Forget yourself

Among recent thought-provoking quotes I’ve found, I love this one most of all:

Develop interest in life as you see it; in people, things, literature, music – the world is so rich, simply throbbing with splendid treasures, beautiful souls, and interesting people. Forget yourself.
Henry Miller

What about you?

What interests help you most to forget about your troubles, your fears, and sometimes, your goals and aspirations, too?

How can you most naturally get immersed in the moment, free of the past, free of the future?

As hard as it may be to do, in ways that are satisfying to you, as often as you can, fill yourself with the present.

Really…get excited and change things

Get excited by vintage letterpress
Originally uploaded by flowers&fleurons

Do you see something that could be better?

Or see something that’s just not right?

Do you have a dream of better things…for you, your company, country or world?

Then muster your courage.

Follow the urge.

And take this poster’s sage advice:

Get excited and change things.

Why wait for tomorrow? You can change the world today

It’s common to want to make an impact in a big way with one’s time and talents.

And it’s common to miss the small, daily opportunities each of us has to make a difference.

The subject came up in a book club meeting recently.

This group of about ten women had read and were discussing a book we loved, Let the Great World Spin, by Colum McCann.

One member of the group asked, as we talked about a character who was quite selfless and had a big positive impact in others’ lives, “How can we make a difference in the world? There’s not a lot we can do in the jobs and lives we have.”

She was searching for ways of making a huge, high-impact difference in many people’s lives, all at the same time.

“There ways to have a positive impact where you are, right now,” I said.

“Who knows? You’ve probably made a difference in someone else’s life by an example you set, or by something encouraging you said at a time when they needed it most. And you may never know that you had that impact,” I suggested to her.

She paused, and thought back to her own experience, realizing its truth from the receiving side. Her husband passed away within the past year after a nine-year struggle with a serious illness. Many people surrounded them during that time, and have since, trying to help them, and ease their burden.

What I think my friend may not realize is how much she and her family gave many people in their example of grace, courage, and yet, strong and positive spirits in the face of such daunting circumstances.

Many of us know, I’m sure, what a relief it is to receive much-needed help from a caring friend at a time when we’re experiencing great life challenges.

That encouragement can make a huge difference with smaller challenges, too. These smaller opportunities crop up far more frequently.

You know such moments, such as when a friend seems discouraged, but doesn’t mention it, feeling her concern may not be important enough to take others’ time with it.

Or when a neighbor, normally upbeat, seems depleted, distracted.

And we can be helpful in these ways to strangers, too.

I will never forget one older woman in New York, and such a moment.

Physically frail and with poor eyesight, she was shuffling down the wintry street, alone. She was struggling to get to an appointment at a building she’d never visited before.

Meanwhile, my daughter, 13, and I were hustling down the street, enjoying the festivity of New York City at the holidays, engrossed in a full schedule, high energy, happy chatter.

And while I wasn’t really aware of the people around us, for some reason, I noticed the struggling, solitary old woman.

“Could you help me find this building?” she asked, exasperated, a bit sad, a bit desperate at her solitary plight.

I hesitated, unsure how long it would take, knowing how much Anne and I were trying to get done in our rapid-cycle trip.

But I stopped. How could I not help this old woman struggling down a busy New York street, alone?

Ultimately, helping her didn’t take long, at all, of course.

And far from taking away from the experience of our time in New York, it only added to it. I’ve never been able to forget her, what she said to me, and her thankfulness.

As she’d taken the arm I offered her for steadiness, and we started to slowly, quietly search for the building in the midst of the hustle and bustle that surrounded us, she said, “No one will stop to help! Everyone is so busy! They go so fast!”

It was so easy for me to help her, and it made the city a little more accessible, a little less angry for her, the day a little less alone.

I probably have my mother to thank for the fact that I even noticed her, and her need for help.

When we were growing up, Mom would say at dinner almost every evening, “What did you do to help the world today?”

The point she was making – and I’m now thankful she did – was that the help we provide others may not be life-changing for thousands of people at a time (or maybe it is).

But there is something we can do, right where we are, helping the people we encounter.

The point is, don’t wait for great, big world-changing events, or high-profile, celebrity-filled fundraising appeals.

Keep your eyes and ears open. There’s someone around you now who could use a little bit of your talent, your time, your encouragement.

And it would be easy not to notice.

Start today, in some small way, to make the world a better place.

