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My plans for 2013: Part 5 of 6 — Body / Red

The PolyBlog
January 17 2013

The “Body” category is one that is represented by the Fiery Red of leadership and action. It is the physical side of me, the action-taker, the pro-active, take charge, kick butt and take names me. Outside of a work environment, not a me you see very often.

In the past, some of my successes in this area have been kayaking, finding new doctors or dentists, going whale watching / hot air ballooning / climbing a mountain, travelling to Nova Scotia / Cape Breton / Quebec City / Sherbrooke / Bahamas / Amsterdam / Gaspe / St. John’s / Hawaii, doing a 5KM walk, learning to golf, and actively going for massages.

Last year,I had six priorities, and separate from some one-off contributions here and there,  I did nothing about any of them in any consistent fashion. All of them will roll forward onto this year’s list. One positive aspect was related to careers — I moved off of the one-off special projects that were EAP / SR / SORO / DRAP and back into my “day-job” elements of audits, performance measurement, and evaluations.

This year, there are several activities that mutually reinforce each other — stretching exercises, more proactive back care (stretch, massage, chiro), and losing weight. On the formalized health front, there are some boxes that I need to tick with my regular doctor and need to find a new dentist and hygienist. In addition to getting organized for giving blood, I also want to improve my management of “sleep” times (i.e. going to bed earlier). And, just cuz I want to increase my frustration perhaps, I want to go golfing more often this year. Once a year is just not enough for an activity I enjoy.

With those goals in mind, here’s my working to do list for the Heart category:

ROCKSGRAVELSANDWATERAIR
Annual Update
Exercises
Proactive back care
Weight
Golfing
Outstanding health issuesSleep times
Dentist
Give blood (#25)
Ongoing Tracking
BP changes
Checkup
Stress mgmt
Meditation
KataMentoring
Coaching
French
Ethics: EX
Ethics: WA
Teaching role
Municipal
Theatre
Bucket List Areas
#23. Meditation
#24. Slide down a firepole
#27. Weigh under 200 lbs
#28. Skate Rideau Canal both ways
#29. Ride a dogsled
#30. Whitewater rafting
#31. Kayak a river
#32. Go fly fishing
#33. Rappel, zipline
#34. Try surfing
#35. Rock climbing
#36. Snowboard
#37. Tree-top sleeping
#38. Cross a rope bridge
#39. Cage diving with sharks
#40. Upgrade scuba certification
#41. Take athletic trip
#42. Horseback riding
#43. Learn to sail
#44. Learn to waterski
#45. Learn to play tennis
#46. Learn a martial art
#47. Learn archery
#48. Learn to fence
#49. Learn how to swim properly
#50. Milk a cow
#82. See free lions, penguins, alligators, pandas, polar bears, dolphins (Hawaii, September 2008)
#84. See Northern (Ottawa, 2008) and Southern lights
#85. Drive convertible
#86. Take trip in RV
#87. Houseboating
#88. Ride in gondola
#91. Ride an airboat
#92. Take a cruise
#93. Ride an elephant
#94. See an iceberg
#95. Haunted house
#96. See a castle
#97. Tall ship
Priority Travel Areas
England
Territories
Grand Canyon
Galapagos
Ortona
Iceland
Scotland, Ireland
Aust / NZFijiEgyptAntarctica
Additional Travel Areas
Canada  
Ottawa sites
Quebec – Northern
BC – Interior and Northern
Alberta, including Waterton Glacial Park
Saskatchewan
Manitoba
Newfoundland – rest of island, Labrador
Yukon
NWT, including Nahanni National Park Reserve
Nunavut
PEI again
New Brunswick again
Cape Breton again
Nova Scotia again
USA
Grand Canyon
Vermont
New Hampshire
New York
New Orleans
San Francisco + San Diego
California – Route 1
Alaska
Boston
Chicago
Latin and South America
Galapagos
Belize
Chile (including Patagonia)
Argentina (including Patagonia)
Peru
Costa Rica
Brazil
Cozumel (sinkhole)
Falkland Islands
Caribbean
St. Lucia
St. Martin
Dominican
Windward / Leeward Islands
San Andreas
Curacao
Cayman Islands
Western Europe
Spain
Greece
Italy – Rome, Ortona, Venice
Portugal
Austria
Germany
Nordics
Iceland
France
UK +
Eastern Europe
Russia (St. Petersburg)
Czech Rep.
Ukraine
Hungary
Western Asia
‘Stans?
Nepal
Eastern Asia
Thailand
Andaman Sea (sharks)
Malaysia
Vietnam
Laos
Japan
China
Mongolia
Tibet
Oceania, South Pacific
Australia
New Zealand
Kiribati (diving)
Diving atoll
Fiji
Polynesia
Middle East, North Africa
Egypt
Nile
Morocco
South Africa
Kenya / Kilimanjaro
South Africa
Victoria Falls
Seychelles
Madagascar
Northern and Southern Poles
Antarctica
Arctic
   

