On another
note, a newsworthy event occurred in Oslo as well this past week. Perhaps not
earth-shattering for those who work outside the health sector, but for those
who work in it—Bente Mikkelsen resigned her position yesterday as the director
of Health Southeast Corporation. This corporation owns the hospital I work for;
the past few years have been less than pleasant under her rule, to put it
mildly. Rather than dwell on her departure, which is rather farcical in and of
itself, I’d rather focus on the potential for a brighter future for the
hospital. Hopefully the job she leaves behind will be filled by a person with more
emotional intelligence and the ability to think independently, by a person who
can give and take, by a person who can admit mistakes and take responsibility for
them, by a person who can listen to employees and report their concerns up over
in the system. There is always hope.
Friday, November 2, 2012
Reflections on this past week
Super storm
Sandy and its brutal attack on the east coast of the USA was the major news
story this past week, after it swept through Haiti and Cuba causing much destruction there first. It was also the event that dominated most of my waking
hours this past week, since I was unable to get in touch with a few people
until Wednesday evening. I have now heard from family members and friends who
were directly affected by the storm, so I know that they’re all safe. Some are still
without power, a few just had power restored today, some others are waiting in
long lines at gas stations in order to fill up their cars, and one of my
friends has not been able to return to her home in Long Beach, New York because
of the extensive damage there. I felt very restless this week; I wanted to
help, but could not physically do so from here. And it would not have been
possible for me to have traveled there either since most flights into and out
of the New York area were cancelled. So what I have managed to do is follow the
events and updates related to the storm in great detail, and have been able to
share them via email and social media with those who were cut off from all
forms for news/internet coverage since Monday evening. The feeling of
restlessness has lessened, but is one I remember well from 2001 during the 9/11
days; it bothers me to be so far away from my country when bad things happen
there. I don’t know that I could even be of much help; perhaps it’s my
imagination working overtime. Nevertheless, the restless feeling remains. So I
will donate to the Red Cross and hope that eases my worries and restlessness somewhat.
Perhaps it comes down to wanting to serve and to be needed? Sometimes I wonder
if that is an indication that my job is not providing me with those
opportunities.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
The unbelievable storm
I was up
until 4 am Oslo time last night watching super storm Sandy make landfall on the
eastern coast of the USA. It chose the area around Atlantic City as its
entrance, and the video footage of the Atlantic Ocean pouring into this casino
city was just unbelievable to watch. The Atlantic Ocean has never been the
enemy before. Not until last night. Watching it flood these coastal towns was kind
of like watching a mini tsunami—scary, unbelievable and fascinating at the same
time. I can understand why people want to get close to the fury of a storm to
film what it does to everything in its path, but you would have been completely
foolhardy to have done so yesterday. I’ve been in Atlantic City, walked along its
boardwalk, and enjoyed its shopping and luxurious hotels. Last night it did not
look luxurious at all. It made me sad to see the destruction, as it did to see the
flooding and destruction in Manhattan and Queens. This is not supposed to
happen in these areas. But it did. The monster storm from hell made sure that
we will not take anything for granted ever again, not where nature is
concerned.
I grew up
in Tarrytown, a lovely little town on the Hudson River, about a thirty-minute
train ride north of Manhattan. In all the years I lived there, I cannot
remember this type of storm occurring. Yes, there were intense storms, with resultant
minor flooding here and there. I can remember the Saw Mill River and Bronx
River Parkways being flooded and becoming impassable. Once I tried to drive
through one of those parkway floods with my car, but had to back out of it as I
could not steer my way through it. Luckily I managed to back out of it; not
everyone was so fortunate. I was together with a friend of mine; we were
commuting home from college that day. Water seeped into my car through the
doors, and we had to bail out pails of water from the car afterward. It was a
stupid decision on my part to attempt to drive through the rising water, and I
learned an important lesson that day for the future about not taking unnecessary
risks. But in Tarrytown (and other Hudson River towns) yesterday, there was unprecedented
flooding. The Hudson River rose higher and higher due to the storm surge
further south. Boats floated inland, having broken free of their moorings. In
the town of Ossining, a few miles north of Tarrytown, a boat floated onto the
railroad tracks, blocking passage in both directions. The pictures tell the
story—proof that the unbelievable happened. I am including two links to online storm
photos here. I am sad to see the destruction and flooding, and only hope that
most people have come through the storm safely. http://www.businessinsider.com/at-least-16-dead-75-million-without-power--heres-what-hurricane-sandys-destruction-looks-like-photos-2012-10?0=bi
and
Saturday, October 27, 2012
A new favorite TV show
I am
enjoying (if I can really use that word) watching the new season of The Walking Dead on Fox Crime on Thursday evenings. Perhaps a better way to say it is that I am enjoying being scared and
jolted by the twists and turns and scares of the new season. We are about a week
behind in Europe compared to the USA. The new episodes (Seed and Sick thus far) contained a lot more exciting action now that Rick and his motley group of survivors have
arrived at the prison and made it their home. The ‘walkers’ inhabit certain areas
of the prison and need to be dispatched if the group is to live there. Some of
those attack scenes were pretty intense; we’re talking a high zombie
dispatch rate and a group of survivors who were literally dead-set on taking the
prison for themselves. But to spice things up even more, there were also surviving
prisoners who were intent on keeping their prison for themselves, which made for
a tense conflict in this week’s episode with unfortunate outcomes for some
of those prisoners. Rick and his group don’t waste too much time talking; it’s kill or be killed.
