Thursday, November 28, 2019

There is always room for discovery

"There’s wisdom in acknowledging that even if you passionately believe something, there’s room for possibility, for discovery, for progress."
Maarten van Doorn

It is such a confusing world of conflicting voices and the chaos of people and governments justifying opposing theories is crazy making.  I appreciate the above quote and the accompanying read that goes with it (if you follow the link below) for this. Basically this quote says to me that once we formulate what we believe in it is not the stopping point, this does not become an absolute belief that we have to defend and support ad infinitum. It is merely the starting point!!!
And, I think there is always room for more thinking, reading, and listening to what's underneath the babble ...
Cheers
Jeanne

"Thinking begins when you ask really difficult questions."
SLAVOJ ZIZEK, "Slavoj Zizek: I am not the world's hippest philosopher!", Salon, Dec. 29, 2012 http://www.notable-quotes.com/z/zizek_slavoj_ii.html
(Slovenian Marxist Philospher) I will definitely be reading more of Zizek's writing... although I have always blindly assumed Marxism was one of the ideologies that took away the Individual freedoms we value so highly in our democratic society. Haha here's a whole new tangent ... 

Maartan van Doorn
Medium member since Mar 2018
PhD candidate in philosophy. Reconsidering the obvious. Chasing interestingness. 
Get good ideas that make you think

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

A Wife's Tale by Aida Edmarian

Thank you Erin  for hosting Bookclub evening for The Wife's Tale by Aida Edemarian

I really appreciate all the work you went to for the authentic Ethiopian meal. It was a real treat, and added another dimension to the story of Yetemengu's life. Not only was feeding people so much work it was also as much a cultural experience as was eating the food, the spices and flavours so warm and delicious and nutritious! I wonder what it was like for her son when he came to Canada to eat the food he had access to here...

I did love the sparks we saw that she had a sense of humour and imagination, despite a life that seemed filled from a very early age with dour drudgery, violence, and injustice. Her indomitable spirit as well as her intelligence was what gave her family the opportunity to excel in their education and vocations. Quite inspiring! 

The other thing my mind keeps wandering back to as I read these and other stories is that judgement and comparison really don't serve us unless they make us feel grateful for where we are and more empathetic to others. To me reading this story was experiential rather than just an outside view into a life. Even though many of  Yetemengu's references; spiritual, historical, religious and family were obscure I don't know that having the confusion explained away would have helped me with the meta experience of the book, I still got the take away of a little more understanding of a life lived so very different than mine.  

We read history; details about the events and timelines of wars, revolutions, changes to new political regimes. To read about the day to day life and need to flee one's home and how a family adapts to all the events takes these events from the realm of facts and dates to individual lives lived. A valuable insight to assist in seeing the similarities of mother's and that feeding our family and education for our children is a universal concern and we all value the same things despite cultural and religious differences.

I am halfway through reading "Boy Swallows Universe" by Trent Dalton. A thought provoking journey through a young life, intense and hard to put down. It would be great for our bookclub, although I'm not so sure about some of the food; there is a Vietnamese feast with snake's head among the many dishes...some things make you gag, but are perfect in the context, both real and allegorical... every paragraph is a full of beautifully crafted descriptions and feelings. It is a full on pleasure to read 

