Recently, I involved myself in a small project for a good friend. It was a time-limited task - I had a couple of weeks to come as far as I could, giving my immediate comments to a book draft. A task with which I could spend more or less time.
Why? some people will say.
And true - I could have said no. I could have done a superficial effort. Found a place here and there and written a comment, but otherwise it will be relatively quickly done. Time is valuable, as we know.
At this point, let us briefly stray out at a tangent.
Most people know the old anecdote about the philosophy professor who presents his students with a transparent container, which he first fills up with stones until the students say it's full - then he pours gravel in until the students say that now, it is really full - after which he eventually fills it up with sand until the students for the third time claim that there is room for no more in the container. Then the professor takes the exact same amount of sand, pours it into a similar container. Then there is room for the gravel, but not all of the stones - especially not the big ones - can be placed in the container.
The point is (and let us refrain from venturing too far into what I think is a particular Danish devaluation of the anecdote - that the professor in both cases ends the session by empty a full beer mug into the container, after which he, while the beer seeps through the sand, point out: "but remember: there's always room for a pint"): we should make room for the big, important things in our lives first - if we take the small indifferent things first, there will be no room for the big, meaningful things.
In this case, the comments I have written to the book draft (comments that I would describe as a piece of gravel greater than the average, or one of the smaller stones in my container) had no influence on the more significant things. I have had my sleep every night, done my duty at work and as a family man. I have had time for all the other things in the gravel category: my presence on social media (which I choose not to call procrastination) has been unchanged, I have written my daily blog posts and I even had time for my #7ThingsIReadThisWeek. I may have translated a blog post less, maybe skipped watching a TV broadcast - but that's about it. It has actually only been sand that I have not had room for.
I am writing this halfway through the time I have available for the purpose. And I'm sure I'll make it. Because I've actually seen it as a pleasure. I like it, I get this fabulous sense of flow, and I do not notice that time passes around me - and then it even serves a purpose.
So if I'm actually able to make a positive difference that way - well, I would say yes again - any time!
(Translated from Kostbar tid, vel anvendt)
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Saturday, March 03, 2018
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Everywhere!
If I were to offer a single piece of advice that I think, most people could benefit from every day, it would be as simple as:
All to all those objecting that "unfortunately, I have no space for the two books when I am on the move": let me guess that you always have space for the omnipresent smartphone? Well, then it is easy: install an e-book reader and an application for taking notes on it. And open one of these two, whenever you have the time and the urge to throw a bird...
(Translated from Overalt!)
Bring two books everywhere.A book, so that you always have something inspiring to read, if you happen to have an idle moment, and a notebook, so that you always have a place to nake a note, if you should happen to have a thought worth keeping for later use. Think it over: how many spare moments have been wasted on Angry Birds - or whatever happens to be the thing of the moment on the omnipresent smartphone? How many thoughts worth keeping for later use are lost, because they weren't noted anywhere?
All to all those objecting that "unfortunately, I have no space for the two books when I am on the move": let me guess that you always have space for the omnipresent smartphone? Well, then it is easy: install an e-book reader and an application for taking notes on it. And open one of these two, whenever you have the time and the urge to throw a bird...
(Translated from Overalt!)
Tuesday, February 13, 2018
One of my rare bets
Normally, I rarely venture into betting. But recently I had an opportuninty that I found to be too good to be missed.
I had the opportunity to enter into a bet with a CEO I have the pleasure to know. He has a quite natural interest in the image of his management team within the company - an image, which has the measurable indicator of a score in the annual satisfaction survey filled in by the employees.
This was the foundation, on which I made him an offer: "If you make yourself more physically visible in the offices, start applying Management By Walking Around on the days when you are not out of office on other business - initially, just start visiting coffee machines in remote corners of the offices - I am fully convinced that the Management Team score in the satisfaction survey will increase." The bet concerns a book - the loser will give the winner a book, which book is chosen by the loser.
I am quite certain that I will win. And even if I lose, I still feel that in a way, I will have won - because even in that case, I get the pleasure of picking a good and inspiring book to give away.
(Translated from Et af mine sjældne væddemål, originally published February 10th, 2018)
I had the opportunity to enter into a bet with a CEO I have the pleasure to know. He has a quite natural interest in the image of his management team within the company - an image, which has the measurable indicator of a score in the annual satisfaction survey filled in by the employees.
This was the foundation, on which I made him an offer: "If you make yourself more physically visible in the offices, start applying Management By Walking Around on the days when you are not out of office on other business - initially, just start visiting coffee machines in remote corners of the offices - I am fully convinced that the Management Team score in the satisfaction survey will increase." The bet concerns a book - the loser will give the winner a book, which book is chosen by the loser.
I am quite certain that I will win. And even if I lose, I still feel that in a way, I will have won - because even in that case, I get the pleasure of picking a good and inspiring book to give away.
(Translated from Et af mine sjældne væddemål, originally published February 10th, 2018)
Monday, January 29, 2018
On the topic of forgetting history
It cannot come as a surprise to people who have read just a bit of what is said in this blog that I am quite excited about books and literature, and appreciate reading in general. But on very rare occasions, something strangely uncomfortable happens - it always starts when I hear about some book, after which I come to the conclusion that I should own that particular book, and that I hope that I will never ever need to read it.
Such a book I became aware of when I read an article about it in a Danish newspaper. It was not because the book itself was new - it actually appeared for the first time in German already in the nineties - but here, I read about a Danish translation. It was the Israeli historian Gideon Greif, who wrote the book "We Wept Without Tears", in which he tells us how he has sought the surviving Jewish members from the so-called Sonderkommando in Auschwitz, where they were tasked with participating in mass extinction of Jews in the camp.