I have been
online to read about what people are saying about the new season, and a lot of
the reviews are quite positive, precisely because there promises to be a lot
more excitement during this season. There is less talk and more action,
and many of the characters have gotten much tougher. It’s a welcome change from
last season which moved slowly and relied on countless numbers of conversations
to drive it forward. Not that slow or talky is bad, just that action is more exciting,
and that is one of the reasons I tune into a show like this.
The last
time I actually looked forward to watching a TV show each week was when The X-Files was on the air. Some of their
episodes were completely spooky with assorted creatures and monsters (e.g. Home stands out) and the creep factor
was quite high. But I sat and watched them all and dealt with being scared. The Walking Dead is different in that the
humans are always under attack by the same type of monster—zombies. So the
survivors have learned how to take them out and have become good at doing so. But
at the same time viewers are being scared, they are also being comforted,
because they know that ultimately the survivors will be able to take care of themselves.
That doesn’t mean that favorite characters won’t die off; I’m sure they will as
the season progresses, but it’s anyone’s guess as to who they will be. In the
meantime, I'm going to sit back and enjoy the ride--it promises to be a memorable one.
Thursday, October 18, 2012
A supermarket on every corner
Well, it’s
official. We are now almost completely surrounded by supermarkets on our city
block (three of four corners are occupied), so that soon it will be impossible
for me to leave my house without encountering a supermarket. The Turkish convenience
store with its friendly proprietors and wonderful variety on one corner closed
a few months ago after losing its license to sell beer. And as is always the case when that happens in
Norway, they go out of business rather quickly, whether or not they are a small
grocery store or a restaurant. You cannot survive without the beer or liquor sales.
The same will happen to one of my favorite pizza restaurants right down the
road from us; they lost their liquor license a few months ago and that will
most likely be their death knell.
Back to the
supermarkets. I googled supermarkets in Norway and retrieved this Wikipedia listing.
This then is a list of supermarket chains in Norway, broken down into Discount
stores, Supermarkets, Hypermarkets, and Convenience stores. To me, they’re all
variants on the same theme—supermarkets, large or small.
· Discount: Bunnpris, Coop Marked, Coop Prix, Kiwi,
REMA 1000, RIMI, Rimi Stormarked
·
Supermarkets: Centra, Coop Mega, ICA Gourmet, ICA
Supermarked, Meny, SPAR, Ultra
·
Hypermarkets: ICA Maxi, Coop Obs!, Smart Club
·
Convenience Stores: ICA Nær, Joker, 7-eleven, Narvesen
I wouldn’t mind
being surrounded by supermarkets if they offered a real variety of groceries,
in other words, if they were different from each other. But they are not. Two
of the supermarkets are the same chain—Joker
(I know, what a name); the other one is Bunnpris
(literally translated as ‘bottom price’). I have no major problems with any of
them, just that they all offer homogeny. It’s all the same, a standardized
foodstuff menu with limited choices. If you want slightly more variety and
breadth of choice, you have to go elsewhere, like ICA Maxi, Centra or Meny. Thank
God they exist. What makes me laugh is that this is such a small country; at
last count, roughly 5 million people. Why do we need so many supermarkets? Soon
there will be one supermarket per 100 people or per one large apartment building. I’m
not joking. I cannot understand how they all can turn a profit. I’m not sure it
matters to the food chain owners, who are wealthy beyond belief. All I can say
is, ‘oh bliss--I no longer have to walk too far to find a grocery store’ (a
little sarcasm never hurts).