Here are the links to the Ethiopian dishes:
First I made the Berbere spice: https://www.daringgourmet.com/berbere-ethiopian-spice-blend/
and the Niter Kibbehhttps://www.daringgourmet.com/niter-kibbeh-ethiopian-spiced-clarified-butter/
used in the following dishes…
Mesir Wat – Spiced Red Lentils:https://www.daringgourmet.com/misir-wat-ethiopian-spiced-red-lentils/
I used this recipe for the Ayib -Ethiopian Cheesehttps://www.aspicyperspective.com/ethiopian-recipes/
Doro Wat -Ethiopian Spiced Chicken: https://www.daringgourmet.com/doro-wat-spicy-ethiopian-chicken-stew/(The recipe suggests adding hard boiled eggs, but I decided to not include since I had seen Doro Wat also prepared without them)
Gomen – Collard Greens:https://www.daringgourmet.com/gomen-ethiopian-collard-greens/
And for dessert: Ethiopian Coffee-Infused Coffee Cake with Vanilla Ice Cream:
https://www.yummy-africa.com/recipes/2019/4/12/ethiopian-coffee-infused-coffee-cake
I didn’t have Yirgacheffe coffee on hand but believe you can get it at Ten Thousand Villages. I like the French Roast from there for my morning latte, so used that. Beware: there is a mistake in the baking time … it take about 45-50 minutes (not 20 minutes) in a Bundt pan. The recipe serves about double the number suggested (5-7 for a large Bundt cake seems like humungous servings!)
I had planned to make Injera but ran out of time… and instead served fried Parathafrom the frozen food section.
However, this looks reasonably straight forward to make…  I thought the other Doro Wat recipe looked better using the traditional spices and clarified butter: 
https://www.aspicyperspective.com/ethiopian-recipes-injera-doro-wat/
For the Injera Recipe:
  • In a large bowl, mix both flours, salt and baking soda together. Whisk in the club soda until smooth. Then add the vinegar and whisk. 
  • In a large skillet over medium heat. Pour oil on a paper towel and wipe the skillet with the oiled paper towel.
  • Using a scoop, pour batter into the skillet creating a 6-inch circle. Carefully swirl the pan around to thin out the batter until it measures 8- to 9-inches across.
  • Cook for 1 minute, then using a large spatula, flip the Injera over and cook another minute. Remove from the skillet and stack on a plate. Repeat with remaining batter. The Injera will seem slightly crisp in the pan, but will soften immediately when placed on the plate.
  • Once finished cooking the Injera. Cut the circles in half with a pizza cutter, roll into tubes and stack. Keep warm until ready to serve. Serve the Doro Wat and Injera together, tearing piece of Injera and using it to pick up the Doro Wat.

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Freedom of Speech; my response to Don Cherry controversy

“True power is living the realization that you are your own healer, hero, and leader.” 
Yung Pueblo  

My father in law was a hero in many ways. He served in the Canadian Armed Forces in the Second World War in the Reconnaissance; C Squadron, 11 troop, 8th Recce.  He was 18 years old when he signed up. Theo was injured near Caen in France in 1944 about a month after D Day, about 8 o'clock in the evening on July 15th. He was hit by several pieces of shrapnel from a bomb and one piece lodged in his spine. Paralysis in those days was incurable, basically those unfortunate enough to be para or quadriplegic from their injuries were put in a bed and never got out again, their bodies gradually shutting down until they died, on average they lived about two years. Theo never accepted this and he was his own healer, hero and leader, never giving up faith that he could walk again. He did it and forged a path for others to fight for their recoveries as well!  Through his force of will, determination and seriously hard work and though pain and complications continued throughout his life he continually beat all the odds and lived into his nineties. The strength and power he demonstrated from his choice to own his life was inspirational. The love he had for his family and friends, the many kindnesses he did for people that no one knew about, the values that he chose to live by pragmatically and without drama were dependable and constant. 

Underneath a gruff, abrupt and sometimes judgmental exterior remained that idealistic 18 year old boy who never lost his belief that we choose how we live; despite seeing many friends and enemies injured, killed and mentally damaged beyond hope in violent conflict where human lives were sacrificed in a war machine that was caused by hate, inequality and leaders manipulating divisiveness and fear between groups of people ... and for what?? Why did these boys have to fight for freedom?? Because of a power corrupted by greed and fear that used peoples differences to blame, fear, and ridicule another group, to promote a 'superior race'.

Yes I believe in free speech in its essence. But I believe that speech should never belittle, condemn or abuse another individual or group of people. Freedom of Speech is a privilege. It is not a vehicle to condemn other people. Compassion and empathy should be the basis for free speech. Confusion and fear are exaggerated and corrupted when "free speech" is used to separate "us" from "them". Those who fought for our freedom did not fight for one particular religion, culture, race, colour, handicap, gender, sexual preference, language, mental state or other belief that excludes or discriminates against a people. They fought for the right to be free to choose and live without persecution for those choices. 

The fastest way to lose the privilege of freedom of speech is to abuse it. If you are the abuser you may keep it for a while and shut up dissenting voices, but in the end this is what causes divisiveness, power struggles and wars. 