That wraps up the priority-setting in each of the areas. Now I just have to figure out how to pull it all together visually, and set up regular tracking! Oh joy, oh bliss, oh joyful bliss!

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2013, body, goals, personal, red | Leave a reply

My plans for 2013: Part 4 of 6 — Soul / Yellow

The PolyBlog
January 17 2013

The “Soul” category is one that is represented by the Gentle Yellow of belief. It is the deepest part of me, the “this-I-believe” me. It is also the expressive me, the part of me that allows my creativity to grow wings and expand outward, with no “rational” filter on it to say “is this worth it?” but rather just to give expression to a thought, a feeling, to scratch a creative itch because it is there.

In the past, some of my successes in this area have included NAC theatre and orchestra outings, studio tours for art viewing, cooking courses, new recipes, OpEd pieces, participating in critiquing groups, writing different types of prose, book reviews, my spiritual journey, and opening up on my blog. .

Last year, I had ten priorities. My first goal had been to complete my HR guide, and I did make decent progress on it in the summer during my holidays. I didn’t complete it, but decent progress. After that, the list drops rapidly in terms of progress…I didn’t publish anything on my proposed business model for self-publishing, only handled 1 of the big 10-12 questions related to spirituality, did manage to upload some of my past writing to the website, didn’t expand my book reviews or reboot my movie reviews. I didn’t really get going on the various books I wanted to read from either my bedside table or the Top 600 list nor did I do the dinosaur book for Jacob (plus, he’s mostly outgrown his interest in dinosaurs). And no new recipes really to add to the monthly mix. Sigh. Not quite a shutout, but far from “progress”. This is, notably, my hardest category — yellow is my least “go to” energy or activity, the one that both exhausts me and challenges me. But still, they are areas that I want to address/express as part of my personality, and personal growth.

Most of those will roll to this year. I want to get the HR Guide done. That one is priority one, as it has been kicking around too long. Recipe nights and reading from the top 600 list are hopefully easy additions. I’m hoping to knock off one spiritual question a month, we’ll see how that goes. The business model, book reviews and movie reviews are all about populating the blog and expanding it. I have an ongoing debate with myself about committing to goals for writing fiction until the HRG is done, so for now, it will just sit outside the annual priorities. I also want to start taking stock of daily blessings — I read a blog that talked about recording each day something you were grateful for, and I like the premise. At the end of the year, you open the box and review your list. Sounds like a good idea, so I’m thinking each day I’ll record my favorite thing of the day or something that I’m aware of that day more than others, etc.

With those goals in mind, here’s my working to do list for the Soul category:

ROCKSGRAVELSANDWATERAIR
Annual Update
HR Guide (#72)Business modelRecipe nightsSpiritual journey
BRs — 26 new
MRs — 12 new
Top 600 list (#68)
TBR list
Daily blessing
Ongoing Tracking
Tropical chicken curry
Green curry
Tracker: Gods
Ice cream
Ground-nut stew
BBQ recipes
Fae girl story
God novels beats
#21. Read the bible
#22. Attend a spiritual retreat
#61. Design a game
#62. Play Pai Gow poker in a casino
#63. Have a movie extravaganza weekend
#64. See Best Picture Oscar winners to 1928
#69. Read complete works of Shakespeare, Dickens
#73. Publish a novel
#74. Write a screenplay
#75. Publish a novella
#76. Compile a cookbook of great recipes
HR for managers
Managing career
Volume II
Volume III
#55. Learn to dance
#59. Learn to play a musical instrument
#60. Mardi gras or Times Square for New Year’s eve
#65. Be a film extra
#66. Make a movie
#89. Attend major sporting event
#90. Hot air balloon festival
Blogging Ideas
Tribute – Dad
Tribute – Mom
Upload older writings
Stress
Pricing series
Libraries
Analytics
How to follow a blogNew public managementBillboard

On to the next area!

