Friday, January 6, 2012

Starbucks makes me think


I found a couple of interesting articles in a freebie newspaper, The Epoch Times, last night at Starbucks. First, let me throw out a disclaimer that this is a free newspaper because it was created and is funded by supporters of the Falun Gong (Falun Dafa) movement, which is a sort of hybrid Buddhist religion. I had a hunch it was because of the content of a few of the articles and the plethora of advertising for the Shen Yun Performing Arts. Jennifer and I went to one of their performances last year at the Kennedy Center in DC. Their performances are advertised as a look at the grace and wisdom of five thousand years of Chinese culture through colorful and exhilarating performances of classical Chinese dance and music (no mention of anything related to Falun Gong). What they don't tell you is that it is an indoctrination for the Falun Gong movement, complete with volunteers who make attempts to proselytize the audience following the performance. It's the equivalent of going to a "five thousand year journey through middle eastern culture" that really turns out to be the passion play with bible thumpers attempting to save your soul following the performance. I don't mind some religion mixed in with fine arts, as long as it's advertised up front. I probably still would have gone (the music and dancing were beautiful) but I left with a bad taste in my mouth, as if I had been bamboozled. I guess that could have been a blog post all on its own. On to the articles.

The first article that caught my eye is about the Volkswagen company in Germany. "In an effort to improve work-life balance, VW's Workers' Council took the initiative to push through this effort…" What is this effort? Every day after 6:30pm, company issued Blackberry phones will not be able to receive any company emails until 7:30am the following day. It's all part of an attempt to prevent burnout by their employees and make sure that they don't have to work at home late in the evening. I think it's a pretty cool idea. In the article they mention an author who criticizes what he calls the "misguided culture of overwork in the United States." You can read his article here… it's an interesting read. I've read some about companies that are on the "cutting edge" of management techniques that are allowing naps after lunch and other measures that ultimately lead to better performance and production. If you read the article from the Epoch Times and the one criticizing the American work ethic, there is a good case that the Germans have it right and that the "work work work" mentality isn't the most productive. I know that the Navy created a Task Force Work/Life (TFWL) in 2007 that was awarded in 2010 by the Alliance for Work Life Progress for its initiatives. How is work/life balance being addressed in the corporate world these days? By the way, the average full-time German works 1436 hours a year, and the average full-time American works 1804 hours. That's roughly an additional nine hours a week.

The second article that I noticed is actually a book review that touches on a blog that you wrote (Ed) a couple of weeks ago about busyness. The book is called "Simplicity Parenting" and is subtitled "Using the Extraordinary Power of Less to Raise Calmer, Happier, and More Secure Kids." Of course I haven't read the book, but reading some of its basic concepts in the review intrigued me. A quote from the book says, "We are building our daily lives, and our families, on the four pillars of too much: too much stuff, too many choices, too much information, and too much speed. With this level of busyness, distractions, time-pressure, and clutter (mental and physical) children are robbed of the time and ease they need to explore their worlds and their emerging selves."

The book is written by an M. ED. with years of experience as a school counselor and as a consultant and trainer for private schools so he's no slouch. The concept is interesting enough to me that I may add this to my "to read" list even though I don't have kids. The concepts sound like they would apply to adults as well. I checked out the book on Amazon and all of the reviews that it's received have been good, except for one (and that was someone who just complained that they were already familiar with the concepts in the book). I know that we live in a different age, but I do often wonder when kids have time these days to just be kids. Many, if not all, of the stories that we regurgitate over and over with each other an with our cousins were events that happened while we were doing "nothing". It was time that was nothing more than play time.

Maybe if Dad kept us busier when we were kids he would have had fewer nails in the tops of his sawhorses!

Getting High


I’m practicing my journalism skills by creating an eye catching and provocative headline that only loosely relates to the topic at hand. You like? I’ll bet it got Dad’s attention! Now on to Marc’s question…

I’ve always had a fascination with heights. My first recollections were that of buildings in cities. I’m still the guy that walks down a major city street looking up at the huge buildings. When I was in college I started becoming interested in hiking and rock climbing through a good friend Jamie Kurt. His head was firmly in the clouds, dreaming in college of and now actually living in Denver, the gateway to the most plentiful mountain region of the continental US. Through his friendship and my/our hiking adventures, my perspective began to change and I started to recognize nature and the beauty and tranquility of mountains.