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Treating customers well
Just had to
comment on a pleasant experience today with a large company. It’s not every day
that you deal with a customer service department in a huge company that
actually treats you well, solves your problem for you, or even gets back to you
on the same day that you contacted them. All that happened to me today in my
dealings with Amazon.com. I had purchased a DVD TV series for several hundred
dollars back in May of this year, and it arrived in Oslo in late June when we
were on vacation in Germany. Unfortunately, the post office in Oslo only allows
the packages to sit in their buildings for fourteen days, so as we were on
vacation for about this amount of time, the package was returned to Amazon
before I had a chance to pick it up. I contacted Amazon in mid-July to register
this incident as a return, and received an authorization number so that I could
track the return process and when the package was logged in as ‘returned’. As
it took almost eight weeks for the package to arrive in Oslo initially, I
figured it would take about the same amount of time for it to arrive back in the
USA from whence it was shipped. Due to other matters, I didn’t have a chance to
check on the status of the return until today, three months after I first
contacted Amazon. I wrote to the customer service department as the package had
not been returned by me but by the post office, so that the return process was
irregular. I received an email within a few hours from not one, but two
customer service reps, within a few hours of each other. The first one wrote to
me to tell me that the package had been returned and that it would be no
problem for me to get my refund. The second one wrote to tell me the exact
amount that would be refunded and how my Amazon gift card and credit card
accounts would be credited. No fuss, no bother, no ‘please contact this or that
person’ in a long chain of persons, no recriminations or criticism on their
part concerning the irregular return process. Rather, personal emails to me that
said that they understood that I was disappointed that I had not received my
package and that the refund process was initiated and that it would not take
long for me to receive my refund, respectively.
How great
is this? This is a huge global company at this point in time, and yet they
managed to get back to me the same day I wrote to them. Not only that, they managed
to resolve the situation immediately. I am a regular and good Amazon customer
and have been since the late 1990s. I have never had a customer service problem
with this company, which in and of itself is pretty amazing. Their efficient,
fast and friendly customer service ensures that I remain a loyal customer. Why
is it that they manage this absolutely crucial aspect of running a business—providing
excellent customer service--whereas other companies fail so miserably? At
Amazon, it seems that the customer is always right. At least that’s been the
case in my dealings with them. It just goes to show that just because a company
is large doesn’t mean that we need to abandon all hope of being treated well as
a customer. I hope their policy of treating the customer well continues.
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Quotes about bureaucracy
As most of you know, I am preoccupied these days with bureaucracy and its fallout, especially in the workplace where it threatens to strangle the very efficiency it proclaims as its sworn goal (efficiency and productivity, which shall be dissected and measured down to their minutest details).
Bureaucracy is defined as (definition from Merriam Webster online dictionary):
Bureaucracy is defined as (definition from Merriam Webster online dictionary):
1) a body of nonelective government officials; an administrative policy-making group
2) government characterized by specialization of functions, adherence to fixed rules, and a hierarchy of authority
3) a system of administration marked by officialism, red tape, and proliferation
So I thought I would post some interesting quotes about bureaucracy as today's post. Interesting to consider that some of them were written many years ago. For example, the first quote from The Screwtape Letters, is from 1942. That tells you that these 'systems' have been around for a while. Some bureaucracy is of course necessary to get things basically organized. But at present, it seems that it exists for itself and itself alone--to make itself bigger, better and irreplaceable. We must need it, for without it we are nothing. And I have real problems with this way of thinking.
--------------------------------------------------
“I live in the Managerial Age, in a world of
"Admin." The greatest evil is not now done in those sordid "dens
of crime" that Dickens loved to paint. It is not done even in
concentration camps and labour camps. In those we see its final result. But it
is conceived and ordered (moved, seconded, carried, and minuted) in clean,
carpeted, warmed and well-lighted offices, by quiet men with white collars and
cut fingernails and smooth-shaven cheeks who do not need to raise their voices.
Hence, naturally enough, my symbol for Hell is something like the bureaucracy
of a police state or the office of a thoroughly nasty business concern."
― C.S. Lewis, from the Preface of The Screwtape Letters
“Remove the document—and you remove the man.”
― Mikhail Bulgakov
“I sighed. I hated the maze of bureaucracy with a
passion, but I've found the best way to deal with it is to smile and act
stupid. That way, no one gets confused.”
― Kim Harrison, Dead Witch Walking
“Bureaucracy
destroys initiative. There is little that bureaucrats hate more than
innovation, especially innovation that produces better results than the old
routines. Improvements always make those at the top of the heap look inept. Who
enjoys appearing inept?”