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2013, goals, personal, soul, spirit, yellow | Leave a reply

My plans for 2013: Part 3 of 6 — Heart / Green

The PolyBlog
January 17 2013

The “Heart” category is one that is represented by the Warm Green of emotions. It is the feeling me, the how-I-relate-to-others me.

In the past, some of my successes in this area have been getting married, having a child, more structured relations with my extended family, travelling with Andrea, becoming less squirrelly, career support (2-way), some mentoring, outings with friends (like MMMMM), house parties, holidays together with others, outings with Jacob and Andrea, and generally learning to be a better husband, father, and (hopefully) son.

Last year,I held myself to just six priorities but I made almost zero progress. Sure, I continue to support Andrea in her career relating to her M.Ed., helping to make sure she has the time to do it without having to do it as a complete “add-on” or trying to kill herself. I wanted to do more lunchtime outings with Andrea, and it did happen sporadically. I am not, however, doing much on Jacob’s night time routine…Andrea tends to get him ready, and I read him a story or six. I set up the website for Astro Pontiac, but that was about as far as I went in helping, other than to give some seed money. I had really hoped to have a Remembrance Day party, or a corn roast sometime, but by the time that period came along, I was in survival mode for dealing with my mom’s stay in palliative care. And I did nothing about figuring out an overall charitable giving strategy.

However, if I am truly honest with myself, there are three things that I did this past year that overshadow everything and so I’m chocking up one giant “win” in this category. First, I said goodbye to my mother. Actually, I said goodbye six or seven separate times (depending on how you count) and it didn’t get easier each time. But I did it. Second, while my mother was in palliative care, I went and hung out with her for a week, staying overnight to keep her company. It was way easier in some ways — I thought I would be freaked out by the issues with her, but I wasn’t. By contrast, I hated the hospital itself, by the fourth night, I was completely squirrelly. Hard to sleep, claustrophobic almost. Jumpy, quick to pounce on any opportunity to do something, particularly if it took 15 or 20 minutes. But I spent the week with her. I’ll talk more about this next fall when I do my first annual tribute to her, so for now I just want to give credit to myself for doing it. It was only one week out of six, but still.

Finally, the big one. I did the eulogy. After having done my Dad’s eulogy, I said to myself, “Never again.” I figured when it came time for my Mom, someone else could do it. For my Dad’s, I cried all the way through it. I was almost incoherent. Lord knows what anyone understood. However, because of some odd quirks of the family dynamics, I ended up doing the one for my Mom too. I made it as clear as I could that I was willing to do it, but not insisting — if anyone, a grandchild perhaps, wanted to do it, I was good to defer the honour. But no one else stepped up for that item, perhaps not wishing to deny me that opportunity, so I did it. For a week afterwards, I kept saying to myself, “You did it! You made it through without losing it!”. It was such a different experience than for my Dad’s. Obviously, I’m 16 years older. Hopefully more mature, more grounded, more experienced with life and, unfortunately, the death of a parent. I also practiced out the wazoo — full walk throughs, out loud, six or seven times. Each time through, I put stars and notes where I lost it emotionally, so that I would know when it came time for the real reading that I should pause there, or slow down, or just focus on breathing. More importantly though, I had support. When my Dad died, I was single, lived in Ottawa, and without much of a portable support network. This time, I stayed at my inlaws most of the time my mom was in the hospital, which was amazing support. Andrea’s grandfather came to the funeral too. I had a friend, Seb, who drove all the way from Ottawa to Peterborough and back the same night, just so he could come to the visitation. Nine hours round-trip, and did I mention he had a broken foot at the time and was on crutches? Of course, the biggest supports were Andrea and Jacob. There are no words to express how much they supported me, particularly while they too were experiencing the same loss. But somehow, we all got through it.

So I chock all of that up as a win for the year.