I’ve matured significantly since my college days (in some ways) and that maturity has, among other things, calmed my mind enormously. The mind of most 20-somethings is wild and chaotic, and mine was on cognitive red bull. I’ve learned calm my gray matter a bit, and sustain the mental focus that allows me to appreciate experiences more. This includes allowing myself to be humbled by the beauty of nature. My experiences along this path have been “escalating”: initially through my college adventure experiences, more recently doing significant research and reading about expeditions in faraway places, and now planning some larger scale adventures myself. It is not unlike a quote on a different topic by Michael Hyatt: “You are not as smart as you think you are, but you have more potential than you can possibly imagine; and the secret from one to the other is humility, if you'll be humble and learn, you'll get there and make a big dent." My own maturity and humility at the prospect of nature’s marvels has allowed me to truly appreciate their grandeur. What a better place to realize one’s enormous and God-given physical potential than through the exploration of our world!

So, in a time when humanity is advancing on and destroying the precious few unspoiled natural landscapes of our world, the mountains to me seem one of the few final frontiers where a true connection to a natural and untamed landscape can be made. One of the few places where our mind and our body can connect with a “field of play” this is at once harsh, trying, but above all fair. There are rules, and although we may not always understand them, they don’t change. And don’t I owe it to myself and my Maker to find my outer limit?

This post is reading like an Ed on an airplane at 37,000 feet, but I will close with two quotes from a wonderful book by explorer Mark Jenkins:

• Real alpinists know how to turn off their head. From years of experience they realize that half the time the body knows better than the know-it-all-mind. The mind is too fickle. Optimistic one minute, pessimistic the next, pitching back and forth like a rowboat on big seas. Not the body. The body doesn’t exaggerate or self-deprecate or play mind games. The body is a machine, a realist. If it’s hard and painful, well then it’s hard and painful. If it’s a cruise, then it’s a cruise. The body doesn’t make mountains into anything. The body is an animal. It moves and lives, only in the present.

• Adventure is no longer simply about exploitation or education; it’s about the quest for understanding. You don’t need a mountain or a river or a jungle – you need only an open mind. Your goal does not have to be a first; it only need be something that takes you to a new place and challenges you physically, mentally, emotionally, or spiritually.

Let the heckling begin!

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Marc on Brad's 2012 List

Nice work Brad. Way to make us slackers feel like - well, slackers.

I think we've talked about it on the phone previously, but I don't remember what the source is of this desire you have to hike at altitude. It's interesting to me because I really have none - and I mean zero - inclination to do so. Granted, there are probably some great views above 14K feet, but that's not enough motivation for me to want to do it.

Are you going to introduce Sasha to your brand of back country single-man tent camping, or the Marc and Jennifer brand 8-man tent with a queen-size inflatable mattress camping?

Jennifer would LOVE for me to quit biting my nails, but I don't see it happening. I've told her (and it's the truth) that I only bite my nails when I'm completely bored, which usually happens in meetings at work. I don't think I can avoid that. I don't know why white fingernail tips look so appetizing!

I really hope it does work out, but Jennifer and i have said for quite a few years that when I retire from the military, we'd like to take six months to a year to travel around the United States and visit national parks. We would do it in some kind of RV (think more Will Smith's Motorhome vice the Christmas Vacation RV) and just freewheel it around the country. I hope it actually pans out.

I used to teach SMART goals back in the Navy Leadership Continuum. Those were the good ole days! I've probably mentioned this before, but the two concepts that I have carried forward from the curriculum and used the most are Blanchard's Situational Leadership II model and Victor Vroom's Expectancy Theory of Motivation. I like the concept of SMART goals, I'm just not very good at doing it! As a side note, I decided to do a search on Situational Leadership, and a training session from Blanchard's company on Situational Leadership runs about $2000, and that's if you're an American Management Association member! Holy smokes!

Brad on 2012 priorities & goals


You know how this fella get's jazzed about goals. I've included a SMART goal graphic for all. I also like to set general priorities that aren’t necessarily goals, but guiding ideals for what is important to me.

General priorities
1. Moderation in diet.
2. Moderation in spending money.
3. No clock punching at work.
4. Maximum time with Sheila, Sasha, Kira.

Goals
1. Read 12 books.
2. Hike above 14,000 feet twice.
3. High point in at least 5 states.
4. Attend 5 men’s and 5 women’s UI sporting events.
5. 2 separate 1-1 activities each with Mom and Dad.
6. Rock climb 4 times on natural rock.
7. Introduce Sasha to camping, sleep in tent 4 times.
8. Visit 10 different state parks in Iowa.
9. Stop chewing fingernails (Sheila monthly judge).
10. Do 1 bike race/ride, 1 triathlon, and 1 running event half marathon or longer.
11. Swim 50 times (avg. 1/week).

Looking forward to motivating each other throughout the year to stay on task!

