positive-thinkingis a headline that definitely grabbed my attention. Luggage in hand I tore through Dublin airport desperate to pick up the Guardian where I could read the full article on my plane ride home to London. I’m sure I found the last newspaper in all of Dublin with minutes to spare,.. the paper came to me in bits but I was ok with that. I just wanted that part that contained Barbara Ehrenreich’s article on “The bad science that fooled the world”.  This isn’t the Guardian’s version… but it’ll do the trick.

 

First of all, I friggin love reading work from people who happily set out to challenge the mainstream way of thinking.  I like people who make me think. Barbara is one of those people.

 

I haven’t quite formulated my opinion yet, but she has made me wonder about several things. Is it possible that the happy happy, positive feel good movement was a major factor in causing this recession? Is it really just an income stream created to help lots of innocent people part with their cash? I think in a way it is of course, but is it to the extent Barbara suggests?

 

If you can spare the few minutes, check out Barbara’s blog. Part author, part activist and part PhD – she’s worth a skim even if you don’t agree with what she’s sounding off about.

 

I’m an optimistic realist who sees a lot of merit in reading books from Napolean Hill, Og Mandino, Tony Robbins and even Osho but there’s a difference between embracing a positive outlook vs. allowing positive thinking to become your religion. Right? But the question is …where’s that line? 

 

 The Secret  was probably one of the greatest marketing campaigns ever. I read the book and even watched the movie…  My thoughts on it all? I buy into the concept but find the content presented in The Secret severely flawed. The Secret however, quickly became a phenomenon. It went mainstream in no time… and not long after that, it evolved into some sort of religion. Hmmm, there’s that R word again… maybe Barbara has a point but maybe it isn’t a mass orchestrated corporate puppet master ordaining it all, maybe it’s those people who flock to quick fixes instead of stopping to ask a few questions along the way.

Jan 07th by Shannon

18 12 2009

Dec 18th by Shannon

Red Gift

Dec 14th by Shannon

15 09 2009

True story:
I make a reservation at a lovely restaurant in one of my favorite cities: Calgary. I’m entertaining business colleagues from a company we’ve just acquired. PR people, Marketing people, Regulatory people and more. I let the restaurant know we’re a party of 12. We’ll arrive at 6.

Our waitress kicks off the evening with making us all wait nearly 20 minutes for drinks. No worries. She must be busy. The meals are muddled up. Ok. So perhaps the kitchen has a new chef. When asked to fix the mistake we get the standard eye roll and deep sigh. Not cool. I slip out the back and look for said waitress to let her know that this evening is really important. The service could make or break the night… and could she try and step up her game. It got worse. We left early. We found a patio else where and made the most of our night. Tip? HAH! yeah right! Not even the mandatory gratuity got passed us.

Fast forward three weeks. I need a freelance photographer. I spread the news through my network. I get introduced by email to a budding young photographer whose nothing less than genius. We arrange to meet.

Imagine the look on both our faces when in walks the chumpy waitress from three weeks back.

My point is this. The person you’re being a complete jerk to today could very well be your next boss, client or worse…

I’ve recently been inundated with stories about the recruiters in the Toronto area that would make your head spin:

Calls on New Year’s eve demanding time and attention to hear about potential role.

11 calls in one hour only to be berated for 25 minutes on the phone for turning down a position.

Mean messages left on voice mail only to turn super sweet and lovely when said candidate ends up in a senior role who has responsibility for head count.

Hostile conversations where the candidate simply slams down the phone.

Hello? Your candidate today is very likely to be your client tomorrow? With an industry as small and as incestuous as ours, wouldn’t one think that acting like a chump is a short train ride to no where eventually?

Sep 15th by Shannon

All of us in Southern Ontario know the devastation experienced by the Stafford family when their little girl was taken from them.

Tori Stafford’s father is cycling across Canada to raise awareness of missing children… in honor of his daughter! He is cycling from Ontario to Jasper Alberta because that’s where Tori spent some very happy times. When he arrives in Jasper he will be releasing a purple balloon in honor of Tori.

@kilos4kids is tweeting the cross canada journey in an effort to raise funds for www.ChildFind.ca

Currently, @kilos4kids has 64 followers! I will donate $100 as soon as the number of followers reaches 500.

I’d like to extend that challenge to any of you in the twitterverse.

Offer a donation to @kilos4kids in exchange for x amount of followers.
Then let them tweet their hearts out until that follower target is met…
then you pay up and…
find someone else to take the challenge.

All money<that’s 100% people>  raised goes directly to Child Find.

I would love to see @kilos4kids hit 50,000 followers by end August. C’mon Twitterverse… we all know this is completely doable.

To the Stafford family… our sincerest sympathy.

Aug 17th by Shannon

Teweheshtik Farouk!

Aug 16th by Shannon