on energy and ‘doing’

*travels{abroad}, Israel, {abroad}journey, {abroad}knowmad No Comments »

Doing is what I came to Knowmads to learn.

Energy is what I’m constantly exploring in myself and the world around me.

After a not so recent walk along the beach in Tel Aviv with a friend and spiritual mentor, Tsi-la, I learned a very beautiful metaphor for approaching each day. It is about energy renewal and the recent feeling of leaving a certain honeymoon period with my new company and school that I’ve spent the last two months getting started up.

Tsi-la says it’s about being an egg.
It’s wrapping yourself in blue, or whatever color you’re feeling, and filling yourself with gold. What does she mean by this? She explained to me that you must start with creating a solid and centered core filled with a gold that holds you strong so that you won’t fall, but also a gold strong enough to push out into the world; keeping in mind that gold must shine through the colorful filter that you wrap around yourself.
I asked her why you need a filter and why must it be colorful? She told me that the filter helps protect all that gold that you’ve filled yourself up with, strong for the day. It allows everything that helps the gold grow stronger, all the positive energy you’re given, and screens out any sign of something viral that may arouse feelings of fear, anger, hurt, resentment, jealousy, guilt, etc. All the lousy things, basically.
After learning this, I also came to the conclusion that the filter can also catch things and keep them stuck– like cheese in a cheese grater. Your filter  should be strong enough to shelve these feelings, and look at them later when you are able to handle them. Even better, perhaps these feelings will melt away after awhile, using a little soap and hot water, the filter might be able to wash these things out once you realize that it’s not worth the battle later.
If I just take one day at a time, stress seems to cross my path much less frequently. There is one thing I’ve recently stopped doing that has reduced about 80% of the negative energy that sucks my day up. That one thing has been making to-do lists. The past few months have kept me so busy doing things that making a list of them just didn’t seem practical anymore. I attached so much negative energy towards these lists that never seemed to end, so I finally just stopped doing them, and man does it feel great!
Instead of to-do lists, I now make have-done lists instead. It was a piece of advice given to me by quite a few people and I like them much more. The things that you have done today rather than a list of things to-do. When it comes to time management, I’ve found To-do lists the most impractical things ever at this point. I always end up disappointed with what I didn’t accomplish that day. I first tried three important things a day, prioritizing my to do lists by size, and numerous other ‘to-do list techniques,’ but in the end I think I’ll stick to these have-done lists. It makes me realize just how much I have accomplished instead of what I haven’t. I think it’s a much better way to end each day.
It reminds me of what my most hospitable host, Gili, wrote to me in my notebook upon my departure from a great visit to Israel that marked the start of a new friendship:
I give thanks for this perfect day.
Today is a day of completion.
Miracles shall follow miracles,
and wonders shall never cease to exist.

to today, everyone!

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Two More reasons “Art School” is the next “dream” school:

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In a recent blog post, Three Reasons I think “Art School” is the next “Dream School,” I wrote about why I think creativity, essentially, is the biggest factor that determines the (personal) leadership styles required in 21st Century Education. Recently, I read a tweet that states that creativity is the most needed leadership quality required in 2010. I didn’t open it, but I don’t think creativity is not just a fad of the current times.
Creativity is required for the present and future as we catapult into an emerging era of excess and abundance of resources of multi-dimensional degrees.

Two questions emerged from these thoughts as I put together that blog post:
Who is the artist?
What is the role of art and the artist in the 21st Century?
After exploring who I perceived as an artist, I determined three qualities essential to the thriving century nouveau Picasso:
  • “feeling,” or rather, giving meaning to
  • “creating” an authentic and balanced life in order to navigate through the required
  • transformation,” or ability to flow, along the basic priciples of Liquid Modernity.
To further explore the story of these qualities, I pose two more traits:
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World Cafe; harvest