― Frank Herbert, Heretics of Dune
“In our time... a
man whose enemies are faceless bureaucrats almost never wins. It is our
equivalent to the anger of the gods in ancient times. But those gods you must
understand were far more imaginative than our tiny bureaucrats. They spoke from
mountaintops not from tiny airless offices. They rode clouds. They were
possessed of passion. They had voices and names. Six thousand years of
civilization have brought us to this.”
― Chaim Potok, Davita's Harp
“Bureaucracies
force us to practice nonsense. And if you rehearse nonsense, you may one day
find yourself the victim of it.”
― Laurence Gonzales, Everyday Survival: Why Smart People
Do Stupid Things
“If you are going to sin, sin against God, not the
bureaucracy. God will forgive you but the bureaucracy won't.”
― Hyman G. Rickover
“The true nature
of bureaucracy may be nowhere more obvious to the observer than in a developing
country, for only there will it still be made manifest by the full complement
of documents, files, veneered desks and cabinets - which convey the strict and
inverse relationship between productivity and paperwork.”
― Alain de Botton, The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work
“Some third person
decides your fate: this is the whole essence of bureaucracy.”
― Kollontai Alexandra, La Oposición Obrera
“In any bureaucracy, the people devoted to the benefit of
the bureaucracy itself always get in control, and those dedicated to the goals
the bureaucracy is supposed to accomplish have less and less influence, and
sometimes are eliminated entirely.[Pournelle's law of Bureaucracy]”
― Jerry Pournelle
Street art in Oslo
Street art in Oslo is more prevalent now, and some of it is really eye-catching. I don’t know who the artists are, but I hope you enjoy their work. Feel free to comment if you know who the artists are. I'm only the photographer, but I like what I see.
Sunday, October 14, 2012
Random thoughts on writing, street art and 'Living in the Material World'
A very busy
week at work, which did not leave me much time for writing of any sort. I have
mixed feelings about these kinds of weeks. On the one hand, it’s good to be
busy at work. On the other hand, time passes and each day that ticks by is one
less day to write and to pursue those small personal dreams. I guess others
have the same problem—being torn between personal dreams that have less to do
with career ambitions and more to do with personal fulfillment, and workplace ambitions
and goals that are held up as meaningful by the workplace. I am always trying
to find time to write. It has become my soul’s desire, nothing more, nothing
less.
Tired in
the evenings, so that doesn’t always bode well for writing, either for its
quality or its quantity. In other words, I don’t get many words on a page
before my eyes start to close and I feel sleepy. Twenty-five years ago, I could
pack another life into my evenings, and I did. I worked sixty to seventy hour weeks
then, and sometimes on the weekends. Sometimes I took courses at night—accounting,
Italian, business courses, or sometimes I attended evening seminars having to
do with investing. It’s been a while since I’ve taken a course. I’m more into
learning how to do things myself these days, and less interested in traditional
ways of learning. I suppose that has to do with how the brain changes and
learns as one grows older. I like that aspect of growing older. Everything
feels more fluid and less rigid. There is not one right way to do things
anymore, like we were ‘taught’ when we were young.
Inspiration
comes from films—I watched ‘Exit Through
the Gift Shop’, a documentary film from
2010 about street art as viewed through the eyes of Thierry Guetta, a would-be
filmmaker, who followed street artists around the world for years as they pursued their
art. One of those artists was Banksy, who ended up using Guetta’s video footage
to make this film, because the film that Guetta first made was (presumably) a chaotic mess. Hard
to know for sure how tongue-in-cheek this movie really is—is it a hoax film or
is it for real? Thierry Guetta followed these street artists and ended up
besting them at their own game—setting up a big ‘street art’ show happening in
Los Angeles as MBW (Mr. Brainwash) and making millions. By the end of the film,
Madonna has hired him to do the artwork for her latest album cover. The
question then becomes, who was the brainwasher and who was being brainwashed? Are
we being hoodwinked, or is this film for real? The film is well-worth watching,
as it is a good introduction to the lives of currently-popular street artists
from around the world.
Apropos Madonna (“…You know
that we are living in a material world, And I am a material girl”), another
good documentary film I watched this past week was from 2011—‘George Harrison: Living in the Material
World’ (director Martin Scorsese). Scorsese did a great job with this film;
we get a real introduction to the spiritual Beatle, and to his spiritual
journey as well as to his progression and evolution as an artist. We also get a
real sense of the conflict that pervaded most of his life—how to remain
spiritual in a material world. Harrison was truly an amazing artist—creative,
spiritual, persistent, focused, dedicated. All of this came through in the film.
