Don’t pee in the pool

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The always insightful Seth Godin writes:

For generations, people dumped crap into the Hudson River. The river was so large and so swift that they assumed that the effluent wouldn’t come back to haunt them.

Of course, it did, killing the oyster beds and poisoning the public.

How big does a body of water have to be before we forget that we’re swimming in it? That it all comes around…

Why are we are okay at yelling at a stranger, but not our neighbor? We will abuse the department in the other building, but not down the hall…

It turns out that the pool/river/tub that we live in is far smaller than it seems. The culture of the place we work, the vibe of the community where we live. It’s all more connected than we realize.

Photo by Shazmyn Ali on Unsplash

Bees: The quintessential collaborator

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Bees are the quintessential collaborators, strong and focused.

 

Photo by Mladen Borisov on Unsplash

The case against the “Friend Argument”

Posted by on Jun 28, 2019 in Abso-effing-lutely, Ipso Fabulous, My Style | No Comments

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I’m not a murderer; some of my best friends are alive.
—Sean Lock

Having a friend who belongs to a demographic that one hates isn’t incompatible with a prejudice against that demographic – and this is the key to the fallacy. A prejudice, is by its etymology a “pre-judgement” of someone, based on more general information that may not necessarily apply to an individual.

This can be a relatively benign conclusion (“he’s a gay man, he must like fashion”) or it can be the considerably more negative (“he’s a black man, he’s going to stab me”). However, once some has actually gotten beyond the stage of judging someone on prior knowledge, they can change their mind about that individual.

In many cases, this might overturn the prejudice entirely but in the case of people using the friend argument, it has only overturned the prejudice against one individual, or maybe a few more. The prejudice, the pre-judgement against a group of people, still stands. This is why saying you have a friend in one particular demographic doesn’t excuse racism, homophobia or other prejudice; you can’t have a pre-judgement about someone you already know, but you can still maintain your pre-judgement against people you haven’t met.

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You don’t have to monetize your joy

Posted by on Jun 4, 2019 in Abso-effing-lutely, Ipso Fabulous | No Comments

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Molly Conway absolutely stopped me in my tracks with this great article. Here is a small excerpt but it is worth reading the whole article:

We live in the era of the hustle. Of following our dreams until the end, and then pushing ourselves more. And every time we feel beholden to capitalize on the rare places where our skills and our joy intersect, we underline the idea that financial gain is the ultimate pursuit. If we’re good at it, we should sell it. If we’re good at it and we love it, we should definitely sell it.

Adam J. Kurtz, author of Things Are What You Make of Them has rewritten the maxim for modern creatives: “Do what you love and you’ll never work a day in your life work super fucking hard all the time with no separation or any boundaries and also take everything extremely personally.” Which, aside from being relatable to anyone who has tried to make money from something they truly care about, speaks to an underrepresented truth: those with passion careers can have just as much career anxiety as those who clock in and out of the mindless daily grind.

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FREE coloring pages from museums around the world

Posted by on May 28, 2019 in Abso-effing-lutely, Ipso Fabulous, My Style | No Comments

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Unbelievable! Your can download FREE coloring books from 113 museums from around the world!

This is my personal favorite >>

Check all your options here >>

Photo by Joshua Eckstein on Unsplash

Three questions for effective feedback

Posted by on May 3, 2019 in Abso-effing-lutely, Ipso Fabulous | No Comments

three_questionsby Thomas J. DeLong

Read the full article here >>

Photo by Taylor Leopold on Unsplash