For new priorities, most of last year’s will roll over to this year too…continuing to support Andrea on her M.Ed, becoming more involved in Jacob’s night-time routine, supporting Stephan on the Astro Pontiac initiative, figuring out a charitable giving strategy, and organizing a Remembrance Day party or a Corn Roast. However, I am adding four additional ones this year in a slightly different nuance.

Three of them are about better connecting to Andrea and Jacob. First of all, Andrea is spending the first 9 months of the year at home with Jacob, which is great, but it will also might limit the interaction her and I have — less time spent commuting together, less time sharing, perhaps. So we need to kickstart some date nights somehow. Not entirely sure how to get that organized in terms of babysitters, etc. without making it too “scheduled”, but we need to do it, just to stay sane. Second, this year marks our 5th anniversary and I’d like to do something special to celebrate / commemorate the occasion. Could be merged with our house party option if we want to keep it casual, or maybe go larger. Not sure what Andrea would be interested in yet. Finally, I also want to take some extra leave this year to give the three of us more time together before Jacob starts school in September (ack! he’s starting school!).

The fourth addition is a duty I must perform, and to be honest, I wouldn’t describe it as a pleasant one. My mother appointed my sister and I as co-executors of the will. Which means for the first six months of the year, we’ll be doing a lot of organizing to get the personal items distributed and the house sold. Separate from the challenge of just getting it all done in a reasonable amount of time, we also have the fun that the six kids named are rarely in agreement on anything. We’re trying to avoid anything that will be “nasty” or unpleasant, but it deals with issues tied to raw emotion, so it may happen. Nevertheless, I will do my duty, as my mother asked me to do at the end.

So, with those goals in mind, here’s my working to do list for the Heart category:

ROCKSGRAVELSANDWATERAIR
Annual Update
Support M.Ed.
Executor duties
Nighttime routine
Date nights
5th anniversary
Leave to spend with J&A
Astro Pontiac
Remembrance Day party
Corn roast
Charitable giving strategy
Ongoing Tracking
Hospital mtg
List format
Layout jewellery
ROM visit
MEP dinner
Wings with Seb
Probate
Wedding present to Aliza
GGs service record
Scanning
Botox for J (?)
Genetics test
Wedding Feb 8-10
Genealogy (#13)
Letter in a bottle (#26)

On to the next area!

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2013, goals, green, heart, personal | Leave a reply

My plans for 2013: Part 2 of 6 — Mind / Blue

The PolyBlog
January 17 2013

The “Mind” category is one that is represented by the Cool Blue of analytics. It is the rational me, the planner, the learner even. In many ways, the introverted me, the deep-in-my-head-this-is-what-I’m-thinking-about me.

In the past, some of my successes in this area have been purchasing a car or house, getting my french, finishing my Masters, making career changes to try something new, taking courses for fun (like film literacy), using a telescope, making some shelving, trying new software packages, learning to program, organizing my book collection, making presentations on HR, moving, running my website, home repairs, financial planning, lots of interesting and challenging files at work, and even using this approach to personal planning.

Last year, I took a slightly different approach, and had ten clear priorities for the year. Here’s how I did on them — generally, I sucked. This is my “big” area, the one that should come naturally to me. Sure, I completed my planning guide with my new approach (#1), organized the office closet (#3, done but need to reattach closet doors), and we re-did the powder room (#4, although mostly farmed out to others).

However, I didn’t set up the backyard or redo the kitchen island (#2 and #5, both postponed due to insecurities at work); never got around to looking at ETFs or re-reviewing the insurance papers (#6 and #7), didn’t update my french profile at work (#8) nor organize my booklist in paper and ebooks (#9). I did add some stuff on trivia and photos to my site, but it now needs to be redone completely in those areas (#10).

For this coming year, being better organized has to be on the list again. I have been feeling like I’m drifting of late, and I am. Survival mode rather than “progress mode”. So, I need to get Evernote organized, using my tablet to help me manage my To Do list regularly, getting my HD / backup scenario going.

While somewhat linked, I also want to do a lot more reading this year. Since I do book reviews, this also means getting my books organized, as well as my booklist. This should also help me on my bucket list regarding making a list of top 600 books and reading it (BL #67 and #68).

