Archives For August 2012

If your mind is empty, it is always ready for anything and it is open to everything.” – Shunryu Suzuki

Lately I’ve been spending time in silence, letting my mind wander. On the way home from work, I used to either listen to music, a podcast, or an audiobook. Now, 80% of the trip is silence. I think isolation helps creativity. Especially when you have nothing but your thoughts.

If you want to know what an hour is like inside my ADD head, here are my thoughts while at an airport, up until the flight took off.

Neck Pillows
I forgot how much I love neck pillows. On my honeymoon, I wore my neck pillow during the entire flight and continued to wear it through customs in Jamaica. You don’t see many people wearing neck pillows outside of planes an airports. If it were socially acceptable, I’d probably bring one to work or keep one on hand during long baseball games.

If it’s acceptable to wear neck pillows in airports, I’d consider working at an airport, though I don’t think neck pillow privileges transfer over to employees at airports. You can wear one in pretty much any context in an airport: walking, sitting, napping, or while anxiously waiting to board the plane. You’d never see someone sitting on a park bench wearing a neck pillow. They likely fear social judgment and bringing the neck pillow could be a hassle, unless of course they wore it the whole time.

Mentos
While using the bathroom, I was forced to use a stall since the urinals were occupied. On top of the metal container that secures the toilet paper, I noticed an empty Mentos wrapper. Clearly someone ate Mentos to freshen up while or after using the toilet. I don’t think anyone would carry around a candy wrapper and choose that place for disposal. Likely someone was forced to use the airport restroom out of necessecity and was in dire need of feeling fresh.

Gum
I bought gum before the flight. I had to because I had a sparking green tea lemonade from Caribou, which is a phenomenal drink, but left me with the impression that I should stand at least 2-3 feet away from people while talking directly to them. The little kiosk where I bought the gum only had two selections: kiosk brand and a package that mentioned starving children. Both were poor gum choices, but I decided to help the kids. The pack of gum was the flat rectangle with punch out pieces. It’s fun to push out the gum, but the package makes noise while in pockets. I generally prefer my gum packaging to be silent. There’s no need to remind myself with every step that I’m carrying gum in my right pocket.

Tax
While paying for the gum, I forgot about sales tax. When the price of something is $2.99, I assume sales tax is going to be added. When the price is $3.00, as was the gum, I assume sales tax is inclusive. Due to this, the cashier reminded me that I couldn’t count properly and I owed her another bill. I left with 76 cents of change in my pocket, which is another thing that will make noise.

Bald Men
There are a lot of bald men at Gate 19 today. All of them except one either have a shaved head or a very short buzz cut. If one goes bald while relatively young, you pretty much have to shave or buzz your head. You just hope the rest of your head isn’t covered with moles, making your shaved head look like a chocolate chip muffin. I wonder what I’d do if I went completely bald. A lot of guys wear hats as they bald. I’ve only worn hats in short phases in high school and college. If the balding hit me full-force, it’s too late to start wearing hats. No one really starts wearing hats after college unless they are balding or they’ve just retired.

String Cheese
If you think experience doesn’t factor into purchase decisions, look at string cheese. 80% of the enjoyment that comes from string cheese is due to the peeling of the cheese. I once had string cheese that wouldn’t peel and ended up being just a cheese stick. It wasn’t very good. I wonder how big the string cheese industry is? I did a quick Google search, but nothing relevant came up. I’d guess it’s at least over 50mil/year.

Employees Using Scripts
I hate scripts. They don’t work. There is a big difference between hearing someone say something and believing what they say. Is the Delta employee at the gate sorry for and the inconvenience and grateful for our patience? I don’t think so. It sounds scripted. A robot might as well have said it. If your goal is to connect with people, you have to approach them as human to human, not training manual to human. The stewardess who gave me a free beer on the flight seemed sympathetic at least.

Yelling
A guy getting off the plane from Chicago forgot his black suit coat on the plane. As he yelled to the flight attendant what item he left behind, as she headed back to the airplane, he progressively began to sound more furious, yelling “BLACK. SUIT. COAT.” He wasn’t mad, but he sounded mad due to volume.

Stowed Items
I never heard someone use the word “stowed” outside of an airplane. Never. Yet, I heard the flight attendant use it at least 5 times in the scripted speech about making sure items are stowed before takeoff. “Honey, where did you put my car keys?” “ I stowed them back in your purse.” That conversation has never happened.

