Showing posts with label audacity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label audacity. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Constructive social action led by youth in Pakistan [INITIATIVE], [AUDACITY], [IDEALISM], [COOPERATION]

A remarkable story of an initiative for the benefit of the local community in Pakistan. Youth can move the world!
(Excerpts:)

"Everybody keeps blaming the government, but no one actually does anything," said Shoaib Ahmed, 21, one of the organizers. "So we thought, why don't we?"

"The rich don't care, the poor can't do anything, so it's up to the middle class to make the change," Mr. Khwaja said, as a group of friends standing near him nodded in agreement. "We have to lead by example. To change it from inside."

May 19, 2009

Young Pakistanis Take One Problem Into Their Own Hands

LAHORE, Pakistan — The idea was simple, but in Pakistan, a country full of talk and short on action, it smacked of rebellion.

A group of young Pakistani friends, sick of hearing their families complain about the government, decided to spite them by taking matters into their own hands: every Sunday they would grab shovels, go out into their city, and pick up garbage.

Zackary Canepari for The New York Times
Shoaib Ahmed, 21, one of the organizers of the group, in Lahore on a recent Sunday.

It was a strange thing to do, particularly for such students from elite private schools, who would normally spend Sunday afternoons relaxing in air-conditioned homes.

But the students were inspired by the recent success of the lawyers' movement, which used a national protest to press the government to reinstate the country's chief justice, and their rush of public consciousness was irrepressible.

"Everybody keeps blaming the government, but no one actually does anything," said Shoaib Ahmed, 21, one of the organizers. "So we thought, why don't we?"

So they got on Facebook and invited all their friends to a Sunday trash picking. Trash, Mr. Ahmed said, "is this most basic thing. It's not controversial, and you can easily do it."

Pakistan is a country plagued by problems, like Islamic extremism and poverty. But these young people are another face, a curious new generation that looks skeptically on their parents' privilege and holds mullahs and military generals in equal contempt.

"The youth of Pakistan wants to change things," said Shahram Azhar, the lead singer for Laal, a Pakistani rock band, reflecting an attitude that is typical of this rebellious younger generation.

"The reason the Taliban is ruling Swat," he said referring to a valley north of Islamabad where Islamic extremists took control this year, "is because they are organized. We need to organize, too."

"The only answer to Pakistan's problems," he added, "is a broad-based people's movement."

The trash movement, which calls itself Responsible Citizens, does not yet qualify as broad, but it still drew a respectable crowd on a recent Sunday, considering the heat (above 90 degrees) and the time (around 4 p.m.). Mr. Ahmed and his friends were doling out trash bags they had bought for the occasion. About 40 people had gathered. Some were wearing masks. All were carrying shovels.

They set their sights low. The area of operation, Ghalib Market, was modest, a quiet traffic circle in central Lahore encircled by shops, a cricket field and a mosque.

It was not one of the dirtiest parts of the city, but the group felt attached to it, as they had cleaned it in the past, and wanted to see if their actions were having any effect.

The first time they cleaned there was like raking leaves on a windy autumn day.

"We collected, like, 30 bags, but there was no visible difference," Mr. Ahmed said.

But they talked with local shopkeepers, in a kind of trash outreach, asking them to walk their garbage to the trash bin. Those connections, Mr. Ahmed said, were actually the point of the cleaning — setting an example for others to follow.

"The major problem people have here is that there are no bins," said Murtaza Khwaja, a 21-year-old medical student.

Actually, the problem was deeper. A long-term cycle of corrupt, weak governments interrupted by military coups has caused Pakistan's political muscles to atrophy, leaving Pakistani society, particularly its poor, hopeless that it will ever receive the services — education, water, electricity, health — that it so desperately needs.

"People say, 'This is nice, but things will never change,' " Mr. Khwaja said, pointing to a hamburger seller who he said was particularly pessimistic. "There is a hopelessness."

That is where the trash cleaning comes in. Locals find it perplexing and helpful in equal measures. One enthusiast who met the group on its first outing in March, Muhamed Zahid, has come to every one since. One man passing by in a rickshaw dismounted to help them shovel for a while.

The men in the mosque, on the other hand, were picky, wanting the young people to clean the mosque but not the surrounding area.

"They said, 'We already have Christians doing that for us in the morning,' " Mr. Khwaja said. Christians are a minority in Pakistan, and those who have no education often work in the lowest-paid jobs, like collecting trash, sweeping streets or fixing sewers.

On Sunday, Malik Waqas, a 16-year-old who was driving by on a moped, stopped to watch a cluster of young people shoveling what looked like old food.