Home renovations could be a major theme for the year, although a lot of it will be done by others. Up first is some electrical work, but overall, the backyard is the first priority, followed by the basement, and lastly the kitchen. We may not do anything with the kitchen this year, but it’s an option. Some minor roof work is on the list too, but really it’s about the deck and the basement.

Finances have shaken themselves out a bit, but I need to tick the box by the end of February on new mutual funds or ETFs. Andrea and I should also re-evaluate our insurance this year, and I want to update one element of our will (simplifying the options around catastrophic loss).

I’ll also be expanding my website. This includes more book reviews, some movie reviews, more blogging, etc. — this is generally more related to the yellow section for self-expression than here, but I do need the “structures” of the website to be updated to accommodate the various pieces.

I’m also hoping I get time to perhaps make a garden (#03), learn to knit (#56), learn to juggle (#57), or learn origami (#58). I would also like to find time to take a course or two, just not sure yet on what — or rather, there’s a long list, just not sure what I want to do THIS year.

With those goals in mind, here’s my working to do list for the Mind category:

ROCKSGRAVELSANDWATERAIR
Annual Update
Evernote
Goals layout
Electrical panel
ETFs
HD backup
Deck
Website structure
To do list use
Organize books
Basement
Insurance review
Booklist (#67++)Kitchen reno
Update will
Garden (#03)
Knit (#56)
Juggle (#57)
Origami (#58)
Ongoing Tracking
Charitable giving
Smoke detectors
Roof cleaning
LIA option
Google docs
Plumbing leak
Tax prep
Boxes in office
CD ripping
Towel rack
Bathroom stand
Basement shelving
Apps for Jacob
Bluetooth setup
Photo gallery
Jacob’s history
Laundry vent
Photo sorting
Roof vents
Insurance claim
Toon Boom
MR design
Address book
Hang pictures
Hang clock
Consolidate credit card use
Gift cards – Bell, KFC, Trailhead
Garage sale
Basketball hoop
Porch swing
Fireplace
Lighting
Lawn light
Grading, window-well
Pension – transition
Pension – Co-op period
#04. Design a house
#05. Have a cottage
#06. Use own telescope (and look through giant)
#51. Meteor shower
#54. Live abroad for three months
#77. Present to >1000 people
#83. Teach a course 
Focused Learning Areas
AstronomyLegal studiesClassical music#07. Learn photography#09. Learn sign language#08. Learn to drive a standard transmission

On to the next area!

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2013, blue, goals, mind, personal | Leave a reply

My plans for 2013: Part 1 of 6 – Personal philosophy…

The PolyBlog
January 15 2013

As anyone who has read this blog or met me already knows, I’m a big believer in having detailed resolutions / yearly plans. Complete with monitoring throughout the year. I have to confess though that this past year was a bit of a write-off. I started strong, but things were starting to get crazy around work in the Spring and then my Mom got sick, and she passed away in November. Goals went out the window, and I pretty much hunkered down in survival mode. At the end of the year, there were a bunch of cartoons / comics I saw that showed people basically beating up on the year 2012 and hoping for a better 2013. Those comics fully resonated with me. I feel like I’ve been drifting for far too long, and I really feel like I need to kickstart some aspects of my life again. Hence, it’s planning time.

For any planning, I think one should start with their personal value system. While I did some work on my “Tier 1” beliefs this past year — my spiritual journey, so to speak — the trip is far from over. As such, what I’m really talking about here are elements of my overall “personal philosophy”. Perhaps “Tier 2” in many ways. For 2013, I don’t see many great “truths” emanating from 2012 that would cause me to change them greatly, but I decided I would more fully articulate what I mean by each of them.