Mostly when you think of the Beatles, you think of Paul McCartney and John
Lennon. This film shows you why George Harrison was an artistic force to be
reckoned with. He was way ahead of his time in terms of collaborating musically
with ‘foreign’ artists—Ravi Shankar and other Indian musicians--as well as
organizing the first charity concert for Bangladesh in 1971. But mostly, I was
impressed with his spiritual journey. Here was a man who thought it was
important to prepare for death, for the time when he would leave his body for
another world. He never denigrated or poked fun at the world of the spirit. And
he was a pretty good example of practicing what he preached, with the possible
exception of the few periods in his life when he dishonored his body through
excessive drug use. I like films about artists of all kinds; I like watching the
creative process at work—how artists think, act, work, live in a family, relax—all those
things.
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
Sunday, October 7, 2012
It takes two to tango
Sat down to
breakfast this morning, and was flipping through the newspaper sections rather
randomly. My husband was reading the front section of Aftenposten, so I settled
on the Jobs section, where there are not
only employment ads, but often articles about new trends in the workplace as
well as advice from headhunters and work-life coaches. Wouldn’t you know, there
was a photo of two couples dancing the tango in connection with a leadership
course they’re taking. This particular course encourages its participants (leader
personnel from the company Siemens Healthcare) to learn to dance the tango as
part of learning how to team-build and be a better leader. In this particular
case, since there were no women attending the course (which is telling in and
of itself—not many female leaders out there, apparently), males were dancing
with other males, and the photographer snapped a photo of two of these couples.
There was talk about ‘stepping outside of your comfort zone’ and all that. I’m
sure it’s a lot of fun and hard work to learn the tango, and I would be stepping
out of my comfort zone as well to learn the tango and any kind of ballroom
dancing. But I would do this in my free time, not during work time, so it
wouldn’t matter that I was a slow learner. I’m not sure how learning the tango
has anything to do with learning how to be a better leader. Does it have to do
with learning to lead and have others follow, or vice versa? What happens if
you are trying to follow the lead of someone who never learns the dance, as is
often the case in the workplace? What happens if none of the trendy leadership
courses results in better leadership? I don’t get it, so someone has to please explain
to me why companies are spending money on such courses at a time when the global
economy is in a downturn. These courses cost money, a lot of money.
I have yet
to see the solid research/statistics that demonstrate the absolute benefit of
leadership courses for leaders. How do you measure the effectiveness of these
courses; how can you assess the results? Can you be sure that the methods work?
I’m a scientist, so I want to see the research data. Please show me the reports
so I can read them. I have no problems with an annual daylong seminar where
leaders can meet together in their workplace and share common problems,
brainstorm, or otherwise come up with new and creative ideas about how to lead.
I just don’t understand the emphasis these days (the new trend) on traveling to
out-of-the-way hotels and resorts for this purpose, for two or more days at a
time. The idea I presume is that you cannot just ‘go home’ at the end of the
course day; you’re stuck together with other leaders during the evenings where
social skills play a large role as well. Networking and more networking. I know
several leaders who shun these trips (or want to) as often as they can. A
decade ago, private companies spent money on sending their employees out into
the forests and mountains to learn how to work together as a team to survive
and maneuver through the inevitable problems that cropped up. These team
building courses seem to have paved the way for the new types of leadership and
team-building courses. Is this because the old ones didn’t work, or are the new
approaches the ideas that sprang up during the old team building and leadership
courses? Did someone ten years ago think—it would be cool to have leaders learn
to dance the tango together? Is that how it works at the top?
As
children, we learned the Golden Rule—‘do unto others as you would have them do
unto you’. In other words, treat people as you would like to be treated. I
learned this rule early on and it stuck. And when I have broken it, my
conscience tells me that I have wronged someone and to go and make amends. I live
this way in my personal life and I have behaved accordingly in my work life. I
can honestly say that I have tried to the best of my ability to treat those who have worked for me with
respect and honesty, and have been as professional as possible when dealing
with them. The awareness of your behavior and how it affects others in the
workplace are the two most important things one must learn as a manager, and if
you manage this you can be an effective manager or leader. I don’t think it is
more complicated than that. Unfortunately, when you are lied to, exploited or
pushed aside by company leaders, it makes it that much more difficult to treat leadership
with respect. It takes two to tango. You
cannot expect respect from employees if you do not treat them with respect. It’s
that simple, and that complicated. We say that about children and adults as
well; you cannot expect children to respect adults who abuse them or treat them
badly or indifferently. It doesn’t matter if the adults are parents, teachers
or other authority figures. I could already differentiate very clearly when I
was in grammar school, who were the good teachers and who were the abusers. You
remember both and you learn from both. Had I been surrounded only by abusive
teachers, I would have learned how to evade them to the best of my ability--how
to lie to them and how to be dishonest—how to play the game to see who would
eventually win control. They would not have deserved better treatment. The same
is true for abusive or exploitive company leadership.
