A Southerly Aspect

fresh perspective

Archive for life

facing the future

Regardless of your personal views of the monarchy, you MUST watch this years David Dimbleby Lecture on the BBC iPlayer. Delivered by HRH Prince of Wales, it should, in all seriousness, be required watching for the world. This man’s destiny was set the day he was born, yet rather than patiently wait to take his seat on the throne, he’s spent the last thirty or so years of his life asking the kind of questions of the world which we all need to be asking. He’s an inspiration. What more might we ask of a future leader?

the glorious sun

If anyone’s struggling to know what to pick up for my Christmas this year then look no further than a subscription to The Sun Magazine. It’s a phenomenal monthly, ad-free publication and I always eagerly await the online publication (see links). The Sun Interview is always a highlight and this month is no exception. Bethany Saltman talks to Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges about religion, the new atheists, war and morality – fantastic stuff! Here’s a wee snippet to tempt you in….

“You trust that the work is worth doing and that it’s helping somewhere, though perhaps evidence of that won’t be apparent in your lifetime. You find self-worth in the ability to stand up and fight back without worrying too much about what you can accomplish. That is part of being human. We’re not God. We have a limited capacity to fight evil. We use the gifts and tools we’ve been given and trust that life is meaningful, even if everything we try to do seems to fail”

Enjoy…

barack

“He came to see me during his first year at Harvard. It was 31 March 1989. I found my desk calendar and I’d written his name with an exclamation point. From the late 1960s, when I began teaching as a professor at Harvard Law School, until the present, there has been no other student whose name I’ve noted in that way.

He impressed me from the beginning as an extraordinary young man. He was obviously brilliant, driven and interested in pursuing ideas with a clear sense that his reasons for being in law school were not to climb some corporate ladder, nor simply to broaden his opportunities, but to go back to the community.

He had a combination of intellectual acumen, open-mindedness, resistance to stereotypical thinking and conventional presuppositions. He also had a willingness to change his mind when new evidence appeared, confidence in his own moral compass and a maturity that obviously came from some combination of his upbringing and earlier experience.

I asked him to be my research assistant, a role he filled for a year and a half. We had a much more vibrant dialogue than one typically has with a research assistant. He was witty, he had a lighthearted touch and even though we were dealing with some pretty grave and weighty subjects, it was always a breezy thing to talk to him.

He had a charismatic quality and was very engaging. Other students gravitated towards him and liked him rather than envying him or wanting to compete with him.

Typically in a place as competitive as Harvard or Yale, one student will make a comment and another student will try and one-up him by saying something cleverer or wittier. But Barack would never put anyone else down. If a student expressed a view he didn’t agree with, he nevertheless saw the value in it and built on it.

He found points of communality and gave people the sense that he could see where they were coming from, and what their core beliefs were, and why they were worthy of respect. It was really a precursor to the way he engages in dialogue across ideological and partisan divisions.

In his second year, he became the first African American president of the Harvard Law Review [one of the leading law journals in the world]. It was a position which represented the judgment of his peers about his intellectual acumen and his leadership capacities. He emerged with the enthusiastic backing of other students. In no sense was this some kind of affirmative action; he was chosen as the best person people could find.

We used to take long walks on the Charles River in Boston. Our conversations were enormously wide-ranging and enjoyable, about life in general, not just about work. I had no doubt as I got to know him that he had an unlimited future. I didn’t have a clear sense of what direction it would take, but I thought it would be political and I thought the sky was the limit.

He had a personal quality which was transcendent and I continued to feel that way about him each time we met. And the quality he demonstrated that I’ve always been left with more than any other is authenticity.

There isn’t a fibre of phoniness about this guy”

 

Larry Tribe, Professor of Constitutional Law, Harvard on Barack Obama

chez john

Well it’s gradually all falling into place. The builder has replaced the doors on the kitchen which he knackered when putting the handles on the wrong way, and its really just a case of some finishing touches – painting (yes, more of the same), a floor to lay, the boiler to fit then we should be ready to rock and roll!

I can’t believe it’s nearly a year since I bought the place! 14th December was the date the sale went through. Work began in January and must finish soon – no more money left! Let’s not go there!

Check out the pictures over on my bebo. There’s before, during and afters which I’m going to print off and stick in a big frame. Very cool thing to have been able to do – renovate an old property that is. I’m a very lucky boy.

Now Auntie Shuna, all you have to do is find me someone to share it with!

communicative art

How many times have you heard someone say ‘I didn’t know about that’, or ‘but no-one told me’? Those are the two phrases I hear repeated more than any others in my day to day work. The cynical amongst us may suggest that they are simply excuses, ways of avoiding a meeting or event which we just can’t be bothered attending. But perhaps for many they are real and legitimate concerns, phrases which are symptomatic of a much wider communication crisis which is manifest in so many groups, organisations and communities.

 

In my work, I’m privileged enough to be able to attend and participate in a huge number of local groups. I find myself constantly overwhelmed by the volume of information which I’m party to, and struggle to keep track of developments and opportunities. And that’s my work – how on earth is a volunteer juggling numerous commitments ever expected to keep abreast of such things?

 

Conversely, it’s always easy for an individual or a group to become comfortably ‘in the know’ and to forget about the wider community who are equally entitled to access to that same information. It’s very easy to get caught up in the day to day business of an organisation and forget to report progress and developments to the wider world and before long the shape of a project or an idea can have changed so much to the extent that it’s no longer recognisable. The phrase ‘knowledge is power’ often rings true.