General Philsophy

  1. An unexamined life isn’t worth living. My first element is not that original, I confess. But it is the basis for who I am and even this approach to setting and monitoring my goals. To be aware of my actions or inactions, to take charge of my destiny, to review and assess my behaviour. To accept responsibility for who I am. To reflect that free will comes with the need to be aware of how that will is exercised.
  2. Dare to dream, but live in the real world. I love that so many people out there take a carefree, live positive, think positive, be positive approach to the world. The view that if you just think good thoughts, good results will come. But I am not one of those people. Separate from the problems I have with the way they misconstrue the concept of karma, it also encourages people to think if something bad happens, they were at fault, that somehow they weren’t “deserving” of a better outcome (a dangerous line of thinking, me thinks). Instead I like the idea of daring to dream, but also taking responsibility both for planning and actions to make that happen along with being realistic about the outcomes. Some people interpret that as “settling” or “lowering the bar” before you start, and that is not what it means. Instead, it means perhaps aiming for the moon but being happy that you got off the ground at all, noticing the success you get just from committing to something even if the final goal isn’t achieved. Just as Machiavelli implied that one should always look to the end when measuring means, so too should someone look at the milestones along the way.
  3. Be unreasonable whenever possible. When I was at law school, we learned about the “reasonable man” doctrine that is so prevalent throughout the law. The idea is “what would a reasonable man do / say / think in a given circumstance” as a test for what is reasonable in a situation, somewhere between perfection and negligence. But to me it was also a failure — sometimes we need the bar higher than that, sometimes we want to tilt at windmills and say “Wait a minute, was that REALLY the best we could accomplish? Couldn’t / shouldn’t / wouldn’t we want to aim higher?”. To some, that may even seem “unreasonable”. But having high standards isn’t a bad thing sometimes unless it means you can’t accept anything less or you’re just setting people up to fail (including yourself). Instead, high standards help you remember what really matters to you and keeps you focused on what you’d really like to achieve.
  4. They are only principles if you’re willing to fight for them. This one is heavily related to #2 and #3. There have been times, particularly in my work life, where I have let stuff go unchallenged that I thought was wrong. People who were being run roughshod over, policies that had weird externalities, behaviour that was just unacceptable. I’m not talking about illegal activities, or even necessarily morally wrong. But not honourable, if it isn’t too old-fashioned to use such a word. Actions that offended me. And yet, under the guise of “picking one’s battles”, I let them go. There are only so many windmills you can tilt at without starting to just look like a crackpot. But I regret a couple of windmills that I let go by me, leaving it to others to address, only to see no one else pick up the mantle of windmill tilting. Yet while I claim they offended my principles, I did nothing either. Not unlike the classic quote that the only thing needed for evil to flourish is for good men to do nothing. There are ways to oppose without being curmudgeonly, but if no one draws lines in sand, there are no lines to avoid crossing.
  5. Never presuppose a “no”. Back when I was in my undergrad, one of our group projects involved interviewing people in a factory dealing with nuclear materials. Out of all the control issues we looked at, and all the management challenges and solutions studied, one thing I remember was the lead interviewee talking about how people decide not to pursue something because they expect a “no”. They assume it can’t be done, and so they don’t push for a change, etc. When I was at CIDA, I watched a DG whose ethics I detested almost single-handedly achieve something most people didn’t think was possible. While I wouldn’t emulate his business style, I liked the fact that all the naysayers didn’t stop him from trying and succeeding. Again, at another job, I watched a set of international discussions start sliding into a morass of problems. In three other negotiations, it had gone nowhere, and one delegate was pushing in the same direction. While I disagreed with him on substance and the advisability of the approach, I also didn’t think it could happen — three other failures in the same vein, despite weeks of negotiations, yet he wanted to attempt to accomplish something similar in two short days. I would have bet my life, if pushed, that not only would it not happen, that it couldn’t. Two days later, we signed with his approach agreed upon and included. I still disagreed with him on substance, but I was amazed at and impressed by his outcome.

Personal Effort

  1. The saddest words are “unrealized potential”. This is one that scares me to my core. It is hard to describe, but I guess the closest I can come is that I fail to accomplish something not because I “can’t” but rather because I never try. My father, when he was just married, was offered a new job in drafting at the factory where he worked. But it was unsecured, no guarantees for the future, and there was a wife and little ones to worry about. As a result, he passed on the drafting career, instead opting for a factory floor position. I hesitate to say he “regretted” the decision, more that he regretted having to choose. There are some things — like writing — where I wonder if it doesn’t happen a certain way, will I feel like I missed out on something? That I didn’t fully realize my potential? And, to be honest, I’m more concerned where it ends up being something I don’t even realize I’m not pursuing, more of a latent itch that I might regret later somehow.
  2. Who begins too much, accomplishes little; who begins too little, wastes a life. One of my ongoing battles is to keep a balance — having too large a to do list and accomplishing little, or not pushing hard enough and wasting time. A constant struggle. I’m not sure if this is just a subset of #6, but it seems a bit different.
  3. 20% of effort gives you 80% of results; the remaining 80% delivers the next 20%. When I was just starting my career, it was the first performance feedback that I ever received. I am a bit of a perfectionist in certain areas, and it really is both a weakness as well as a strength. In my case, my boss noted that I was spending a lot of time to get that last little bit perfect when 80% might have been “good enough” and I could have been getting a lot more productivity out of myself if I just moved on to the next item. Over time, I’ve watched for it when managing others too — trying for perfection, when “really good” is more than good enough. It is one of the hardest things for me to let go of in my personal life though.