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Steven Bloom is a Jackass

Finally got around to watching the MSNBC video with the Bloom interview and his "defense" of his piece. You can just tell by his attitude that he's an elitist jackass. Now that I heard him speak about it, I find his piece more offensive than it did originally. It's actually hard for me to believe that he's stayed in Iowa all those years.

Sadly, he has already benefited from the media attention he's received, and probably WILL get out of Iowa because he'll get all kinds of job offers from uber-liberal colleges around the country now.

Good riddance.

Ed on Iowa, and the article from Steven Bloom

Brad, I didn’t have this context and really appreciate you providing it. I’ve just invested an hour at work in reading the article and all I have so say is … WOW. There’s a lot to think about packed into that article. And really, I’m not sure what to think of it. My initial reaction is that I was more offended by it than Marc, but not to a great degree. And yes, there were parts of the article that were endearing to me also, made me proud to be from Iowa.

One thing that does come to mind is how easy it is to use facts to mold your perspective of history, and what “really happened” from your unique perspective. And how easy it is to let the argument distract us. Distract us from what is far more pressing and important, our future. So what does the next 25 years hold for Iowa? That’s what I would like to debate, not imposing factually based jabs on both sides of an issue about what has already happened, unless there is a usefulness in understanding how that past can help us understand what is going to happen in the future.

Iowa, the United States, and the whole world (farmers, politicians, pastors, immigrants, etc.) needs to leave the past behind and should be far more interested in the future. I know that “history repeats itself” and that much can be gained from knowing and understanding what happened in the past. But that sounds like a hardened realist history professor talking. I say we should invest less of our precious energy and time on the past – and put far more interest and focus on ensuring our future.

So what does the future look like for Iowa? Now that’s great blog material …

More on Iowa

I wish that I could watch the video of his defense of the piece, but I'm at work, so this will have to do for now.

After reading through his article, I can't say that I found much of it offensive. It seemed fairly straight forward and some parts of it were even endearing to me. It was a little irritating to me that he strayed off course with the sole intent of taking a pot shot at Christianity, but other than that, it wasn't much different than what you would read in a RAGBRAI piece.

The offensive part, at least to me, is the assumption that all of these things about the state disqualify Iowans from picking a president. That is what I call the "Democrat Arrogance" in action. I'll try not to go too far down the rabbit trail, but my complaint about democrats has always been what I see as their elitist attitude. They think that Iowa farmers, or anyone from a community that has less than 500,000 people, or doesn't have a PhD, or doesn't have an Indian neighbor, is too stupid to decide who is best to lead our country. I believe that Iowa can choose a president as well as anyone can. I would love to have a follow-on argument with anyone that claims otherwise: Tell me what state IS qualified to choose the president. If it wasn't Iowa, who would it be?

There were less than 125,000 votes cast in Iowa last night (combined total). If you want to blame anyone for the power of the Iowa caucus, blame the media. Ultimately, that's what Mr. San Francisco is crying about; he doesn't understand how a state like Iowa, which he doesn't think is qualified to choose anything but a hunting dog, can have so much influence on an election. Maybe he should write home and ask the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to declare the Iowa caucus as unconstitutional.

Brad on Love Iowa?


The Iowa video is in direct response to a controversial article written by Steven Bloom, professor at the University of Iowa. It caused quite a stir in the state and beyond because his shock journalism with questionable at best factual underpinning. It unfortunately to us proud Iowans perpetuated many invalid stereotypes of what makes our state and our residents so great. That is why the representation of the state and its people was made the way it was, including the vulgar language, in your face approach, and commentary about "being nice".

Read the Steven Bloom article HERE, perhaps it will give you some context to understand the motive of the video a little better. Mr. Bloom also went on Rock Center recently and defended his article, a link to that video is HERE. My assumption was that news of the article had reached the far reaches of the coast, in part due to the close connection to the Iowa caucuses. Perhaps not. I'll be interested in whether or not that changes opinions on the "entertainment" or "intelligence" value of the video.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Marc on 2012



Ed, it looks like you've got a few significant events on your list this year, and I'm not talking about the sprint triathlon. After RAGBRAI last summer, the triathlon will be a walk in the park.

Riding 1000 miles is a nice bike goal and I'd like to have a similar goal for the year. I'm a little hesitant to quantify it until I see where we end up living in San Diego. It certainly won't be a problem for me in terms of time since I will most certainly be able to ride year-round out there. However, whether or not I am able to log any significant miles by riding directly from our residence will certainly affect my mileage expectations. Riding is so much more of a pain when you have to load up your bike and get in the car before you even start. I'm really hoping to be able to ride from home.

