dr. Spock (no, not the pointy-eared, ever-logical character Leonard Nimoy played in the Star Trek series)? I’m referring to the real, live, earthling Dr. Benjamin Spock; the bestselling author of the baby guide that millions of parents consulted while raising the baby boom generation.

Let’s take his primary bit of advice for new parents, allow it be applied to virtually every situation and call it –

Dr. Spock’s First Rule:
Trust yourself.
You know more than you think you know.

And so it goes for all the rules we have and will be sharing. In fact, so it goes for almost any advice you receive from others that doesn’t sit quite right with you.

So in this spirit (and allowing for The First Rule of Rules which is There’s usually an exception to every rule – including this one) I’m going to press on and continue to share more –

Useful Rules To Live By

In this round, let’s look at “Useful Rules” that, as with Dr. Spock’s Rule, tend to be of a personal nature.

The Useful Rule of …

• Perception: The world is exactly as you perceive it to be.

• Possibility: If you say it’s impossible, it probably is.  And, if you say it’s possible, it probably is.
• Walking the walk: People believe you when they see you living it.

Setting/achieving goals: Every arrow that flies feels the attraction of the earth. If you would hit the mark, you must aim a little above it.

• Empowerment: Everyone deserves, at least once a day, for someone else to make them feel significant.

• Honesty: Always tell the truth as you know it, remembering that others may know differently.

• Multi-tasking: One thing at a time.

• Amazement: Take nothing for granted.

• Responsibility: Clean up your own mess.

• Enthusiasm: Throw your heart over the fence and the rest will follow.

• R-E-S-P-E-C-T (with apologies to Aretha Franklin): If you want to be respected, you must respect yourself (with props to The Staple Singers).

• Belief: Believe that life is worth living and your belief will help create the fact.

• Opportunity: Is greatest where you are. The lure of the distant is deceptive

• Risk taking: Nothing ventured, nothing gained.

• New beginnings: Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.

• Persistence: Fall seven times, get up eight.

Do these Useful Rules “work” for you? I hope so.

And beyond Useful, they’re meant to be “Universal” enough so they pass the standard Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) termed –

The Categorical Imperative: Stated in an extremely over-simplified way, that’s the belief that everyone should follow only those principles they would like to see applied universally. Kant defined an imperative as any proposition that declares a certain action (or inaction) to be necessary. And he argued that “immorality” occurs when people set special standards for themselves alone.

Can you play by these rules? Then –

Share please.

Add to the collection with a qualifying rule (or rules) you’re guided by. Post a response. Or reach out directly at tgimguy@gmail.com. Just tell your story to the best of your ability. And if you have a source or attribution, please share that. Thanks.

Wrapping up for today: Since we started with Dr. Spock, and made a passing reference to the Start-Trekking half-human/half-Vulcan science officer, let’s close with a “rule” we know he would endorse.

Mr. Spock’s Rule: Live long and prosper.

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373

tgimguy@gmail.com   

P.S. “Science is organized knowledge. Wisdom is an organized life.” Immanuel Kant said that.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Thank Goodness It's Monday #326

WHAT’S BETTER THAN THE GOLDEN RULE?

You know “The Golden Rule.” It was the most-received response to last week’s TGIM #325 call for additional Universal Rules worth sharing.

It figures, actually. Scores of influential sources recount the universality of this basic precept of widely held religious and spiritual thinking.
Norman Rockwell created this illustration
which, in 1985,
was rendered as a mosaic
and presented to the United Nations
to celebrate its 40th anniversary.
The most commonly cited versions are rooted in the King James Version of “New Testament” Christianity:

Matthew 7:12 – “Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets.”

Luke 6:31– “And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.”

And, in one of those serendipitous moments that make you go “Wow!,” my current bedside reading talks about the so-called Gnostic Gospels -- the cache of sometimes alternative texts from the beginning of the Christian era unearthed in an archeological dig in Egypt in 1945.

There a writing known as the Didache (Greek for “teaching”) written in Syria about ten years before Matthew and Luke opens with a negative version of the so-called Golden Rule:

“The Way of Life is this: First you shall love the God who made you, and your neighbor as yourself; and whatever you do not want to have done to you, do not do to another.”