Turning Off Electronics
Why? This has to be a “Better safe than sorry” measure. I’ve never completely turned off electronics I bring with me. I’ll turn my cell phone into “Airplane Mode” but not completely off. The flight attendants even specify that “Airplane Mode” isn’t sufficient. Has a plane ever crashed due to a cell phone? I’ve been in a three seater airplane that had an iPad connected to 3G. Didn’t crash. If a plane is at risk of being brought down by a 7 year old who forgot to turn off his iPod, maybe I should be worried.

Shortcuts
The pilot announced, “We might try to shorten up the trip to make up for the delay.” Why not do that anyway? Is there a scenic route that was voted on prior to boarding?

Waiting
Airports and airlines don’t do much to deal with waiting. It’s up to you to pass the time. Some have TVs, today there was nothing. Maybe that was a good thing since I ended up writing over 1,000 words on observations, but probably not since everyone hates waiting. I have to believe there is a reason that waiting for a flight hasn’t been made more enjoyable. It’s not a valid reason, but someone has one.

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While I’m currently in the middle of having my book edited for a third time, there is a lot I’ve learned about writing from having someone edit my work. I wish I learned all of this in school, but I can’t remember writing anything I cared about in school. It’s hard to learn when you don’t care and don’t see the immediate consequence of an action.


- Whatever doesn’t add subtracts


The most obvious and the most true. Delete! Delete! Delete! If something doesn’t add, it waters down your message.


- I overuse the word “That” a lot


Continuing with “addition by subtraction,” the word “That” was frequently overused. When reviewing your writing always look for little throwaway words to delete.


Taking a step away from a project helps creativity


I’ve updated a few of the jokes I didn’t feel were as strong as they could have been and even added a few new ones. When stuck, it can be helpful to move on and come back.


- The reader can’t access my mind


The rest of an analogy may be obvious to the writer, but lose half the readers. Don’t leave any thoughts unfinished.


- End sentences strong


I’ve crossed a number of examples where deleting just a few words at the end of a sentence made for a much stronger punch.


I’ve learned more than this, along with actual examples, but I’m typing on my phone with just a little battery left.


Having your writing edited is necessary for improvement. A boxer doesn’t get better by just working the bag. They need to step in the ring and be willing to take a punch to the face. It can be difficult to get better as a writer without some specific feedback.

Choosing a Bad Story

August 16, 2012 — 1 Comment

If you’ve found yourself not enjoying a movie, it’s likely because you aren’t sure what the protagonist wants. They don’t have a clear ambition.

If you’ve found yourself not interested in a company, whether as an employee or customer, it’s likely because they don’t have a clear “want.” Either the “want” is vague or the company is unfocused.

If you’ve found yourself bored with life, you might not have a clear want.

What defines a want? If your company died tomorrow, if you died tomorrow, if the movie you’re watching ended halfway…what dream would die with it? Making money isn’t a want other people would care about. Just being able to keep a comfortable 9-5 job isn’t a want other people would care about. The greatest “wants” are larger than the individual. If there is no consequence except to yourself for your story ending in the middle, you’ve chosen to live a bad story.

What makes a good story, makes for a good life.

Good stories revolve around having a clear want.

Connect with me on Twitter @BenNesvig and receive my weekly-ish Best of the Web email.

I come across this situation about 2-3 times a week. There are two left turn lanes with cars waiting for the light to change. Yet, almost all of the cars filter into one single lane. Some of the cars toward the way back end up blocking another lane of traffic or they risk missing the green light completely.

This doesn’t make sense.

Open Lane

In the other lane, I’ll find either one car ahead of me or a completely open lane.

On the day I took this picture I was the only car in the second lane. In the first lane there were 9 cars lined up. Even after I pulled into the second lane, cars continued to pile behind the pack.

Everyone is in a rush. People fly by me in their minivans on the highway, but they don’t want to move ahead when it means they’ll be in the minority.

Like the Eric Hoffer quote:

When people are free to do as they please, they usually imitate each other.

The default in life is to blend in. That way when things fail,which they eventually will no matter which side of line you’re on, you have an alibi and company. Easier to be a cover band than create something original. Easier to create a knockoff of an app than something new.

This experiment could still happen today. People don’t act rationally when pressured to conform to a group.

Ultimately it’s a fear of being alone. People like groups because failure holds a certain anonymity. If you fail as a group, no one person is really responsible. But if you choose your own path, failure is your island.

If at anytime, your actions are those of the majority, you can largely expect average results like the majority. To get windfall gains takes treading a new path instead of following the in the wake of another.

Find me on Twitter @BenNesvig