Not one of us has a divine right to be the judge of other people and it takes a vigilance to recognize in ourselves what we condemn and fear in others and be our own healer, hero and leader.

With love and In Remembrance
Jeanne
                

YUNG PUEBLO
 
diego perez is the writer behind the pen name yung pueblo. the name yung pueblo means “young people.” it serves to remind him of his ecuadorian roots, his experiences in activism, and that the collective of humanity is in the midst of important growth. his favorite word, liberation, took on a deeper meaning once he started meditating vipassana. through writing and speaking, he aims to support the healing of the individual, realizing that when we release our personal burdens, we contribute to a global peace.

Instagram: @yung_pueblo 

What to do to be successful

"If you consistently put unhealthy foods in your body, your body will become unhealthy. You body is a natural system governed by principles.
If you don’t pay the price to develop your mind with consistent learning, your mind will become dull and unclear. Your mind is a natural system governed by principles.
The law of the harvest is always in effect. What you plant, you must harvest. Furthermore, what you plant consistently over time eventually yields a compounded or exponential harvest."
Benjamin Hardy

This morning I was looking for a quote I read that didn't make sense at the time,but after reading and pondering it for a few days it hit me on the head, with a brick!.. and I can't find it now or remember the trail I was on when I read it. From memory paraphrasing: Successful people get successful by doing the things that no one wants to do. (a glimmer is emerging; it was from a Life Insurance company training talk, how I got there I'm not sure) Loosely interpreting, the author used the example that No One likes cold calling for sales leads. The successful insurance salesperson is the one who makes this into the number one thing they do. HA - makes sense... however, they don't think every morning "okay I'm going to do that thing I don't want to do" ... they take their ego out of the picture and don't think about what makes them feel bad, like the many rejections they'll get all day. They maybe say to themselves each morning that they are going to give 50 households the opportunity to purchase this benefit for their family and if even one person a week listens to them it is worth it. (This is not sales training by Jeanne, it is an illustration only)

There are a hundred directions I can go with this... but back to today's quote: we reap what we sow, which is the same as the above illustration in different words.

Thinking about where I want to go, what I want to do and who I want to be ... there is not so far between here and there. What lies in the way is a story I've made up in my mind about what I can and can not do. All I really have to do is that which I don't want to do; the hard thing, the obstacle in my way, the impossible, the thing that some people are genetically predisposed to do but I can't ... the excuses that I manufacture to stay in the comfort zone of wanting but not challenging my status quo to make the leap... the addiction of continuing the habits of my thinking that circle me around but keep me away from what it takes to be whatever my gut and heart tell me are "successful". The thing is we are in our own way, and we know how to get out of it, we just think its too hard.

The Wizard of Oz could say; no one can give it to you, its in you already, all you need to do is trust and follow that yellow brick road on your own quest ... or something could call us to dive down a rabbit hole like Alice and trust that we can grow or shrink or somehow deal with whatever adventures show up. And if we are waiting for the golden path or the inviting rabbit hole to show up... well hey (picture slap on the head) they are already there, in that niggling thing in the back of our head that we are making excuses for not doing and will lead us into the uncomfortable territory of finding out how much more we can be!

Cheers
Jeanne

About Benjamin Hardy

”Success isn’t that difficult; it merely involves taking twenty steps in a singular direction. Most people take one step in twenty directions. If you want a different life, you must be a different person.” –Benjamin Hardy
 Hardy earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology in 2013 from Brigham Young University. In 2018, he graduated from Clemson University with the Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in Industrial and Organizational Psychology.

MEET BENJAMIN HARDY, PHD

Hello and welcome!
In February of 2018, my wife Lauren and I adopted our oldest three kids from the foster system after a long, painful, and miraculous court battle. One month after the adoption, Lauren got pregnant with twins who were born in December.
So in 2018, we went from officially having 0 kids to having 5!
I’m an organizational psychologist and bestselling author of Willpower Doesn’t Work.
My work is viewed by millions of people monthly and featured on Forbes, Fortune, CNBC, Cheddar, Big Think, and many others. I am a regular contributor to Inc. and Psychology Today.
From 2015 to 2018, I grew my email list to nearly 400,000 people (without paid advertising) as the #1 writer in the world on Medium.com.
Enjoy my website and the articles and resources here. Also, as a personal invitation to transform your past trauma and 10X your future identity, you can watch my 45-minute webinar here.
The Hardy Family