{abroad}knowmad No Comments »
So, I’ve decided it’s about time to put up another blog post. The first draft of this has been sitting in my drafts folder on my blog for weeks, since I last blogged. For many reasons, I just haven’t made updating a priority in the past few weeks. It’s ok to take a break, of course, but what I’ve come to realize is that not everything can be perfect. I admit this isn’t the perfect harvesting example, but I’ve decided to just let it go and stick to my blogging rule #1: It’s ok to be shitty.
Not everything I do can be perfect and I think that’s what makes an entrepreneur an entrepreneur. The ability to try, or prototype, something and know that it will be better next time. Maybe it won’t, but either way, if I did everything perfectly I’d never get a blog post done. Not to say that this harvest is horrible, but….
I am currently reporting from Paris, where I was sent for 24 hours to experience the KLM flying experience for our current project with them on the extended office. It’s been a period of extreme acceptance, growth, and challenge. I’m beginning to regain my strength. I will elaborate more on this as well as the KLM assignment in the next days. For now, however, I continue with a blog post that I started weeks ago. Like many things that have happened to me over the past few weeks, I feel a great weight lifted after pressing the publish button.
In a not so recent World Cafe , a social technology similar to Open Space and the Art of Hosting, Knowmads was honored to have as a special guest/host/learning sojourner Pieter Ploeg a.k.a. pietradelmundo.
As a collective intelligence tool, World Cafe was created to to create and harvest conversations that matter.
The first blog post introduced the creation of the space, this blog post focuses on what’s left of the beautiful conversation that was created. Here is a visual of what we harvested:

Based on the question: Given the state of the world, what and how do you want to learn for a better future? Read the rest of this entry »
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Is “art school” the next “dream school?”

{abroad}journey, {abroad}knowmad No Comments »
When asked to write a piece of text for the Knowmads blog in the upcoming “what our students say” section, this is what I wrote:

“Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain one once he grows up.”

“Picasso said this and Knowmads attempts to solve the struggles an individual has in creating a life of purpose by giving them the necessary experience, creativity, and individual responsibility needed to succeed in a world that is changing at an extremely rapid rate. Because of this, the traditional four year degree is outdated within a year of graduation. As a student with a background in experimental, experiential, and artistic education, conforming to the typical university system just wasn’t an option for me. For a true individual seeking to transcend conformity and give more meaning to life, Knowmads is for you. Because It’s not about creating parts to your life; it’s about creating your part in life. Welcome Home!”

So, your first question may be:
Who is the artist? In my eyes, the artist is a human being who combines passion, work, and playful learning. The artist has a spiritual core, a fearless exterior, and uses their creativity, or imagination, to make a difference in the world they’ve created.


The next question I’m attempting to gain more insight on is: “what is the role of art and the artist in the 21st Century?” I believe that the artist can be used as the perfect analogy of what is required of educating leaders in this era of socio-economic complexity. Here are 3 reasons why: Read the rest of this entry »

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boarding for Jerusalem

*travels{abroad}, Israel, palestine, {abroad}art 1 Comment »
Central Bus Station, Tel Aviv
12.4.2010
The stones are screaming blood, she said. I am haunted by the words of my Israeli friend Tsila as I sit here writing in my notebook and watching the bus stop swell. Our conversation this morning, as she drove me to the station, sits heavily at my heels. The bench- a relief for my dream-like state of mind. There was a red light leaving her street. I ask her: “how can I find meaning within it all?”
Read the rest of this entry »
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21st Century Leadership

{abroad}knowmad 1 Comment »
As we enter completely new and complex socio-economic times, new leaders need to be built to navigate the turbulent ecology of a rapidly-changing planet. I believe that this planet  is built on community. Within this community, I see leadership as horizontal or circular, perhaps a combination of the two. This is why I see (personal) leadership not just as a crucial tool to strengthen the circles of tribes within this world; I see it as a necessity to build a lateral community these circles are built upon. I envision this community as a globally unified tribe, a tribe of leaders within each and every single one of us. This is the importance of a tribe- a well functioning human control system.