My view of
workplace leadership is more along the lines of the top-down approach. If you
want respect from employees, start at the top and look down. Take a really good look at yourself, and then your employees. Companies should hire leaders
who know what the Golden Rule is, who have ethics and morals, who abhor
corruption and political game-playing, and who are not just interested in their
cushy titles and salaries. They should hire leaders who understand that the
buck stops with them. But companies have to value these types of leaders. This
is the type of leadership that employees will respect. This is the type of
leadership that employees will listen to, when new ideas, change, and challenges
confront them in a world of global uncertainty and instability. Employees will
look to leadership for guidance, but they will also pitch in and do their fair share
and more if they know it will help the company survive. I have yet to meet one
employee who was treated fairly by his or her company, who didn’t want to give
back his or her fair share to that company. In other words, those employees who
have been kicked around, exploited, lied to or treated poorly, and there are a
number of them, are those who do not want to give back their fair share to
their companies anymore. They have felt the injustice that pervades the system;
they know that they are dancing alone. Where they once followed another’s lead,
they now dance in place. Their leaders bailed out on them a long time ago. I
would say that’s the biggest problem in workplaces these days; employees have
to figure out everything on their own. There is no one to look up to, no one to
mentor them, no one to take responsibility for them and their professional wellbeing.
There are few good leaders who take their employees into consideration, who
prioritize them. I know of one leader who was told that she was too concerned about
her employees; that as a leader, she should be concerned with the company views
and policies and with getting her employees to ‘accept’ a new policy that
amounted to nothing more than a new way to exploit their competence and
dedication (getting them to work twice as hard for the same amount of money).
Suffice it to say that this company has a lot of problems and that the turnover
rate for employees is high. Employees can ‘see through’ a lot of the new
trends in the workplace, and leadership courses are one of those trends. Bad
leaders will not become good leaders by learning to dance the tango; they will
become good leaders by practicing the Golden Rule. I have yet to see a course
that focuses on the ethics of leadership. I have to wonder if it would be
well-attended.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Autumn comes to Norway
Autumn has arrived, and with it comes some stormy days, with menacing clouds and rain. But sometimes rainbows follow after the storms, and if we're lucky, we get to see double rainbows.
This past weekend, we drove about thirty miles north of Oslo to see the autumn foliage. In many places, the leaves were just starting to turn, in other places, they were well on their way. Not so many bright red colors this year--more oranges and yellows. At least right now. It has been a lovely autumn so far--mild temperatures, mostly sunny days and clear nights.
This past weekend, we drove about thirty miles north of Oslo to see the autumn foliage. In many places, the leaves were just starting to turn, in other places, they were well on their way. Not so many bright red colors this year--more oranges and yellows. At least right now. It has been a lovely autumn so far--mild temperatures, mostly sunny days and clear nights.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Why I love the story of Jane Eyre
One of the
best things I did last weekend was to watch the most recent film adaptation of
Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre from
2011 (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1229822/) with Mia Wasikowska as Jane Eyre and
Michael Fassbender as Mr. Rochester. I was completely emotional by the end of
the film; I know how the story ends so there were no plot surprises, but the
quality and intensity of the acting by Mia Wasikowska and Michael Fassbender were
just that overwhelming. Michael Fassbender was a wonderful surprise as Mr.
Rochester; I have seen him in Prometheus
and Fish Tank previously, and he is Mr. Rochester, David and Conor
respectively, all completely different people, a testament to his acting
abilities. He managed to impart a real humanity to Mr. Rochester, a humanity
that I have not felt as strongly in other Mr. Rochesters. You feel sorry for
him and for his predicament, even though you understand that he will suffer for
his willfully deceiving Jane about his being married to a mad woman whom he is
unable to divorce. By the time he tells her the truth, on her wedding day; you
are hoping that Jane will forgive him because you know he is truly sorry for
lying to her. But being the moral, proud and wise young woman that she is, she tells
him that she will not live with him without being married and she leaves him and
Thornfield Hall behind. As fate would have it, a tragedy occurs that ensures
that she will finally be able to marry Mr. Rochester, but it was not the tragedy
that made her return to Thornfield. It was her recognition of her own humanity
and need for love; she gained the insight (inner
sight) she needed to understand that she had found real love with Mr.