Friday, November 08, 2019

Routine lethal

“If you think adventure is dangerous, try routine, it's lethal" 
Paulo Coelho

Definitely one of my favourite authors of all time Paulo Coelho comes through with the perfect quote for the occasion. Today my daughter is leaving on her travels south with her dog Ziggy. She a great inspiration for listening to the call of adventure. It really takes me out of my comfort zone that she goes on these trips and I know I won't see her for months, but I remind myself constantly that she is "Naturally creative, resourceful and whole"* and the biggest service I can do for her is emotionally support her choices and send her off with blessings and love. 
Cheers
Jeanne

*That "People are naturally creative, resourceful and whole" is a cornerstone of the coaching model from the Coaches Training Institute which I did my coaches training through over fifteen years ago now. This 'cornerstone' is still something I consciously remind myself of when I find I'm trying to fix people and situations, particularly for my kids.
Here' s a couple bonus quotes for today, to help get through those times stuck in the routine of whatever comfort zone we are in.

"People have a hard time letting go of their suffering. Out of a fear of the unknown, they prefer suffering that is familiar." ~ Thich Nhat Hanh 
If we practice mindfullness, we always have a place to "be" when we are afraid" ~ Thich Nhat Hanh
 
The Thich Nhat Hanh quotes I found on the following blog when I was wandering around google for "creative resourceful and whole"

Need a Heart? Listen to the Tin Woodman

“Thereafter he walked very carefully, with his eyes on the road, and when he saw a tiny ant toiling by he would step over it, so as not to harm it. The Tin Woodman knew very well he had no heart, and therefore he took great care never to be cruel or unkind to anything. "You people with hearts," he said, "have something to guide you, and need never do wrong; but I have no heart, and so I must be very careful. When Oz gives me a heart of course I needn't mind so much.”
L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz  

I think the Tin Woodman could be our heart guide
Cheers

NO limits to who you can become

"Our past shapes and influences who we are, but it doesn't limit who we can become"
Arlene Dickinson

How great is this?!! We can always become something new, reinvent ourselves and move beyond any limits! ANY!! ALWAYS!!
One of the most transformative things in my life happened about 15 years ago when a friend did a short bio of me for a project we were doing. She described my life in a way I had never seen myself... I actually started arguing with her about it, before I shut myself up, said "Thank you"! I am still consciously reminding myself of this story every time I sink into the old comfort zone of using my insecurities from the past as an excuse to not do the things my imagination comes up with. 
Arlene Dickinson is inspirational as someone who has reinvented herself and become so much more than her earlier self could ever dream. She has written a book "Persuasion A New Approach to Changing Minds" which I randomly chose to pick up at a used bookstore. There are many quote worthy ideas in this book... you may not have heard the last ...
Cheers
Jeanne

Persuasion: A New Approach to Changing Minds

 3.74  ·   Rating details ·  645 ratings  ·  66 reviews
At thirty, Arlene Dickinson found herself stranded. Recently divorced, she had a high school diploma, no savings and no clue how she was going to feed four young children. But just one year later, she was a partner in Venture Communications. Ten years on, she was CEO, poised to grow the business into one of Canada’s largest independently owned marketing firms. Today, as a co-star of the CBC TV hit Dragons’ Den, she is one of the country’s most sought-after female entrepreneurs. The secret of her journey from poverty to the corner office? The art of persuasion, as she explains with wit and unusual candour in this, her first book.

Blending her own frank and highly entertaining stories with compelling social science, she explains how to persuade both in the boardroom and in everyday life: the crucial importance of a particular kind of listening; how to get people to buy into your ideas; how to attract followers and deal with naysayers; the art of storytelling; how to turn mistakes to your advantage; and how to seize opportunities where others see only roadblocks. Anyone, she believes, can be persuasive—just look how good we are at persuading ourselves we can’t do things. Using the tricks of her trade and insights from her own fascinating experiences with some of Canada’s leading companies, Dickinson explains how to master the art of persuasion, without an M.B.A., to achieve maximum success in business—and in life.