"It's good," Mr. Waqas said shyly. When asked why, he said, "Because people care."

But that also confuses passers-by, many of whom stop to gape at the young people, who, in their jeans, T-shirts and sunglasses, look more New York than Pakistan. On Sunday, three men in flowing, traditional garb leaned on a fence staring at the students while they cleaned.

Mr. Khwaja's mother, who had also come to clean, was commanding like an army general, trying to get them to join in.

"Most of them just mock us," she said. " 'What are you women doing?' "

But the youngsters seemed to understand the men's perspective.

"They're like, 'Why are these rich people cleaning this up? It's probably a college project,' " one student said.

That brought the students to the most serious discussion of the day, one that is arguably Pakistan's biggest problem: the gap between rich and poor. Generations of poverty and a system of substandard education that keeps people in it have created fertile ground for Islamic militancy, which now poses a serious threat to the stability of the country.

"Here, if you're poor, you're not even a human being," said Pavel Qaiser. "It's the culture we have — one landlord and the peasants working under him."

And here was a revelation: the trash picking, which the students had intended as an example for shopkeepers and residents, was actually an exercise for themselves.

"The rich don't care, the poor can't do anything, so it's up to the middle class to make the change," Mr. Khwaja said, as a group of friends standing near him nodded in agreement. "We have to lead by example. To change it from inside."

He continued, his voice urgent, as if he were giving a speech: "We want to tell everyone, 'You have the right. For 60 years everyone has told you that you don't, but you do!' "

Then he bemoaned the small number of friends they were able to gather for the trash cleaning. For those who didn't come, he had a message. "You want to do something? Pick up a shovel."

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/19/world/asia/19trash.html?_r=1&pagewanted=1&ref=world

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Taking the path less traveled and following one's dreams -- [AUDACITY], [COURAGE], [FAITH]

This seems like pretty good advice in any situation! What are your thoughts?
(Excerpts:)


"...which decisions did you make that helped the most?
"- The decision to learn to speak in public...
"
- The decision to commit. Commitment brings its own reward - in ways that are unimaginable things happen to speed you on your way. But you must commit."


Personal Branding Interview: Phil Town

Today, I spoke with Phil Town, who is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Rule #1 and the upcoming author of Payback Time, which debuts in September. In this interview, Phil tells his own story of how he's build his personal brand to be what it is today. Also, he gives you the secret to getting a book deal and becoming a bestselling author, tells you how to invest in this economy and emphasizes the importance of social media in the world today.

Phil, how did you go from an average high school student pumping gas to a #1 NY Times bestselling author and world renowned speaker?

I took the path less traveled and followed my dreams. I wanted to be a soldier since I was a kid so I went in the Army and eventually was awarded the famous Green Beret and joined Special Forces. I liked some parts of what I did in Latin America and Vietnam but it wasn't for me so I got out at age 23. I got a job as a whitewater guide because running drugs looked too dangerous.

I loved running rivers, living outside and I did that on a bunch of rivers for ten years. I had a lot of time off season so I started reading philosophy, got stoned a lot to discover the secrets of the universe, turned to meditation instead, lived in India and France in ashrams so I could ponder the absolute and eventually was so absolutely broke I took an offer to apprentice with an investor who taught me the right stuff and then I went off and made my millions. And then wrote about it so you can do it, too.

There are hundreds of thousands of books published each year. How were you able to stand out? What marketing tips do you have for authors?

"The key thing to understand about the publishing industry is that they don't sell books, they publish them."

Since they don't sell books, they look for authors who can sell the books if they publish them. This ability is highly prized. They will pay you a lot of money for your book if you can show them how it will be sold in large enough quantities that they'll not only get their money back but also make a profit. In my case, I had been on a speaker circuit with several seminar producers and over 2 million people had seen me already. Plus, the seminar producers raised their credibility by raising my credibility so they featured me in ads after the book came out and they put the book out to their subscribers …. all of which drove it to #1.

"Here's the marketing tip of the century: create a large group of fans who will buy your book before you write your book."

In a horrible economy, what three pieces of advice do you have for hardcore investors and what three pieces do you have for a beginner?

  • For the hardcores: Be careful. The best investments are usually the one's you don't make. And only buy wonderful businesses and only when they are on sale. Then go do something else and wait for the price to go up as it inevitably will.
  • For the beginners: Ditto.

If you had to examine your personal brand throughout the past few decades, which decisions did you make that helped the most?

The decision to learn to speak in public. That led to being in front of people. That led to a book. That led to another book … and that will lead to a bigger audience. And that leads to a lot of fun.