Relationships

  1. You can only truly count on yourself; trust and rely on others anyway. Okay, I stole the first part of this from a stupid source — Ashley Judd’s character Robin Lefler on Star Trek: The Next Generation. Unlike Wesley’s stupid response (“Sounds lonely”), the reality is that while the first part is true, it is the act of faith in the second part that is really the heart of the human condition. With every trust comes the risk of betrayal, but we risk and risk and risk anyway.
  2. Be there. If you can’t be there, support those who can. This is a tough one in many ways. When there is personal trauma in your life, your family, at work, wherever, the big gurus advise that it is all about “showing up”. Just showing up is enough. Well, that’s great. But what happens when you can’t? Physical or even emotional distance, for example, often prevent you from “being there”. In that case, I think it is important to avoid berating yourself for not being there and doing nothing else; in some cases, you can support others who are able to “be there”.
  3. Trauma and emotional distress have a long half-life. This one is easy to see on a regular basis…people who went through something — personal loss, heartbreak, physical trauma, whatever — still feel the effects long after other people might think they should have “gotten over it by now”. And it affects their reactions to things, just as if it happened last week.
  4. Take responsibility for pushing buttons, not for installing them. This was a hard-learned lesson. Up until I was about 30, I was the “facilitator”. If there was conflict, I tried to ease it. To build bridges amongst family members for example. To rush in and try to “solve things”. Even more so if I was a catalyst. But with one personal relationship in particular, I realized that I was taking responsibility for their over-reaction to something that had been innocuous on my part. They had over-reacted because I had pushed a button, yet I hadn’t been the one in their past who “installed” the button. So, while I was “sorry” for pushing it, I eventually refused to accept that I was responsible for their overblown reaction. I can be sensitive to their “issues”, when I know in advance what they are, but if you don’t, that’s the other person’s responsibility.
  5. There’s no such thing as a casual conversation. This is a bit of an odd way of listing something that others might simply say is “be mindful of others”. Except, for me, what it is really about is recognizing that conversation is very intimate, intensely personal. It is a form of sharing that should be respected — and sometimes people tell you something or hear what you say, and react badly because you didn’t really think about what you were saying or how you were saying it. Which isn’t to say “watch everything you say”, just to be mindful that every conversation is both a risk and an opportunity.
  6. Communication is 20% what you know and 80% how you feel about what you know. The past two and the next one are all related — they are all about communication in various forms, and how to deal with the reactions. In this one, this is a lot more about the internal process. In an obvious example, people often talk about being confident and understanding something before speaking out on an issue. Equally, they talk about letting passion guide your way of communicating. Others too talk about how “negative words convey negative messages”, that if you are being cynical then that is a poor way to communicate, to inspire, etc. In short, you become Debbie Downer. I agree with some aspects of each of those cautions, but I’m also mindful of the idea that it isn’t just “what you know”, but how you use it internally, how you connect various dots, and what you can do with that knowledge.
  7. Learn to express, not impress. Lastly for the comms side of things, this goes past the two reactions or internal process above, and focuses back on the reason for communicating. I really hate the idea of networking as it is traditionally done for extroverts, and this sums it up perfectly. Too many people are trying to “connect”, to “impress” the other person, when the best way to impress is through self-expression. Tell them about yourself, tell them something you know, share with them a skill you have — not to “impress them”, but to simply communicate. When I was at CIDA, I had a strange set of conversations one week. A friend was commenting how he thought I was an “expert networker” because I knew everyone. And I was offended, really, because I don’t “network”. Sure, I knew lots of people, because my job required a lot of interaction with different people. Another friend noted that I did something that nobody else really did — I shared good information with people. Sure, lots of people shared info, but I only shared useful stuff that I came across, curating it before curating was even a pop term, and sharing items of true interest and utility. While others were basically spamming, I only sent them useful items. Another colleague chimed in noting that whatever I sent her, she always found useful and she always read it, often passing it on to her team. Meanwhile, she routinely deleted messages from some other people unread. I started thinking of it as “substantive networking”. I wasn’t networking to impress, I was networking to express something, to share something I found useful, even going so far in most cases to say “Here’s an article on X that you might find interesting for reason A, B, C and D based on our conversation last week” — doing a bit of the mental thinking for them to explain why I was bothering to share it. If they aren’t interested in X, A, B, C or D, they can delete it easy enough, but at least there’s a mental hook for them to see why it might be relevant at all.
  8. Hindsight is not always 20/20, and not all interpretations are true interpretations — even though sometimes hindsight can give hind-insights. This is a really confusing one for me. I am a firm believer that hindsight is not 20/20, despite the cliche. I think we actually look back and end up reinterpreting things. A friend of mine went through a relatively upsetting breakup, and their tendency was then to go back and say, “Well if they did X now, it must mean that it was all part of this long pattern, blah blah blah.” It is the same argument when people say, “But you said you loved me, you must have lied if now you don’t”. No, you express yourself, make choices, live your life in a forward direction. Separate from physics theory, cause precedes effect in the real world. It doesn’t mean that if you see an effect now, you should push the “cause” back to the beginning of the relationship. Life changes, and you shouldn’t second guess decisions you made three years ago. People made decisions with the best available info at the time. But, what I think is useful sometimes, which belies the same argument somewhat, is to think about your own motives sometimes or even behaviours. Not in the most negative light possible which is popular during emotional periods, but just simple motives. Other people don’t make decisions based on how it affects you, they’re not that complicated…in short, it’s not about you. I was thinking about a breakup the one time and I suddenly had an epiphany…I had kind of kidded myself that although I knew it should happen, I tricked my brain into thinking it was more related to the triggers that week. Then I realized suddenly that in the larger picture, that week was planned entirely and in fact I knew it was going to happen that week (I was actively avoiding her). A simple realization, not about motives or second-guessing anyone, just the realization that at the time, I was deliberately blinding myself to avoid a bigger truth. I was seeing part of the picture but not the whole picture. I don’t regret the decision or even the behaviour because later growth is what made that realization even possible, just as the whole cliche exists abo ut how a young man often thinks their parents are idiots, and yet a few years later is amazed at how much they apparently learned in the interim. I think hindsight can help us see larger, longer trends, but I don’t think they help us much with second-guessing other people’s motives very often.

