Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Google?

Uma, what do you want to do for the science fair this year?
Can we do Crystal growing thing again, mom?
You already did that last year, how about i go do some research and get you a list of things you could do?
OK, mom. Mom, I can tell you how to do your research?
Yeah? How?
You can Google 'science projects for elementary school'. I am sure you'll find some great ideas!

This has to be it. Google has so arrived! My seven year old is recommending it now!

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=elementary+school+science+fair+project+ideas

Friday, February 23, 2007

Corporate Athlete?

Work is tiring.
I am in a business where I do not have to move from my chair very often, the biggest energy expenditure of a typical day is a stroll down to a conference room or to the cafeteria for a meeting or a meal. Yet, at the end of the day I often feel like I have run a half marathon. I am exhausted.
When not at work, I usually find myself hiding under a rock, engaging in activities like painting, running, gardening, cooking, cleaning... most of them have very low people interaction requirements. My friends and relatives complain, we never hear from you!!
Early in my working career I made a rule, weekends are for recovery. A time to re-group and be ready for the next week. I have been working for the past 12 years, without a break and I have found that every time I break the rule, I head for a serious burnout. So, at the cost of having people hate me, I don't engage in catching up on the phone on the if the week was particularly brutal. As a friend would say, if I use up my 'quota' of words at work, I wait till the next week for the quota to renew.
This week has been especially harrowing. I was out on a business trip for the first three days of the week, the flying and customer visit and the sense of every free moment spent talking about work surrounded by my colleagues, had me ready to collapse by beginning of Friday, when I run into this article.

"The Making of a Corporate Athlete" Jim Loehr and Tony Schwartz ( HBR, Jan 2001)

Sustained high achievements demands physical and emotional strength as well as a sharp intellect. To bring mind, body and spirit to peak condition, executives need to learn what world class athletes already know: recovering energy is as important as expending it.

The High Performance Pyramid
Peak performance in business has often been presented as a matter of sheer brainpower but we view performance as a pyramid. Physical well-being is its foundation. Above that rests the emotional health, then mental acuity and at the top, a sense of purpose. The ideal performance state- peak performance under pressure - is achieved when all levels are working together.

Rituals that promote oscillation- the recovery of energy- link the levels of the pyramid.

They promote rituals as a way of creating the oscillations that take you between expending and recovering energy.
If executives are to perform at high levels over long haul, they have to train in the same systematic multilevel way that world-class athletes do.

The message is clear. I need to concentrate on recovery and built it into my daily routine. Not wait for the weekend, make the cycle shorter and consciously recognize when I am flagging, learn and train to institute cycles of recovery. The simile, awkwardly is weight lifting:
it involves stressing the muscle to a point where the fibers literally start to break down. Given an adequate period of recovery the muscle will not only heal, it will grow stronger. Conversely failure to stress the muscle results in weakness and atrophy. In both cases the enemy is not stress, it is linearity- the failure to oscillate between energy expenditure and recovery.

Here's to working in Corporate America, and surviving it !

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Denim so distressed...

it is distraught...

- from A& F

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Who, me?

met a few new people tonight, they were not very new, just new to me ...
It isn't very often I ponder my affiliations, but tonight I did. I am an immigrant, in this shiny land of plenty. Where I come from there isn't much, but it is my own land and tonight I wondered about how far I had come along in this journey. Many thousands of miles, in time and in space and the place where I am now is not quite the land I came from, and yet I am not ready to call this sparkling place my home. Not yet. Will I ever? And more importantly, will I ever be ready to call the land I left, not my home anymore? I know the land I left lives on in my mind and sometimes I wonder if it lives just in my mind? Was it ever really there? And the place that I am in now, what is it? it not very sparkly from where I sit... how many roads do I still need to travel before I reach my home? is it a distance I can make? for it is really a distance in my mind. Maybe I am already home, I always have been, I just need to be able to make others see it, the way I see it.