Here's a bonus article I came across in Arlene Dickinson's latest Digest at https://arlenedickinson.com
I feel the following article could be posted as a reminder for us to see everyday!

 

13 Ways We Justify, Rationalize, or Ignore Negative Feedback

FEBRUARY 14, 2019
Everybody loves feedback . . . as long as it’s positive.

But most of us dislike negative feedback so much that we’ve even changed the name — it’s not negative, it’s constructive.

Still, it’s an irreplaceably valuable gift.

We need to know when we are doing things that don’t land the way we planned.

When our impact veers from our intention. And the best — often times the only — way to discover that gap is through feedback.

That said, chances are you fight against it.

It doesn’t feel good to be told you missed the mark. And, since feedback often uncovers our blind spots, it’s especially jarring because, in many cases, we thought we were doing a good job. So we don’t immediately or intuitively agree with the validity of it (we tend not to believe things we can’t see ourselves).

This is especially true for leaders who, because of rank and power, don’t often get told the whole truth.

So, it’s not unusual for leaders to get defensive when we hear criticism about our leadership. It doesn’t fit with the story we tell ourselves.

In order to understand this issue more intimately, I asked the person I work most closely with to give me negative feedback, to expose one of my blind spots.

I took a breath and readied myself. I wanted to go slowly and notice everything that happened in my mind and my body.

“You work too hard,” She said. As criticism goes, this was a softball.

Still, here’s what happened:

That’s a compliment, I thought, not a criticism. She was trying to tell me that I am acting in ways that are unsustainable for me and for the organization, but my protective response was pride.

That thought was quickly followed by another: She doesn’t work hard enough! I de-validated her feedback by de-validating her. It’s not that she’s insightful, my ego decided, it’s that her bar is not high enough.

And then another thought: I have to work so hard because the business depends on me. I made excuses to justify why I act the way I do. In other words, sure I work too hard but it’s not my fault.

Meanwhile I felt a squirrelly feeling in my abdomen and could feel the vulnerability of not being perfect. It was subtle but definitely a felt experience. A physical reaction, a feeling that something wasn’t right.

As an executive coach who helps successful people become great leaders and create more effective teams, I’m often in the position to give people feedback that’s hard to hear.

As I thought about my own reaction, as well as the reactions I often hear from clients, I began to list the common things we say (or think) when hearing negative feedback to defend against new information that threatens the way we see ourselves:

  • Play Victim: “Yes, that’s true, but it’s not my fault.”
  • Take Pride: “Yes, that’s true, but it’s a good thing.”
  • Minimize: “It’s really not such a big deal.”
  • Deny: “I don’t do that!”
  • Avoid: “I don’t need this job!”
  • Blame: “The problem is the people around me. I hire badly.”
  • Counter: “There are lots of examples of me acting differently.”
  • Attack: “I may have done this (awful thing), but you did this (other awful thing).”
  • Negate: “You don’t really know anything about X.”
  • Deflect: “That’s not the real issue.”
  • Invalidate: “I’ve asked others and nobody agrees with the feedback.
  • Joke: “I never knew I was such a jerk.”
  • Exaggerate: “This is terrible, I’m really awful.”

If you ever notice yourself saying, or thinking, any of the above, it’s a clear sign that your ego is getting in the way of an important learning.A lot has been written about how to receive feedback well, some of it quite nuanced. But once our ego is involved, and we feel the emotional charge, it’s hard to access nuance.

What we need, is a simple, reliable, default response:“I really appreciate you taking the time and the effort to tell me. Thank you.”Isn’t that the way you would want someone to respond after you gave them a gift? Accept the gift (in this case, that means listen), and then say “thank you.” That’s it.
This response communicates to people that it’s safe to offer you feedback and they will be far more likely to speak directly to you, instead of behind your back.

There’s also an almost magical added benefit to this simple, undefended response: It dramatically increases your ability to take in the feedback. When you stop defending against it externally, you actually stop defending against it internally too.

After my colleague told me, “You work too hard,” and I quietly observed all my own defensive reactions, I followed my own advice. “I really appreciate you taking the time and the effort to tell me,” I said. “Thank you.”

The result? She thanked me for receiving it so well and I’ve actually begun to put less pressure on myself and others.

Maybe that’s why they call it constructive feedback after all.