There’s an opportunity around you now, somewhere right where you live.

Only a few decades and yet…

Only a few decades and yet…

Originally uploaded by jcgr

Some things change and some things stay the same.

Here a Sacramento city street scene from the 40′s or 50′s (car buffs, which is it?) is contrasted with the reflection of a street scene from 2010.

How is it true in your world that some things are changing – perhaps even rapidly – yet some things will always stay the same?

The mixed emotions of reaching major milestones

Our son’s last day of high school is tomorrow.

Well, he does have finals ahead next week. And then graduation is just after that.

It’s all happening so quickly now.

Everything has been happening quickly this year, as it did when our daughter was a senior.

The time, from a parent’s perspective, absolutely flew.

I asked Matt tonight as he was heading to bed, “How do you feel about your last day of high school? Are you excited? Sad?”

I paused, letting the feelings just be what they were, for each of us.

“Or maybe you’re feeling a mix of emotions. Often at these times, we do,” I suggested, reflecting privately on my own mix of emotions at this momentous time in his life, and ours, too.

How about you?

What emotions occur to you, when you recall having reaching major life or work milestones?

Do you recall a combination of excitement when looking ahead, tinged with wistfulness, as you looked back and realized what was ending, too?

It is possible to feel many different emotions, all at the same time.

Change often means you’re gaining something, while giving up something, too.

Simple, elegant execution leads to customer delight

The last macarons
Originally uploaded by jcgr

It often doesn’t take that much to create customer delight.

Just an excellent product, well-tuned into what customers want.

Simple, and elegantly-designed.

Perfectly executed.

Fresh.

Well-offered, well-sold at the right price, and the right place and time.

Voila! Customer delight.

Here, the last of a box of simple, but simply wonderful macarons.

I so hated to see this gift come to an end.

Running on the same wavelength

In unison

Originally uploaded by jcgr

As athletes, members of a track team compete individually.

But they also work together as a team, competing effectively, collectively against other teams.

Sometimes teammates work in especially synchronous fashion in sports, work, and life.

Here, in one especially synchronous moment, members of a track team run in almost perfect unison in the inside lane, and in almost perfect mirror images of each other, between the inside and outside lanes.

As the photographer who caught this moment, it reminded me of times I’d experienced as part of an especially strong team.

What are the most synchronous and effective team experiences you recall from your work or life?

You’re always creating

We’re constantly creating, each of us, in our own way.

We create products and services.

We create relationships with suppliers, partners, and customers, as well.

We create personal relationships. We create families.

We build bridges, networks, and communities.

We create moments. We craft futures, with decisions and actions, large and small.

We’re creating in more ways than we even know.

Here are thoughts others offer on the process of creating in various ways:

True happiness comes from the joy of deeds well done, the zest of creating things new.
Antoine de Saint-Exupery

We are constantly creating ourselves by what we move toward or away from.
George Weinberg

You can teach a student a lesson for a day; but if you can teach him to learn by creating curiosity, he will continue the learning process as long as he lives.
Unknown

We are creating the future.
Gunter Grass

Clipping along



Running along at a rapid clip

Originally uploaded by jcgr

Zipping along, clipping along.

Places to get to.

Things to get done.

No time to waste, you can bet.

But to make that clipping along, zipping along work as well as it must and it can, make sure that you take even a few minutes for yourself.

Take a deep breath.

Pause, and refresh in a way that works for you.

In the short- and long-run, as well, pause and refresh time is time that will serve you well.

How to bring your dream to life in 5 minutes a day

Dreaming of something you’d like to achieve?

Dream fully, imagine freely.

Pre-experience success.

Notice what you will see, hear and feel when all actions have been taken and everything has played out well.

And after imagining completely…take the first step.

Today.

Tomorrow.

And every day, even if it’s just for five minutes a stretch.

At the end of the first week, you’ll have more than a half hour of progress invested, leaving you with a half hour less of dream-making work ahead.

That’s not much, you say?

Well, then, invest 20 minutes a day, or an hour, if you can.

By the end of the first week, that will give you more than two hours of progress.

By the end of the first month? You’re at least ten hours ahead.

And at the end of the first year?

You’ll have invested at least 120 dream-creating hours more than you have now.

It adds up fast.

Consider what you dreams you can begin to achieve if you invest 5, 20 or even 60 minutes a day.

As for me, I think I’ll go spend my 5 minutes today starting to learn French…