The decision to commit. Commitment brings its own reward - in ways that are unimaginable things happen to speed you on your way. But you must commit.

You have another book coming out in 2010, and you're already preparing now for it's launch, with a Facebook page and Twitter. What role does social media play in your life now and in the future?

It is huge. Unimaginably huge. In two years I will not need a stage to speak on. My audience will be connected to me through social media and web 2.0. These are incredible democratizing tools that allow talent and skill to rise to the top. Learn how to use these tools. Do it now.

—-
Phil Town is the author of Rule #1: The Simple Strategy for Successful Investing in Only 15 Minutes a Week! (Crown Publishing Group, 2006)—the #1 New York Times best-seller and Amazon.com's top-selling business book of 2006. He heads the list of motivational speakers, addressing 500,000 people per year across the nation at the mega-seminar "Get Motivated." An ex-Green Beret and former river guide, Phil is a self-made millionaire several times over. Town usually is found sharing the stage with the likes of President Clinton, Rudy Giuliani, Colin Powell and Zig Ziglar, speaking to groups numbering 20,000. His latest book called Payback Time: How to Outsmart the System That Failed You and Get Your Investments Back on Track, comes out in September.


Source: http://personalbrandingblog.com/personal-branding-interview-phil-town/

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Creativity, innovation, audacity in one's work

http://ebbf.org/inspire22_rebecca_teclemariam.html

Rebecca Teclemariam-Mesbah: Thinking and Painting 'Outside the Box'

Painting Murals at the Sarajevo Pediatrics Ward

Rebecca Teclemariam-Mesbah defies a simple description. French-Ethiopian, eight years of childhood in Ethiopia, another few in Kenya, studies in France, Germany and Holland, and currently living with her family (Swiss/French/Iranian husband, two children and two cats) in Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina).

Loaded with credentials—an MA in Gender studies and a PhD in Neurobiology (research on "the fascinating connections between our eyes, our biological clock, and our organs")—and after having worked as a research fellow and lecturer at the University of Strasbourg, France, the Netherlands Brain Research Institute, and the Free University of Amsterdam, she has chosen an atypical career path, involving a mélange of teaching biology, moral leadership, painting, and motherhood. In this interview Rebecca talks about how she has tried to bring together her varied facets—artist, mother, scientist, person of faith, entrepreneur, African, European—into line with her values.

***

EBBF: You were born in Ethiopia to a mixed race family, have lived in very different countries around the world, speak French, English, Dutch, German, and now Bosnian. How has this diversity of countries and cultures influenced your outlook on life and career choices?

Rebecca: Well, I feel both African and European. African in that I don't create separate compartments in my life. Work, family, faith—all are one. But the way I behave and interact with people is European. Also, I grew up surrounded by poverty, which is a good thing. I don't allow my kids to say (about food), "I don't like it". I tell them that they can't go from a grandfather eating just one meal a day to turning down food!

EBBF: You work a lot, but you don't have a typical career. Can you talk a little bit about what you do?

Rebecca: Well, most people consider me a housewife, which is silly considering I'm not very good at house work! I take my responsibility as a mother as my primary job. I study and organize it as I would do my job. I also make and sell custom made, hand-painted furniture, I teach biology at a French school, and work as a freelance translator.

I started my business by accident. After our second child was born, we moved to a small city in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Travnik. My daughter was so active that I had to dedicate all my time to her. It was very challenging, and in order to channel my frustration I started to paint. I chose furniture because we had unfinished wooden tables and chairs in our house which are made in that part of the country. When the painted furniture kept piling up and filling the house, my husband made me sell it!

The business grew, mostly painting children's furniture, and I started to work in a shop with two other people. But when they started fabricating fantastic stories about the origin of the pieces as a marketing strategy, and also squeezing the price from the carpenter provider, we split up. Now I do the furniture on order so I don't need to keep a stock. I sell online, mostly to customers in Europe and America. Aside from children's furniture, I also sell paintings for kids' bedrooms and abstract art for adults.

At work in the studio

EBBF: You mentioned that you decided to dedicate your time to your daughter. Does this mean you are living the 'family vs. work' dichotomy? Do you feel pressure from people to get a so-called 'real job'?

Rebecca: I do not regret the time spent with my children. Time flies so quickly and if you look at the 80 or so years we're supposed to live here, child-rearing years take up only a fourth of your life. It is even much less when you think about the eternal after-life!

