Showing posts with label Generation Flux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Generation Flux. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Saving Daylight



I went out for a run at 3:30 in the afternoon. I usually go at 9:30 in the morning but it was raining so I held off until 3:30.

Not too long ago I had a single time slot for a workout: 5 a.m. If I got up and went I was proud of myself, if I missed it there was no second chance and I’d berate myself all day.

Now, though, my days are much more fluid.

I eschew schedules. Always have.

I have a certain number of things that need to be accomplished and I will put them in logical order and work through them. I will work until they are done. But the same thing every day? No, thank you.

I didn’t used to have this freedom. I had to have my butt in a chair every day by 8:30 a.m. I was stuck in that chair until 5:30 p.m. That was me paying my dues.

But now I have control over my own destiny and I’m a little bit like the new pilot asking in mid-air, “where to?”


Friday, April 6, 2012

A Birthday Resolution

It’s been a week since A Birthday Juxtaposition. In past years I would still be celebrating my birthday. But I’m older. I only celebrated for four days.
Anyway, the juxtaposition put Lady Gaga, ROI, and Generation Flux against one another in an epic (not really) mind map. Mind mapping is a good way to make sense of disconnected thoughts fighting for attention while you’re trying to focus.
I started with Gaga. March 28th was her birthday so I used mine, the 29th, to salute her. I explained her use of fame as a medium like painting or music. I confessed I love her.
Then I wrote on ROI. I am still working on the project to show exactly what impact our team is having on reducing financial leakage. I wrote a formula into which we could plug various measurements to deduce the definitive sum that would be ROI. It looks something like this:
L= T[Is + L]
No, I won’t explain it. And yes, I do apologize to all the legitimate math people who will be offended by my abuse of their symbols.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Another GenXer in Flux

I want to break my default settings. I want out of the day-to-day life of boredom, routine, and petty frustration (with a nod to David Foster Wallace, linked above).
I know most people don’t think their desires are unreasonable. Except, when I say mine aloud, the people around me scoff. Audibly.
Some of my favorite nay-sayings:
·         Just be glad you have a job.
·         You may have to take what you can get.
·         Well everyone wants that, but be realistic.
·         If the opportunity presents itself, sure, but it’s unlikely.
·         How will you make money that way?
·         I just don’t see how it would work.
The last one is Cuk, my ROI-model-requiring husband. Show me the plan, give me the proof, explain exactly how it will work and also, what the back-up plan is.
Stick to what you know
Most of these voices come from a traditional economy. The traditional economy looks like this: eight-to-five work day, five days a week, office, cubicle, meetings, Outlook calendars, phone extensions, regular paychecks with direct deposit and 401k contributions.
Stability, right? Not so in 2008. Not so in 2009.
I am grateful for having “survived.” I'm grateful for my employer having “survived,” under incredibly competent leadership, with only a small share of the overall casualties. I know my family was extremely lucky and continues to benefit from the benevolence of stable, profitable companies.
But it’s not 2009 anymore. And I'm moving to Clemson Road.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

A Birthday Juxtaposition

On the day before my 35th birthday, my primary task was to develop an ROI model. How do we determine the total cost of doing what we’re doing?
While thinking about this I read this article which suggests embracing chaos. It describes the current business world as being in flux.
Then I thought of Lady Gaga. The day before my 35th birthday, was Mother Monster’s 26th birthday.
What do ROI, Generation Flux, and Lady Gaga have in common? Hard to say.
Visualize It
There is a very talented writing coach I have been following for years who suggests mind mapping. For everything. Mind mapping generates ideas by locating connections and overlaps. So I mind map.
The links I find are between
Lady Gaga “learn, ask, see,” and ROI “proof, data, confidence.”
Then Lady Gaga “brave” and Generation Flux “courage.”
Then ROI “value, participation, contribution,” and Generation Flux “willing, available, opportunity.”
For a tutorial on mind mapping, proprietary of course and meant for reference purposes only, leave a comment and I'll send it.
Find Commonality
This mind map, with its three very foreign subjects, might put “Kasie” right in the middle. At 35, I find I am at times fierce and proud, willing to take risks, but preoccupied with evidence and security.
For example, I think lotteries are voluntary taxes. But Tuesday when Adam Levine re-tweeted a Milton Berle quote, “If opportunity doesn’t knock, build a door,” I bought a Mega Millions ticket. I very rarely play, as evidenced when I needed help picking my numbers.
I did not offer to split my winnings with the clerk who helped me, just so everyone knows. Get in line, dude.
I am at once change junky and curmudgeon, social network surfer and paperback buyer.
What sort of profound life lesson has the juxtaposition of Lady Gaga, ROI models, and Generation Flux provided? Perhaps only this: I know Pandora has a station to match that.
And, we’ll need three more posts to tease out each subject and a fourth one to complete the analysis.
Later today I’ll post the Lady Gaga one. After all, it’s my birthday and I get to do whatever I want. Now off to work!

Kasie Whitener is Running for US Senate in South Carolina

Yep. I'm jumping in. Papa told me not to get into politics until I was 50. He said by then I'd be ruined anyway. I'll be 49 in t...