 

In an attempt to address some of the issues I’ve raised above, here in Douglas we’ve established a group which has become known as ‘Douglas Talking’. A forum which is open to all, it aims to improve communication within our community and increase opportunities for participation. The group meet face to face every few months and the discussions which take place are summarised and published in the local newspaper. The group hope to erect a Village Notice Board and utilise our local community council website to share the information which they possess. An online communications forum has also been developed to which documents and files can be uploaded, shared and commented on by anyone in the community. None of these methods of communication can stand alone; there are barriers to them all, but by providing information in a variety of formats it’s hoped that access will be maximised.

 

Very much in the early stages of development, forum attendance to date has been sporadic and momentum has been difficult to maintain. Perseverance will be required if it is to succeed, and a commitment of time and energy from many already busy people required. That’s important to recognise – an effective communication strategy requires significant resourcing. Meetings require advertising and facilitation. Community newsletters require coordination, compilation and cost money. Websites need updating and online hubs and forums rely on people setting aside time to contribute – all this on top of running an organisation or developing a project! It’s no wonder commercial firms and businesses often employ communications officers!

 

But regardless of the extra resources required to help communication happen, I think it’s important to recognise that it’s often a dialogue with the wider community, a free flow of information and an open and transparent method of operating which can be the difference between success and failure of a group, organisation, even a community. No-one likes a clique or a closed shop, or a group which sends out a clear message of disrespect when it maintains that the information it holds shouldn’t be in the public domain. But a group or a community which shares information, which recognises the importance of doing so and which works hard to eradicate the phrase ‘but no-one told me’ is surely one which has a characteristic of success fixed securely within it

gala week

’tis Gala Week which means much fun and frivolity! Be it fun runs, rounders tournaments, the annual pub quiz or the infamous ‘Superteams’, there’s something for all the family! I will of course be featuring in Saturday’s parade before catching up with friends, old and new, down the local. Here’s hoping the weather improves!!!

inspirational places, inspirational people

Last Sunday, four of the committed individuals from our Coal Yard Development Group set off to visit two of Dumfries and Galloway’s most inspirational places. I don’t use the term ‘committed’ loosely – asking anyone to give up half of their weekend is a big thing! The purpose of the visit was to meet with the people who had successfully managed to realise their dreams, and to learn how they’d gone about doing so.

 

Our journey took us to Auchencairn on the Solway Coast where ‘Auchencairn Initiative’, a group of hardy volunteers, have built an enterprise centre consisting of a post office, village store and childcare facility. The £500,000 development took them around six years to complete, and wasn’t without its ups and downs, but the results are truly outstanding. Not only does the centre provide essential services for the rural population, it also generates an income for the Initiative which they plough into other local projects.

 

Second stop was ‘The CatStrand’, Dumfries and Galloway’s newest Arts and Community Venue. This £1.2 million project has linked the six communities of the Glenkens and provides a vast range of services and activities for both locals and visitors.

 

It was obvious that each project had its champion, the individual who ran with the idea, took the risks and met challenges head on. Linked to that was the way those champions had led the project, their style of leadership, encouraging the support and ownership of the wider local community at all stages. It was a time consuming and at times frustrating style of leadership, but acknowledged as essential to the projects’ success. Perhaps surprisingly, when asked if they’d do anything differently if they were starting over again, both replied ‘very little’, evidence that suggests that despite the hurdles, the experience had been both rewarding and enjoyable.

 

The journey home was an interesting one. In the space of one day, people had become much more aware of the processes involved in successful projects. They had also been inspired by the enthusiasm and patience of one or two individuals. It takes special people to realise these special projects, and it’s the four individuals who were prepared to give up their Sunday that we need to be able to offer more support. I’d humbly suggest that we can prepare plans and strategies ‘til the cows come home, but without investing in individuals, nothing much will ever be achieved. We need strong, confident groups of people working together at a very local level. Let’s support and empower them to do the rest.

turn

You’ve asked me to tell you of The Great Turning, of how we saved the world from disaster.
The answer is both simple and complex.
We turned.

For hundreds of years we had turned away as life on earth grew more precarious.
We turned away from the homeless men on the streets, the stench from the river, the children orphaned in Iraq, the mothers dying of AIDS in Africa.

We turned away because that is what we had been taught.
To turn away, from our pain, from the hurt in another’s eyes, from the drunken father or the friend betrayed.

Always we were told, in actions louder than words, to turn away, turn away. And so we became a lonely people caught up in a world moving too quickly, too mindlessly towards its own demise.

Until it seemed as if there was no safe place to turn. No place, inside or out, that did not remind us of fear or terror, despair and loss, anger and grief.

Yet on one of those days someone did turn.

Turned to face the pain. Turned to face the stranger. Tuned to look at the smoldering world and the hatred seething in too many eyes. Turned to face himself, herself.

And then another turned. And another. And another. And as they wept, they took each other’s hands.

Until whole groups of peole were turning. Young and old, gay and straight. People of all colors, all nations, all religions. Turning not only to the pain and hurt hut to beauty, gratitude and love, Turning to one another with forgiveness and a longing for peace in their hearts…

Christine Fry

revitalisation

I require something of a boost! I’ve been sluggish for a few weeks now and should really take some holidays! A break, coupled with some inspiration, is just what the doctor ordered. No time like the present…

love

‘I know that love is unconditional. But I also know that it can be unpredictable, unexpected, uncontrollable, unbearable and strangely easy to mistake for loathing’

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