I know a move to KC would be the major one on your list, but in the long run would probably pay off based on the location of the kids schools and your work. I hope your preference comes into being in that you can stay put with B&V but serve in a new position that will present some new and interesting challenges.

When's the beach week? Can we get in on that? Any aspirations that involve more time with family (Holly and the kiddos) is worth whatever effort it takes to accomplish it. I hope all of that stuff comes to fruition.

For me? I haven't really thought about it much (sorry Brad). Now that I'm on the spot, I can think of a few:

1. Qualify as a Information Warfare Officer within six months of reporting to San Diego.

2. Get back in the water at least once a week. I hardly swam at all during the past year. I miss it primarily because I don't do anything for my upper body if I don't swim (I know that's hard to believe considering my guns). It's also a lot easier on my knees, which are growing increasingly "gritty". Perhaps my efforts will lead to a B3aW sprint tri at the end of the summer.

3. I checked and was surprised to see that I read only 11 books in 2011. I think I had hoped to read a book a month so at least I wasn't far off my mark. I would like to continue to read at that pace, or perhaps a bit more. 15 books is a good goal. I should combine my goal of spending less time on Facebook with my reading goal since they are directly related. I don't read because I'm on Facebook!

4. I'll try to post more regularly on the blog, regularly enough for 12-months that are free of "I'm carrying the blog" emails from my brothers!

5. As hard as it will be and as funny as it may sound to you guys, I'm going to work harder than ever to abstain from any political commentary on Facebook. That will be tough considering it's an election year, but nothing, and I mean NOTHING good comes from political debates on the interwebs.

6. Not feel like a loser in January 2013 because I can't come up with more things to put on my aspirations list.

That's all I've got fellas. If I think of something else, you'll hear about it.

Love Iowa?





Yeah, I can see where this video would be appealing to Iowans who feel beleaguered by the press who endlessly debate whether or not the Iowa caucus means anything. Let's summarize some of the facts we learned about Iowa in the video:

Fuck you
Democratic
Gay marriage is legal
First female lawyer
City dwellers
Each farmer feeds 155 people
Farming isn't easy because farms are big
Low unemployment
Des Moines is rich and happy
Fly over and wave because we're nice
Fuckwad
We invented the computer

I don't like it. It makes Iowans look petty. Dropping the F-bomb doesn't make you cooler or sophisticated than the next guy, and what would be so bad about being conservative Republican with 4 out of 5 people living on farms instead of in cities? I think farmers are as qualified as city dwellers to choose a presidential candidate.

Entertainment value = B
Intelligence value = D+

Maybe the World WILL End This Year


I'm posting this one for Dad, since he holds Dennis Rodman in such high esteem. How would you follow up a year in which you were inducted into the basketball Hall of Fame?? But of course! You would coach a topless women's basketball team!

I wish I could say I was kidding, but I'm not. You can check it out here.

I think Dennis Rodman is a model citizen. Maybe he should run for the Republican presidential nomination...

Monday, January 2, 2012

2012 Aspirations

Yep, that's right ... aspirations. Basically New Years Resolutions with 60% less commitment! Gotta love it. Here's what I aspire to fulfill in 2012:

1. Get in shape for Grand Canyon trip and stay under 200 lbs for the full year.
2. Complete the planned route with a minimum of bitching and moaning.
3. Hunt with Brad at least one more time prior to Spring.
4. Accept a new professional position (job), preferably in KC and with my existing employer.
5. Take a family vacation by renting a house "on the beach".
6. Take a long weekend (with the boys) and set a new personal best for the largest fish I've ever caught.
7. Successfully complete my first Sprint triathlon.
8. Move to South KC, closer to where our lives continue to trend.
9. Ride at least 1,000 miles on my bike.
10. Stay equally and hopefully more engaged in my kids activities and coach, cheer and support them in their endeavors.

Well, there they are ... for all to judge me on at the end of 2012! Just remember, they're aspirations!

2011 B3aW year in review

It's been a good year on B3aW, and we have covered some ground! An abbreviated list of topical highlights includes sexual assault, media assault, travel, exercise, dumb stuff we do, RAGBRAI, GPS v. humanity, and perfomance management. WHEW!

So what does 2012 look like boys? Is there a blogging commitment on your 2012 goals list? The Grand Canyon will surely provide some content; exercise/activity is always a go to topic, and perhaps we'll get some political commentary in place with the elections looming. Looking forward to another great year on the world wide web (thank you Al Gore!).

Love Iowa - watch video link


Watch Video Here

Revised video HERE