Tag Archives: advice

The Ocean

Ocean Road

There is an old Italian proverb that I don’t expect you’ve heard although you’ve probably experienced.  It goes like this:

“Tra il dire e il fare, c’è di mezzo il mare.”

For those of you who don’t speak the language, roughly translated it means “between saying and doing lies half the ocean” and like many old proverbs, this one has endured because it’s spot on.  There are lots of great ideas that have amounted to nothing because of the ocean, that vast space between saying and doing.  We need to navigate those waters or drown. Continue reading

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Filed under Consulting, Thinking Aloud

Back At It

A golf ball directly before the hole

I finally played golf this weekend. If you’ve been following my tweets or taken note of the snide side comments in this space, you know I’ve not been happy about the layoff.  In fact, the 90+ days of enforced time off (a layer of snow really does inhibit one’s ability to find a white golf ball as well as reduce how far that ball travels) did have a side benefit, one which I think might apply in some ways to business as well. Continue reading

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Filed under Helpful Hints, Reality checks

Emotional Fast Food

Aurora Australis On My Head

I’m glad that I helped to raise two children.  In addition to a lot of other things, it taught me how to keep calm while people scream their heads off at one another.  It’s a skill that came in really handy when dealing with little people and it comes into play more often that you would believe with big people as well.

I’m surprised how much energy and time are wasted by very busy people arguing about things which are absolutely minor in the grand scheme of things.  Today, I listened for a good 10 minutes while three people whose work and intelligence I respect went at one another over a process issue.  Lots of finger-pointing, lots of history revisited.  Not much progress made towards resolving the problem.

It’s nice to feel like you’ve “won” an argument but most of the time, the feeling is fleeting.  The lingering bad feelings, the lack of advancement toward the overall goal (which certainly wasn’t to make your self feel better – it was probably to get something done!) make those petty arguments the equivalent of emotional fast-food – satisfying but ultimately not very goo d for you.

“You did this!” “Well, you did that first” isn’t as productive as “I’ll do this and you do that.”  I’m not sure why grown-ups spend time on anything else.

You want to fight about this?

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