Rochester and that she could not live in a passionless marriage with St John
Rivers. She had to marry a man she loved. Her return to Mr. Rochester was actually
an acknowledgment that she would live with him regardless of his marital
situation as he had initially proposed once she found out he was already
married. As it turns out; during her separation from Mr. Rochester, his wife burned
down Thornfield Hall and committed suicide thereafter, but Jane is unaware of
this when she returns to Thornfield. Mr. Rochester has lost his eyesight due to
the fire and must depend upon those around him for help. When Jane returns to
him, you understand that he has gained the ability to be grateful, and is no
longer the proud and desperate man he once was. No matter how many times I’ve
read the book or seen the different Jane Eyre films and TV series through the
years, I am always moved by this story—it’s impossible not to love it.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Fundraising time at Adventure Center
Dear Blog Readers,
I have written about Adventure Center before in my blog (http://paulamdeangelis.blogspot.no/2010/08/journeys-of-wonder-at-adventure-center.html).
Adventure Center is deeply engaged in fundraising now. Today I am posting a letter written by Elizabeth Mayer, LCSW, President and Executive Director, talking about the mission of Adventure Center and the success of its after-school Arts, Education & Adventures in Nature Programs, and how much the children enjoy and are helped by them. I hope you will support them in their efforts. No donation is too small.
Elizabeth writes:
----------------
Common to many of the students who walk
through our doors at Adventure
Center , Robert has been struggling with issues of injury and pain. Robert began classes here in 2008. His lack of belief in himself was palpable.
He had given up on school. His school
had almost given up on him, describing him as bright but inattentive, lazy, and
defiant.
Four years have passed and Robert has been immersed in Adventure Center ’s after-school Arts, Education & Adventures in Nature Programs. Now Robert speaks with enthusiasm and
wonder. Robert is now able to express
his bright, curious mind, and engaging personality, and with that he is even
serving in leadership roles at Adventure
Center . Over the last year, Robert has
said, “I used to feel mad at everyone. I couldn’t express myself and no one understood me. Hey; that’s not true anymore!”
Robert is one child of many that have been helped
by Adventure Center . The center is affiliated with
organizations like Lincoln Center Institute, Community Works, Symphony Space,
the Bronx Historical Society, and others (as well as the educators and
therapists who provide a learning and supportive environment). Adventure
Center is appreciated as
an oasis of innovation and creativity by all who pass through. We invite you to
join our mission as we celebrate four successful years as a nonprofit Educational Center
in Riverdale , New York .
As we approach this milestone we are stretching our scope and reach to
answer the growing demand of children, families, and other organizations
This
elevated level of activity brings Adventure Center to a new juncture in its’
journey; it will need to create the means to hire part-time and salaried staff
to manage the daily life of the organization, to support the artists,
educators, and group leader as we maintain a good ratio of adult/child in each
program/class. As we engage in the first
steps of this transition—fully volunteer to partially volunteer/partially
salaried organization— we will ensure that we continue a mission of high
quality programming in a nurturing setting for all of our children. The support of friends like you will afford Adventure Center the ability to remain self
sustaining and to continue to thrive.
Please help us reach our goal of raising $50,000.
Any amount will help us meet our ambitious goal and continue to help us meet
our mission. Your tax deductible gift of $50, $100, $500 or more—will
immediately be put to use as we add part time staff—persons who will directly
enhance the learning and growth of our
children.
There are several levels to this giving
opportunity—we appreciate consideration of your support. These costs add up, yet these are some
examples of the large impact your gift can make on children like Larry and
others at Adventure
Center .
Ø
$100 can provide the means to add an
additional group leader for 1 session of the group’s 10-weeks
Ø
$100 will purchase materials for 1
child for 1 ten-week session
Ø
$250 for 3-ten week sessions
Ø
$500 will
purchase materials for 1 child for six-months
Ø
$750 for
seven months
Ø
$900 will purchase materials for 1 child for a
year.
You may donate by check or online by clicking the
donate now button on the home page of our website: http://www.adventurecenterjourneysofwonder.org/index.html
Thank
you for partnering with our students!