The other dominant Abrahamic religions stress comparable reasoning in a number of places, most similarly perhaps in:

Leviticus 19:34 – “The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as one of your citizens; you shall love him as yourself…” for the Jewish faith –

And for Islamists, in the Qur’an at various places, stating the positive form of the rule in:

Surah 24 v. 22 -- “...and you should forgive. And overlook: Do you not like God to forgive you? And Allah is The Merciful Forgiving.”

The Golden Rule from A to Z: Almost all A-for-Ancient cultures – Babylonian, Egyptian, Greek, and Chinese -- have addressed The Golden Rule’s idea of ethical reciprocity. (Wikipedia details many, many variants from a wide range of traditions here.)

And, apparently, the Z-for-Zoroastrianism, translated-from-Pahlavi comparative text is Dadistan-I-dinik 94:5 -- “That nature alone is good which refrains from doing unto another whatsoever is not good for itself.”

So, harkening back to today’s headline, it takes a bit of brass (yes, metal pun) to challenge all this wisdom and suggest that, perhaps –

The Golden Rule is flawed. Not fatally, mind you. And certainly not at all if it’s interpreted in the broadest, most generous way, as I expect most TGIM readers are inclined to do.

But here’s the “catch” as the Golden Rule stands: As George Bernard Shaw pointed out, the tastes of those who receive our Golden Rule treatment may not be the same as ours.

So to press our desires (“as ye would that men should do to you”) on them might not be well received at all.

Easy-to-grasp example: We might want other people to ignore our race or nationality when deciding how to act towards us, but would also want them to not ignore our differing preferences in food, musical tastes, desire for closeness, and so on.

TGIM Takeaway: Trying to live according to the Golden Rule means working proactively at empathizing with other people, including those who may be very different from us.

TGIM ACTION IDEA: Empathy is at the root of kindness, compassion, understanding and respect – qualities that we all appreciate being shown, whoever we are, whatever we think and wherever we come from.

So the burden to “figure out” what to do and how to do it is on those who promulgate the Golden Rule. And because it isn’t possible to know what it really feels like to be a different person or live in different circumstances and have different life experiences, it’s difficult for most of us to imagine what would cause us suffering and to try to avoid causing suffering to others.

For this reason some people may find the Golden Rule’s corollary (sometimes called The Silver Rule) – “do not treat people in a way you would not wish to be treated yourself” – more pragmatic and easier to put into action.

Or --

With such an important precept, perhaps it’s best to clearly state, in a positive way, the most generous understanding of The Golden Rule’s elements of pragmatic empathy, kindness, reciprocity and acceptance of an “other” point of view from the get go.

TGIM ACTION IDEA: Some people call this “improved” version of The Golden Rule –

The Platinum Rule
Do unto others,
wherever reasonable,
as they want to be done by.

Hmmm? Once again we run up against the barrier of knowing just precisely how “they” who differ seriously from us “want to be done by.”

How do you know how others want to be treated?

TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: The obvious way is to ask them.

While this may not be easily done if they’re candidates for Platinum Rule treatment, it’s still worth trying. Even if you can’t get an actionable answer, that process presents the best possible way to open a dialogue and allows you to establish your good intentions.

So has this TGIM message “done right” by you?

In the non-sectarian, not-very-scholarly world of TGIM, let’s deem whatever “rule” we endorse –

A consistency principle. It doesn't mean to give all the answers. It doesn’t claim to be an infallible guide to which actions are right or wrong. It only recommends a path to coherence and consistency; that we not have our actions toward others be out of harmony with our desires -- or theirs.

And there’s not much that’s better than that.

Geoff Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8 Depot Square
Englewood, NJ 07631
201-569-5373

tgimguy@gmail.com

P.S. Just one more point: Whether Platinum … or Gold … or Silver, the “Rule” doesn't replace regular moral norms. If, for example, you don’t believe in killing, no rule or even desire on the part of the person on the other side of your dilemma compels you to violate that conviction.

P.P.S. “Even as wisdom often comes from the mouths of babes, so does it often come from the mouths of old people. The golden rule is to test everything in the light of reason and experience, no matter from where it comes.” Mahatma (the honorific means “Great Soul”) – Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi (1869-1948) said that.