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Archive for the 'Journal' category
CEOs are story tellers; you’ve got to create a story people want to work for, a story people want to buy, a story people want to invest in. A fantastic story may be your last when it doesn’t come true. An unexciting story may never get off the ground. How far do you stick your neck out to create goosebumps–that’s the rub.
Categories: Entrepreneurism, Journal, Notes to myself, CEO musings
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September 13, 2006 8:17 pm
I am halfway through the executive EMBA program at San Diego State and recently wrote a term paper on the meaning of work for my Legal and Ethical Responsibility of Business class. Craig P. Dunn gave excellent lectures on the ethical responsibility portion of the class and really made me think about what I am passionate about. It is a topic we often do not slow down to think about. By the time we are in our forties we end up in a job or career that does not align with what we would have picked when we were teens. We can all think of Bob Parr (Mr. Incredible) in The Incredibles movie sitting at his desk as an insurance claims adjustor. Below I examine what I feel passionate about and how it relates to my work.
There are certain books that we read and we are forever changed. One of the first books that I had that experience with was Cosmos by Carl Sagan. In ninth grade, I took that book to my classes and read it instead of paying attention to my teachers. Cosmos actually describes the greatest men and women of science and their contributions. Each of those scientists discovered a simple truth about the nature of the world. The ideas were so simple and beautiful. However, grabbing those ideas from the ether took a great intellectual leap. These leaps are non-intuitive and these great men and women are honored as geniuses for doing it. Kepler’s three laws of planetary motion exemplify this concept. The three laws are so easy to understand, elegant, and obvious. However, discovering the three laws of planetary motion is considered one of the great intellectual leaps in the history of science.
Another event, like reading the book Cosmos, where I felt forever changed is when I took a three day Robert McKee Story Seminar. In that seminar, I found not just new insights about film and story telling for script writers, but deep insights on the human condition. For example, when making a film, the audience is extremely savvy. They will quickly lose interest if the characters in the story make choices that are not creditable. To make characters believable, you must have them do the minimum under each beat in a scene where they have to make a choice. Now each character has a different minimum and for the axe murderer, the minimum may very well be to chop off the head of his victim. I believe this is the same concept of path of least resistance and why building mechanisms to drive progress is the best way to modify behavior. Jim Collins, the author of Good to Great is a proponent of this concept. If we are the protagonist in our own movie that is our life, then we are going to do the minimum based on our environment. Mechanisms change our environment and make our minimum actions align with our preferred behaviors and outcomes. But the one line from Robert McKee I remember above all else is that art is considered a classic when it expresses an eternal truth that does not lose meaning or diminish over time. A classic stays relevant over the years, much like the great laws of science.
Am I passionate about science or am I passionate about film? I realized after some consideration that I am actually passionate about what is common in my approach to both film and science. In fact it is how I approach software engineering and everything else in life. I am passionate about finding the simple structure and truths hidden behind complexity. I am passionate about thinking about the essence of things and having the epiphany and deep insight of a simple truth. I must then be able to express that truth in the physical world in order to be satisfied. With software, I am in bliss when I can do this. My success with software is that I have the ability to reach a point of knowing the deep meaning of a design prior to the actual implementation. When I have been miserable is when we are stagnated and are not moving forward or building software without thinking it through. I am a fan of Joseph Campbell who said “Follow Your Bliss!” which perfectly describes what this seeking a truth and expressing it the world means to me.
Categories: Journal, Notes to myself
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September 12, 2006 8:46 pm
I ran five miles yesterday. Four miles at tempo pace in 32:20. Felt pretty good except for the extra weight gained from lagging in July. Note to self, stop eating the kids snacks when working late at night.
Categories: Journal, "Run, Steven, Run!"
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September 11, 2006 8:42 pm

The morning of 9/11 my wife and I woke up to a phone call from my mother in-law in distress. She told us to turn on the T.V. and she said she thought my wife’s brother worked in the world trade center. I’ll never forget that morning with my wife and the stress and tightness we had waiting to hear from him. We were fortunate. We reached him later that day and found out his train never made it to work that day (he was running late). We also later learned that he actually worked at world financial across the street from the world trade center–though he often had breakfast in the restaurant in the word trade center. It is one of the moments we all share that divides our lives with a before and after.
Categories: Journal
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September 9, 2006 5:41 am
Okay, this year two couples we know sent e-mails to a distribution list of friends announcing they were getting divorce. It is a shock to get one of those in your InBox–especially when the couples seem to get along so well in their public lives. One of the couples seemed so down to earth and having the perfect life with two great kids. We really do not know what goes on behind closed doors. Who’s going to be next? I realize now that I really do not know.
Categories: Journal
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September 6, 2006 5:00 pm
Welcome to my site. Here you will find insights from my professional experience, blogs I’ve written about software technologies, as well as the occasional blurbs about life in general. I hope you find the information helpful and entertaining.
Categories: Journal
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