Sincerely,
Elizabeth
Mayer, LCSW
President
and Executive Director, Adventure Center
Follow Adventure Center on www.facebook.com/adventurecenterbrx
Friday, September 21, 2012
Thinking about the future, reflecting on the past
Thinking
about the future, reflecting on the past, and trying to live in the moment--the
unending challenge. I try to make sense of past events, to learn from them, and
to use whatever little wisdom I gain to plan for the future. I suppose everyone
does this. It’s probably part of getting older, because of course the older we
get, the more ‘past’ there is behind us for us to reflect upon. I register that
I have changed a lot, just within the past several years. Unsettling workplace
events and family experiences impact on how one wants to live in the present
and plan for the future. I have finally learned to let go of how I wanted things to be and to accept
how they actually are. My work life was one of those things I thought I had a
firm grasp on, but it changed shape as I held it and became difficult to hold
in one place—like a squirming child. The work world has changed dramatically
and for a while the difficulty was just to hang on to the speeding car as it
careened forward. Now the car has either slowed or I have mastered running
faster to keep up. I definitely know that I absorb information and adjust to
change much faster now than I ever did before. And since that seems to be the
goal of modern workplaces—to get employees to adjust to constant change--I
guess the change is a positive one. But it is not my full-time job that has
produced that change, despite the constant pressure to change; it is my
consultant work for the UiO science library and for Liivmedia that have had the
greatest effect upon me. If I have ‘broadened my horizons’ and changed my
approach, it is because I reached out in a whole new direction when I decided
to work for both of them, and found a whole new arena in which to enjoy
science. Following the different scientific social media and internet sites,
reading, digesting, absorbing and commenting on articles I read in all areas of
science has been immensely freeing and exhilarating. I don’t want to just read
about what goes on in the field of cancer research anymore; I find reading
about astrophysics, the universe, global warming, nutrition, and bee colony
collapse disorder just as interesting. I have concluded after much reflection
on past decisions that I have no regrets that I pursued a career in science.
But I have understood that I don’t have to be just a research scientist to
enjoy science or even to work in science. There are many different careers that
one can have that utilize a science background—science communication, science journalism,
journal editor, patent law, social media, consultant. Even though I will likely
end my work life as a research scientist, it heartens me to know that I have
contributed successfully as a consultant as well. That’s what I would tell
young people these days; don’t limit your options. Keep all doors open. It
makes for a more dynamic career and an adventurous future.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Language and identity
After
living in Oslo and speaking Norwegian daily for over twenty years, I have finally
begun to speak English again. I try to do so as often as possible. Not that I
haven’t spoken English at times or when I struggled to find the Norwegian
words; I just didn’t use my mother tongue very much during these years. Now I
do. Why is this important to me now after so many years? One of the reasons was
that I felt I was losing my identity as an American, because English is my
mother tongue and when I speak Norwegian, I no longer feel American. I don’t feel Norwegian either when I speak Norwegian;
perhaps I just felt neutral, and for
many years, that was quite alright. Feeling American, identifying myself as
American—I was not conscious of these feelings when I first moved here. In
fact, it was fine to think and speak in Norwegian, even desirable, because
unless you learn the language of the country you live in, you can never fully
participate in its social or work life. I am fluent in Norwegian; I even write
poetry in Norwegian. In fact, I like to do that, because I feel like I am
another persona when I write in Norwegian, and as a writer, that’s both exhilarating
and adventurous. I’ve even written a poem about that aspect—about ‘hiding’
behind the safety of a language that is not your own. But the older I get and the longer I live here, the more I want to use my mother tongue; perhaps so I don’t forget it, but also
because I feel that I can state my thoughts and opinions more clearly in English
than I can in Norwegian. I felt the opposite to be true a decade ago. What
changed? I am not sure. Perhaps the experience of sometimes being ignored or not taken seriously in work and
social circles, despite my fluency in Norwegian, changed my mind about how to
approach specific experiences. Perhaps I thought, if I cannot make myself clear
or ‘known’ in Norwegian, there is no point in using this language as my main
language to communicate in this country. I can just as well use English, and at present, I feel it is necessary to do so, to communicate who I am at this point in time. The use of English guarantees that
people will listen to you and try to understand you.
I register
that people have different reactions to my talking English. My husband speaks
English back to me unless he needs to really express himself, and then he goes over
to Norwegian. But we have mostly communicated through the years using a blend of Norwegian and English that I call Norglish. I find that most of my Norwegian colleagues, with one exception,
will speak to or answer me in Norwegian. Among my friends, it varies. Norwegian
friends will speak Norwegian with me; non-Norwegian friends will speak English
with me, even though we normally communicate in Norwegian. I find that using
English is freeing for me; there are parts of me that have been released. It is
as though I am allowed to be myself again. I don’t mean that I have not been
myself these past twenty years; just that English puts me in touch with the core part of myself, and as I get older,
that core part of myself wants to make itself better known. It’s not just about
being or feeling American; it’s mostly about reclaiming me and my identity as a
woman in 2012, living abroad, an expat, working in science, with one foot in
Europe and one in America. I’m guessing that it is the core part of me that is
trying to come to terms with all of these experiences—how to piece them all
together--and I’m guessing that it is the core part of me that will be having
much more to say as the years move on. I’m happy about that.
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