I felt bad by simply reading the newspaper article, and I do not want to read the book at all. But I see it almost as a necessity to have it standing on the shelf - for one reason, if I or anyone around me begin to forget or question the history, it's time to take the book down from the shelf and make the effort to read in it. Not that I will hope it ever comes so far. A little like the fact that you have smoke detectors installed in your home that you hope you will never need - but if it really becomes necessary, you wouldn't want to do without it.
(Translated from Noget om at værne sig mod historieløshed, originally published October 5th, 2010)
Such a book I became aware of when I read an article about it in a Danish newspaper. It was not because the book itself was new - it actually appeared for the first time in German already in the nineties - but here, I read about a Danish translation. It was the Israeli historian Gideon Greif, who wrote the book "We Wept Without Tears", in which he tells us how he has sought the surviving Jewish members from the so-called Sonderkommando in Auschwitz, where they were tasked with participating in mass extinction of Jews in the camp.
I felt bad by simply reading the newspaper article, and I do not want to read the book at all. But I see it almost as a necessity to have it standing on the shelf - for one reason, if I or anyone around me begin to forget or question the history, it's time to take the book down from the shelf and make the effort to read in it. Not that I will hope it ever comes so far. A little like the fact that you have smoke detectors installed in your home that you hope you will never need - but if it really becomes necessary, you wouldn't want to do without it.
(Translated from Noget om at værne sig mod historieløshed, originally published October 5th, 2010)
Friday, July 08, 2016
Plagiarism and inspiration
There is a thing which has been on my mind for some time - the difference between plagiarism and inspiration: why is it that something will be categorized as plagiarism, while others slip through the eye of the needle and are recognized just to have been "inspired"?
When one subscribes to the opinion that not only have most things been said before; most have also been said in a better and clearer way before, then one must simultaneously accept that most of the things one can acheive, must be acheived through inspiration - very little comes from nothing. So the important thing must be to make sure that one has something to be inspired by.
Somewhere, I have seen the quote that you have to read thousands of books, before you can write one, and most likely, this is true, then you will have been exposed to sufficient amounts of information (and quite probably also information of divergent nature and content) to form and formulate your own opinion.
And when you have formed and formulated your own opinion, then you can always start looking back at the things you were inspired by and use these as references, make sure that quotes appear verbatim et cetera - and then, you have not leaned on any single source, not copied, not plagiarized.
(Translated from Plagiat og inspiration, originally published January 18, 2010)
When one subscribes to the opinion that not only have most things been said before; most have also been said in a better and clearer way before, then one must simultaneously accept that most of the things one can acheive, must be acheived through inspiration - very little comes from nothing. So the important thing must be to make sure that one has something to be inspired by.
Somewhere, I have seen the quote that you have to read thousands of books, before you can write one, and most likely, this is true, then you will have been exposed to sufficient amounts of information (and quite probably also information of divergent nature and content) to form and formulate your own opinion.
And when you have formed and formulated your own opinion, then you can always start looking back at the things you were inspired by and use these as references, make sure that quotes appear verbatim et cetera - and then, you have not leaned on any single source, not copied, not plagiarized.
(Translated from Plagiat og inspiration, originally published January 18, 2010)
Saturday, May 07, 2016
On the topic of superbosses
From time to time, I am fortunate enough to get hold of a book, which pages almost turn by themselves because the author handles an interesting topic and is able to illuminate in an appealing and relevant way.
Recently, I experienced it when I stumbled upon Sydney Finkelstein's book "Superbosses". Based on numerous examples of superbosses in a variety of fields - ranging from music, american football and the restaurant business to marketing and other professions where business leadership is a more conventional topic - Finkelstein details what makes these leaders so excellent, causing the success of their own business, and members of their staff to later successfully spread like wildfire as leaders in the same industry.
Finkelstein does it so enthusiastically that it can make anyone want to, if not develop superboss personality traits, then certainly work for a superboss - or wish that one's boss developed that kind of personality.
I at least could easily find someone for whom to place this book under their Christmas tree.
(Translated from Noget om fremragende ledere)
Recently, I experienced it when I stumbled upon Sydney Finkelstein's book "Superbosses". Based on numerous examples of superbosses in a variety of fields - ranging from music, american football and the restaurant business to marketing and other professions where business leadership is a more conventional topic - Finkelstein details what makes these leaders so excellent, causing the success of their own business, and members of their staff to later successfully spread like wildfire as leaders in the same industry.
Finkelstein does it so enthusiastically that it can make anyone want to, if not develop superboss personality traits, then certainly work for a superboss - or wish that one's boss developed that kind of personality.
I at least could easily find someone for whom to place this book under their Christmas tree.
(Translated from Noget om fremragende ledere)
Friday, April 15, 2016
Promises made to readers
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| Image courtesy of pixabay / MiraDeShazer |
And then it becomes interesting how Pink reflects on the question:
I'm asking the reader to say: oh, no matter, what you are doing in your life, just stop. Please stop, spend how ever long it takes, 20 minutes, half an hour, with me, because it is more important than anything else you're doing - more important than doing your work, more important than exercising, more important than spending time with your family - just spend that time with me, and it will be a better use of your time. And you're like "whoa, wait a second, I'm actually making the promise that that's the case, I better deliver on that promise."It is very beautifully and accurately put. Because that's what it's all about: in this world where time is often regarded as our most precious resource, we are wasting people's resources if we make them read something for a span of time they could have used for something better.
It is one thing that all those of us who carry an unhatched author inside, should think carefully about.
As well as, for that matter, something that one as a blogger should keep in mind. If we haven't got something important to say, we should remain silent. Alternatively refrain from wondering why no one reads what we write.
(Translated from Løftet til læserne)
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