Balance

  1. Better I be a dolphin swimming with sharks than a shark. I don’t want to be a predator, don’t want to do political work, don’t want to be a “mover and shaker”, making deals, shaking hands, etc. That is not who I am and it is not how I relate to people. While I am not always a consensus-builder, and I’m known to tilt at my share of windmills, even rant from time to time, I don’t want to be a nameless suit making money and moving on. It was one of the things that scared me about law school, the number of fellow students who went from being interested in saving the world on Day 1 and by Day 180 were all about the money, power and prestige. It isn’t me, and I don’t want it to be me. I don’t want to be chum, but I don’t want to be a predator either. Even if I work with some, I can still be me. That’s never more true than when I’m managing people. I have very different values then most of my fellow managers or even most executives in the building. I could shed some of those beliefs and move up, but if that’s the price, I’m good right where I am.
  2. I don’t have to work any particular place, I get to do it. I like my job, I like working for government. I see lots of people drifting in their careers, and I count myself lucky that I at least know the industry (government) and organization (federal) that interests me the most. I have skills, I can move around if I need to, but I’m comfortable where I am right now, and still contributing. I might move on in the next year or so, but for now, I’m still hunkered down in career survival mode after a brutal last couple of years managing some not so pleasant files.

With those personal rules in mind, on to the actual planning!

Posted in Pondside Planner | Tagged 2013, goals, personal, philosophy, planning | Leave a reply

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