Archive for the ‘Learnings’ Category

First Kitchen Confidential

Friday, January 30th, 2009

Obama family’s favorite Chicago chef is coming to the White House.

* By: Dayo Olopad

Samuel Kass, the 28-year-old cook who served as personal chef to the Obama family in Chicago, will be cooking nightly at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, White House Social secretary Desirée Rogers confirmed for The Root. Kass, who will hold the title of assistant White House chef, is also the son of Robert Kass, Malia Obama’s former fifth-grade teacher and onetime faculty director at Chicago’s Laboratory School.

The young chef’s organic cuisine and sustainable kitchen philosophy won over the new first family years ago. Kass trained in Europe after graduating from the University of Chicago in 2003 and ran a private catering business that counted the Obamas as clients even before Malia was assigned to the elder Kass’ classroom in 2007. The Obamas’ refrigerator used to be filled with “Cheez-Its and stuff like that,” says one former Lab student, who has known the Kass family for years. “[Sam] got him eating healthy—got the whole family eating healthy.” The family friend says Kass, a varsity college athlete, “has been cooking for [the Obamas] since they got to Washington.” (A White House spokesperson could not confirm or deny Kass’ involvement in any pre-inaugural snacking.) read more here

Street Art

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

My country Tis of Thee

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

MY COUNTRY ‘TIS OF THEE

My country ‘tis of thee
Sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing
Land where my fathers died, land of the pilgrims pride
From every mountainside let freedom ring.

When I heard Aretha Franklin sing those words at the Presidential Inauguration it took me back to my childhood, and the memory of signing the National Anthem and saluting the flag every morning at the start of school. It was something we did as part of being American, part of being patriotic. We would all sing with a joy and a belief. I vividly remember the early 60’s and being mesmerized by a young Irish President from Massachusetts, John F. Kennedy. He was my hero of sorts. For some reason I could relate to him, I could relate to his story–being the captain of a sinking PT boat and not wavering from his appointed duties of staying with his ship. He was a hero, and I was into heroes. He was up there with the Apache Indian, Geronimo, who represented to me someone who fought against injustice and did it in a way that demonstrated that real men had courage to face death in the face of truth(read more)

The Train

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Are You Going to Finish Strong? Nick Vujicic

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Embracing Differences

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Embracing Differences

embracing differences


comic by Chan Lowe @ www.list@myucomics.com

Jerome Green

This is a year of embracement and a very exciting time in our world. Come Tuesday, we will have a new President, but more importantly, we will have a new lease on life, increased hope and a plethora of new possibilities. The election of Obama came on the heels of a new wave of energy and spirit. This is the year that we will learn to embrace everything around us and this learning will be crucial in dealing with the issues of the economy, our families and life itself.

At Henry’s (my spiritual advisor) annual New Years Eve gathering, he discussed the principle of embracing others – even if you don’t get along, can’t give them what they want or don’t agree with them. Embracing someone is all about how much of your heart and luvv you are willing to give.

As I embraced this idea, I took a fresh look at several areas of my life. I examined how I interact with the many homeless people and beggars on the street. I thought about the times that I am asked for spare change and how I sometimes give it and others time don’t. When Henry was speaking on New Year’s Eve, he said that “Giving someone money doesn’t mean you have embraced him or her. You can give someone a strong embrace and it will do more for them than the little bit of cash you give them.”

I realized that if I give or don’t give money, that there are very few times that I have actually embraced the homeless. I may say hello or I speak to them, but most of the time I just get a little annoyed or wish they wouldn’t approach me. Years ago, Henry said to me “The more you luvv, the more alone time you will have.” People feel the power of luvv. Most people don’t want that much luvv coming their way so they leave you alone.

Henry’s comments about embracing others hit home for me. The embrace is not a hug. Hugs can be full of fake energy and can shut you and the recipient down. An embrace is the exchange of your heart to someone else’s heart. I saw this in action the other day. For the past year I’ve had a person I used to do business with call me and leave messages. As I was no longer interested in doing business with this person, I never returned his calls and I figured that he would “get the message” and stop calling me. The last time he called, I could hear the conscience speak to me and say “What did you just learn about embracing someone? Oh, by any chance would this be the time for an embrace?” So I called the person back, spoke to him and told him about embracing people more than ever this year. I confirmed that I was no longer in need of his services, but wanted to reach out to him. The next day I received a phone message and he spoke specifically about feeling the embrace and how important embracing was going to be for him this year.