In a presentation given to us by Pieter Spinder, the tribe-cheerleader himself, he describes his vision of what leadership could mean in the 21st Century: Leadership can refer to: The process of leading, the entities performing one or more acts of leading, or as wikipedia puts it, “the ability to affect human behavior so as to accomplish a mission designated by the leader”. According to him, a leader is an individualized and responsive person that can make an impact because he or she feels a sense of interconnectedness within the world and believes that change can be built from the bottom up, inside to outside. He believes that to lead you must be able to follow. Because without followers, there can be no leaders. Leadership qualities that he firmly believes are integral to be a successful leader both for yourself and the world include: humility and integrity. Integrity, he believes, is the bedrock of leadership. “If you lose your integrity, you lose everything.” A leader must be decisive and a risk-taker. Even if it’s deciding when a consensus has been reached and it’s time to act, sensing when the time is right to both lead and follow is crucial. Even more important is having the courage to fail and learn from it is essential to being a successful risk-taker. The emotional resonance, or capacity to understand what motivates others and to inspire individuals into action is necessary to what has become what I believe to be the most important tool for a leader to develop: the talent to build a team. Leaders create productive teams that draw the best from people. The 21st Century leader can coach teams in collaboration, consensus building, and conflict resolution. In regards to the individual leader, the necessary self-knowledge to protect you from overreaching and understand your personal passion bring him/her to lead.
“If you are passionate about something, that’s where you will lead.” Building on this passion requires a conviction that believes in what they’re doing to the very core. It also requires a dedication, spending whatever time and energy is required to get the job done, rather than giving it whatever time you have available. It’s making the time for what matters. Further qualities Spinder addresses include magnanimity and openness. A 21st Century leader is gracious in defeat and allows others who are defeated to retain their dignity. They are able to listen to ideas outside their own beliefs and are able to suspend judgement until after one has heard someone else’s ideas. Spinder concludes the topic by adding that performance, vision, initiative, commitment, and character are crucial elements to what an organizational leader needs to have in order to, as the man himself always says, “make things happen!
on the book, Power in Creation, given to us at a recent round-table discussion at De Baak, a leader is described as the following: “A leader must have vision, must engender respect, be determined and honest, must be able to bind people and analyze, inspire and motivate, must be able to listen but take decisions. A certain degree of charisma is also desired. It’s a combination of vision and perseverance on one hand, and modesty and openness on the other. “ Perhaps the most interesting theory I’ve read comes from Paul Nobelen. The author of About Leading, he states “The younger generation of leaders seems more principled than previous ones.”
So, what are your principles?
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Self-Working Day @ Knowmads

{abroad}knowmad 2 Comments »

Today was a great self-working Wednesday where the tribe got together, cooked together, danced, and started shipping! (literally!) Eight of us found our way to work en route a ferry where we went to sunny bar and cafe Noorderlicht near the MTV headquarters on the industrial north island of the city. Constructed from a greenhouse and secured at the base with cement bags, eclectic furniture, and an organically delicious menu and equally enjoyable staff, it has a panoramic vista of Amsterdam harbor. With painted leather sofas littered amongst old ship hull tables and cranes dotting the waterfront, this creative cafe was a buzzing hub of people working, talking, eating, and laughing. I think the tribe managed to do all of the above and then some! We split up to work on two very exciting projects that are keeping us incredibly good busy at the moment. One, from Royal Haskoning SMC and the other from KLM Royal Dutch Airlines.

{A special thanks from the tribe to Roel and Ellen over at Access to Retailing for the great tip on one of Amsterdam’s hottest hangouts.}

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Apples&Chocolate

{abroad}journey, {abroad}knowmad No Comments »

How you can have both your apples and chocolate: on balancing discipline and flexibility… Read the rest of this entry »

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travel&life, soul&spirit

*travels{abroad}, Israel, {abroad}journey No Comments »
Ray Charles calls it “soulfulness,” the Buddhists “mindfulness,” and the Sufi Mystics call it the “eyes of the heart.” Whatever you call it, it’s the ability to respond from our most deepest place, it’s listening to your heart and following your passion. This is where I see a very intense connection between traveling around the world no matter where you are. A state of being that is always “on the road.”
I think it’s important to spend at least one hour alone with yourself every day. At least that’s what I’ve found is needed for myself. I feel it helps a person develop that different set of eyes. I look at it as a life-long process that can help a person better lead themselves. These are the eyes that come from your inner-self. These are the eyes of the heart. Much like those two very different sets of eyes, you find that while traveling  there is the process of change happening within you often sparked by the outer environment of changing cultures, landscapes, foods, everything. Travel, visualizing yourself out of familiar surroundings, out of your comfort zone, is a great way to begin to develop that second set of eyes.
“The secret to successful meditation is visualization. The secret of visualization is to know: More important than seeing with your eyes is seeing with your heart.”
-Lazaris
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How to live a life of Pilgrimage:

{abroad}journey 2 Comments »

find what is sacred.

believe in belief.

be inquisitive.

show gratitude.