Although I loved working in science research, most of the time I did not like the conformity of the career paths offered to me. For a very long time I had the impression that I was on train tracks, following the path laid out for me: science studies, PhD, post-doc, assistant professor and I just needed time at the job (in Europe, a long time!) before I could think of becoming one day a professor. It is the same in most professions but this only validates one type of experience. The fact that I could deal with people from different backgrounds or that I was creative was not really considered an advantage. Also, I never liked being defined by my job. In my research institute we were even defined by the area of the brain we were studying. I remember once someone in my team (we were the hypothalamus people) commented on how I had had lunch with people from the cortex group as if I had done something quite revolutionary!

About not having the real job: here is one area where it is an advantage to be a woman! There isn't as much pressure on getting a "real" job. Some of my male friends who are stay-at-home fathers have a much tougher time. However, it is quite bruising for the ego when people stop a conversation short because they just learned you don't have an interesting work or even worse when they patronize you because they assume you have a small IQ given you have chosen to stay home to look after your family. Everything I do now is more of a one person job, so I miss the buzz of the workplace, the intellectual challenge and the fun of having colleagues. However, because there is no one to push me, I have learned the assertiveness, and the strict discipline I probably would not have developed otherwise.

EBBF: You seem to have managed to integrate various jobs and responsibilities into your schedule, working as an entrepreneur, mother, teacher, and also dealing with moral education and youth leadership. Do you see this as a viable path for more people or is yours an isolated experience? Are there things about this more integrated approach to life that you think can be applied to more conventional work experiences, businesses, and the like?

Rebecca: I think it is important to know yourself first; not everyone can do the same thing. But it is also important to integrate service to a worthy cause into your life and have a passion for it. In our late twenties, my husband and I realized that the life we had chosen—i.e. a career in science research—would mean we'd have to live in a large city in a wealthy country while we both dreamt as kids of working in developing countries. It also meant we'd live a very regular life and although there is nothing wrong with all of this, it was just not for us. First, because we both have a tendency to quickly get bored by routine and need to put ourselves in difficult situations to advance. Then in 1998-1999 a series of dramatic events happened: my husband's brother committed suicide, and I became pregnant with our first child. It is also during those months that the Universal House of Justice [the governing body of the Baha'i Faith] wrote some words which struck a chord: "The days pass swiftly as the twinkle of a star. Make your mark now, at this crucial turning point of a new juncture, the like of which shall never return. Make that mark in deeds that will ensure for you celestial blessings--guarantee for you, for the entire race, a future beyond earthly reckoning." This quote captured our feelings: life is very short and while you're alive you have to do something meaningful. Also, by becoming parents, we wanted to live up to what we would expect from our children. So we decided to put ourselves in a difficult situation and try to do something meaningful, make our mark—as small as it might be—so that our child would see that our deeds did follow our words. We moved to Sarajevo. We had to understand a new culture, learn a new language and re-invent our careers since we pretty much ˝hara-kiried˝ our research careers!


EBBF: In your presentation at EBBF's annual conference you mentioned that currently society is organized around a conception of human nature as innately selfish and competitive, and that society could change to a cooperative model of organization. In this model, you used the analogy of the bird with two wings, male and female, to illustrate the need for one kind of cooperation. How are these ideas related to what you've experienced in your own life?

Rebecca: As human beings we do have greatness and darkness, selflessness and selfishness. It is all about which of our sides we want to focus on. I believe we can not even grasp the changes coming generations will make in the organization of society if the view on human nature changes. This is real science-fiction! We can only extrapolate from what we know from small groups putting human value at the core and using a non-confrontational model of group decision making. EBBF is one group trying to do that. Results show that individuals develop new abilities, learn from mistakes, and in general have a lower stress level. This is not only a ˝feel good˝ effect. It goes deeper, in that constant stress in general is toxic to the brain. In an enabling environment the level of creativity and learning is much higher. I am often humbled by the attitude of children who have been taught that since a young age.

About creating a new society, we have to think that not only do we need to integrate men and women but also minorities, East, West etc. An exciting challenge because it forces us to rethink our assumptions. Does having a career mean I have to give up having a family? Many working men and women do not want to choose. Is it a 9 to 5 job that defines a ˝functioning˝ human being? Romas in Bosnia for example certainly do not think so, but they play a large role in the recycling of materials in the country. Why is this not looked upon as a valid human activity? I think it also comes back to what defines a human being. In an ever-changing world it will be more and more difficult to put people in boxes. Bosnia is a country struggling with defining nations and I know it can be difficult not to know who you are. But if you see life as a journey in which mishaps, mistakes, successes will help you find out the gems you did not even think you had, then it is not so important to draw boundaries around your personality. Just put down a note saying "work in progress"!