In less than twenty-four hours we are going to have a new President. There is the anticipation of great change ahead. How you will direct the changes in your own life? How will you answer the call for change that President Obama has asked of each person in this country? It is our responsibility to do our part to lift our country out of its depression and to bring about more spirit and production. As we look upon this day, no matter what political, racial or economic affiliation you have, focus on who you owe. Embrace them and begin to bring your luvv to them. Some of it can be done “in the silence” or through your thoughts. The beauty of embracing others is that you don’t have to agree with them – just learn to luvv them and hold them in your heart. It will greatly assist us during these difficult economic times and will assist with the rebuilding of the worth of each individual in our country and the world.

Dwight Eisenhower, in his farewell address to the nation after his second term as President, had this to say:

“To all the peoples of the world, I once more give expression to America’s prayerful and continuing aspiration. We pray that peoples of all faiths, all races, all nations, may have their great human needs satisfied; that those now denied opportunity shall come to enjoy it to the full; that all who yearn for freedom may experience its spiritual blessings; that those who have freedom will understand, also, its heavy responsibilities; that all who are insensitive to the needs of others will learn charity; that the scourges of poverty, disease and ignorance will be made to disappear from the earth, and that, in the goodness of time, all peoples will come to live together in a peace guaranteed by the binding force of mutual respect and love.”

Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

This is too funny

Wednesday, January 14th, 2009

The Conscience is Ironic

Friday, January 9th, 2009

catherine Donnelly

catherine Donnelly


This picture was taken in 1985 at Catherine Donnelly’s graduation from Princeton. With her are her mother, Alice Brown (left) and grandmother, Martha Thompson.

Sometimes the Conscience has a humorous interplay with our lives. It was 24 years ago that a white family decided that their little girl couldn’t and wouldn’t room with a black girl. Little did they know that that black girl would grow up to become the first-lady in the White house. The Conscience is irony in action.

Reported on 4/12/08
www.AJC.com

Michelle Obama speaks last week at Winston-Salem State University. When Catherine Donnelly saw her on TV news reports, she thought she looked familiar. She walked into the historic Nassau Inn that evening and delivered the news to her mother, Alice Brown. “I was horrified,” recalled Brown, who had driven her daughter up from New Orleans. Brown stormed down to the campus housing office and demanded Donnelly be moved to another room. The reason:

One of her roommates was black. “I told them we weren’t used to living with black people — Catherine is from the South,” Brown said.

Today both Donnelly, an Atlanta attorney, and Brown, a retired schoolteacher living in the North Carolina mountains, look back at that time with regret. Like many Americans, they’ve built new perceptions of race on top of a foundation cracked by prejudices past — and present. Yet they rarely speak of the subject.

Barack Obama’s run for president changed that. When the Democratic senator from Illinois invited more dialogue on race last month, Shock to the stereotype. The acceptance letter from the Ivy Leagues was really the culmination of two peoples’ hard work. “My mother was thrilled,” Donnelly jokes, that she got into Princeton. Donnelly, now 44, captained the basketball and volleyball teams. She was the homecoming queen. And she racked up science and math awards, often with the help of her mother.

But the “Three R’s” weren’t the only thing Donnelly learned from an early age. There was a fourth one. Her mother and grandmother filled her head with racist stereotypes, portraying African-Americans as prone to crime, uneducated and, at times, people to be feared. Brown, 71, explains that she was raised to think that way.

She recalls hearing her grandfather, a sheriff in the North Carolina Mountains, brag about running black visitors out of the county before nightfall. And Brown’s parents held on to the n-word like a family heirloom. In fact, upon learning that her daughter had a black roommate at Princeton, Brown’s first call was to her own mother. Her suggestion: yank Donnelly out of school. alive and well on a prestigious campus in the Northeast. The university’s private eating clubs, host to frat-style parties, were largely white. The social scene for many minority students, including Obama, revolved around an activity building called the Third World Center. ‘I was inspired …. I was envious’ When Donnelly first saw Obama’s wife on TV, she was struck by how tall and graceful she looked. Then she studied her more closely. Michelle Obama looked so familiar, down to those long fingers. Could that be Michelle Robinson? A Google search gave Donnelly the answer. Obama was far more than a first-lady hopeful. She had gone to Harvard Law School, had been an associate dean at the University of Chicago and rose to vice president at the University of Chicago Hospitals and was making over $500,000.00 at the Chicago Hospital plus receiving $51,000 as a director of Wal-Mart and the associate dean salary was unknown.