You’re beginning to ask bigger questions of yourself and the world you are encountering along the way. Suddenly, you ask of yourself: What do I really want to get out of this journey?

Up until then, you feel that you were merely stumbling around without actually paying attention to making sure that each foot went after the other. Your feet still stumble, but at least you attempt to be more aware of it. You have faith that those feet will keep taking you forward…

I like to call it {abroad} way of thinking…

I left on my own pilgrimage in search of my passion. I wanted to grow as a writer, but also as a person. I wanted to find my story in the telling.

What you say and do, how you communicate, are merely your forms of expressing yourself. Information gets lost, ‘in translation’. It begins taking on new dimensions from the completely unique perceptions each individual applies to some very universal concepts. In other words, everyone has their own definition of the truth and each individual must define it for themselves. It makes the world go round. It’s how things are created, innovated, imagined, and explored. It’s the art of dreaming and the science of doing. It’s understanding that everyone is in search of their own truth, and no two truths will be the same.

Disappearing from the world and into myself, I was able to begin to express where my heart was. I needed long-term solitude free of everyday distractions that were keeping me from knowing where my path should lead me. I realized I couldn’t possibly “know”, but I could always be experiencing.

After walking over 400 kilometers, I felt an amazing sense of accomplishment. However, The feeling was soon followed by an immediate sense of emptiness. A feeling that the journey was somehow over.

After a little over a week interacting with people as little as possible, I was beginning to feel a lot more comfortable in solitude. I was also beginning to see it in my writing, or rather, my confidence to do so. My confidence to create. Not just create writing, but create whatever and whoever I wanted to be, to live life in a new and exciting way. I was finally aware that there were infinite possibilities and if I was open to creating them, I could really begin to change who I was into who I want to be.

I began feeling happier. I felt a sense of newfound clarity breathing in fresh mountain air and carrying everything I owned on my back. Each step brought me closer to my destination, and one foot couldn’t go before the other. It was a practice in meditation on all levels. It was simple. Time didn’t seem to matter and was broken up by eating, writing, thinking, and not thinking. From one village to the next. From morning to night.

“never trust a thought that didn’t come by walking”

-nietzsche

I had a big question looming on my mind as I embarked on the journey. Where is the path taking me next? I was unsure if moving to a city full of vices was really what I was looking for. Wasn’t I supposed to travel the world? Wasn’t I supposed to spend a spontaneously simple life out of a backpack meeting new faces without any schedule or plan? It almost seemed as if I was just throwing the towel in and letting whatever happened… well, happen. Which, don’t get me wrong, isn’t a bad thing. As a matter of fact, It’s how I found myself here in Amsterdam, actually.

There is a big difference between leading your life and letting your life lead you, and I was beginning to see that I was going wrong because of one major problem. I was letting things just “happen” to me instead of actually making things “happen.” The problem was that I didn’t know how to make my life really be what I pictured it to be. I was staring at a blank canvas and hoping the Mona Lisa would just appear. In a perfect world, maybe. But we don’t live in a perfect world and I hope that’s why you’re reading this right now. Because you actually believe you can do something about it.

It’s by taking one step after the other, one stroke of the paintbrush at a time and being open to changing course when you think you were meant to do something else. It’s being open to yourself that will give you the answers and there is simply no possible way you can know what you’re supposed to do except for this very moment that, in this case, you have dedicated to yourself to in this moment, reading this very blog. It’s a choice that you’ve made. Fortunately, I can not tell you how to make any choice in your life.

It’s fortunate that we have that freedom to make those decisions for ourselves, because nobody knows you better than you do. No matter how much people love you, you understand that no one but yourself can possibly know what is best for you and it is important to take that time in solitude to evaluate yourself as an individual free from any job, person, thing, obstacle, or limit.

It’s about taking the time to take care of your garden instead of thinking someone else will take care of it for you, or furthermore, that it will take care of itself.

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