“I was inspired,” she says. “I was amazed. And I was envious of all she had accomplished.”

Donnelly called her mother, who in turn phoned the friend who had traveled with her to Princeton all those years ago. The friends had stayed up that night calling everyone they knew with a connection to the university, hoping to get Catherine moved out of the room.

“We thought this is so ironic,” Brown says. “[Obama] could be the first lady, and here we wanted to get my child out of her influence.”

Some empathy for lingering anger Living as a gay woman has made Donnelly far more aware of what it’s like to be judged by a trait beyond your control. “Being gay is such a small part of who I am.” Now she wishes she had reached across racial lines at Princeton. “I don’t think I ever set foot in the Third World Center,” she says of the popular hangout for minority students. “It’s like this mystical place.” When Brown heard about Barack Obama’s former pastor — his angry rants against white America — she didn’t like it. But she understood. “If I had been treated the same way blacks have been treated,” she says, “I’d be resentful, too.”

Do You Stand for Something ?

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

This is from the website Do you stand for something.

“Reset” – Jeff Immelt from the BSR Conference
Carol Cone

This fall I have been at three terrific conferences, each having GE CEO Jeff Immelt as a key speaker. From Arthur Page (membership-only senior corporate communications executives), to the Harvard Business School Centennial, and last week, at the Business for Social Responsibility Conference, Jeff provides tailored comments that are candid, audience-specific and provocative.

I got the most from Jeff’s BSR speech, so I will share those comments here. Let’s call this one: “Doing well and doing right.” He focused his comments on five key points.
#1. Jeff talked about the current economic crisis as a “reset,” not a standard business cycle. Three things will come from this: Specific industries will be restructured within the next 6-12 months (ex. the financial services industry), the intersection with government and business in the U.S. and Europe will change for at least a generation and now we are in an era of transparency that is profoundly different than even six months ago. “That companies need to stand for something beyond the bottom line is profound.” said Immelt. “We are in an emotional, social and economic reset,” he continued.

#2. People are afraid, especially regarding financing and credit. We need strong leadership now to reinstill confidence in people, especially our employees. “We need to teach our people to compete,” especially in the areas key to the economy — energy, healthcare, education and financial systems. These pillars, he said, play a central role in a reset world. It is critical to turn the fear, via strong leadership, into self confidence.

#3. Corporate social responsibility must be strategic from the core of the company, and then move outward. In the end, he emphasized the “corporate” part of CSR. It needs to make money for the corporation, or it will not be sustainable. Within CSR he talked about the critical areas of governance, transparency, building trust and innovation. He mentioned that GE is spending over $6 billion on R&D in the recession to stay ahead of competition and to be customer focused and socially relevant…..of course he mentioned the company’s investments in environmentally and socially-focused new products and services — clean energy, water, access to affordable healthcare, with their foundation focusing on helping develop new engineers in key cities where they have large operations.

#4. Engagement. It is critical to fully engage with key stakeholders — employees, customers, governments, NGOs, even with people who “make you feel uncomfortable.” Discussion and relationships are critically important in a reset world.

#5. Globalization. In a global world, everything is interconnected and will only become more so.

Companies and their leadership must get the first four things right — understanding we now live in a reset world, that we must regain our confidence, that we must act in a socially-responsible way, that we need to be fully engaged in our work as well as committed to solving today’s and tomorrow’s challenges — doing these well sets up a company to compete successfully in a global economy and in an ever-increasing interconnected world.

Competitiveness. Trust. Confidence. Great people. Technology to help solve the world’s biggest issues. That is how GE will march forward in a reset world. Great insights for companies, large and small.

- Carol Cone

Dirt off Your Shoulders

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

This is a great blog article from my buddy BrooklynRon
check it out.