Archive for December, 2004

You scored as Beowulf. Heroic, strong, and maybe a little on the proud side–not that you don’t have a reason to be. After all, you defeat THREE major evils that ravage the countryside as well as many minor beasties that get in the way before you’re done in. You simply don’t give up. Without you, Hrothgar’s Golden Hall would still stand empty.

Beowulf

83%

Wiglaf

67%

Wealhtheow

58%

Grendel

58%

The Dragon

42%

Hrothgar

42%

Grendel’s Mother

42%

If You Were in Beowulf…
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Lucky Guess…Or not, considering that I am a pacifist. But considering that, ther are really no right answers in this book fo me. I could be the boat that brings Beowulf to the land of the Danes

I just got back from working at starbucks. It was a bummer night; we were way under-staffed. Consequently we were harried, customers did not receive the attention they deserved (or the attention we are required to give them), and we stayed an hour past when we were supposed to leave.
While I was cleaning an analogy occurred to me. Corporate America is like medieval Europe (or any other time when monarchy was the dominant form of government); many monarchies occupying the same continent, all of whom being somewhat uneasy with each other. It is not, however, the relations of nation-states that interests me, but how monarchs relate to their subjects, and how that relating affects the health and longengevity of that state. Those monarchs who served their own ends often did so at the expense of their people - they are remembered as despotic, and, more often than not, the country’s glory was lessened because of their leadership. Further, as a result of the oppression, corruption increases dramatically, and dissent threatens to tear the society to pieces.
Monarchs, on the other hand, who invest inwardly; who invest in the arts, in commerce, and in an infrastructure that frees the monarchy’s subjects, these monarchs are remembered for their greatness. In a country where the citizens are free to protest, dissent is diffused and does not damage the country, but, in fact, strengthens it. The glory of that country increases under the leadership of this monarch, not to mention the glory of that monarch.
The relationship between this and corporations should be obvious: corporations that place profitability as the ultimate priority (that is, the leaders act for their own interests) tend to restrict, or control, their employees: they profit at the expense of the health of their employees. This is not a sustainable situation for a corporation: employees will revolt.
The corporation, on the other hand, that makes investing in the health of their employees: giving them freedom to innovate, and an infrastructure that supplies them with needs, and trust to act significantly within the corporation - these create healthy situations for the employees, glory for the corporation itself as well as glory (and wealth) for the leadership.
well - there is my 2c. I do not expect much to change; but I have my doubt about the future health of Starbucks.

As many of you know I have been thinking alot about social justice issues as well as ecological issues. It looks like I will be sharing (teaching) some of those thoughts for Imago Dei as a part of their School of Theology. If you want information on the Class go here: christian ecology

The class is Monday nights from 7-9 starting Jan 24. and its free.
come one, come all!

Remember the book Alexander And The Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day? well, by day hasn’t been that bad, but it certianly has been a series of unfortunate events. I woke up this morning at 5:30, so as to get to work at 7:00.
6:10 - Leave house on bike
6:14 - arrive at bus stop (about hawthorne and MLK Jr.)
6:15 - watch bus go by with two bikes filling the bike rack (which meant I had to wait for the next bus to come. At this point I am not worried, in fact, I left early just in case this happened)
6:30 - watch bus go by with two bikes filling the bike rack (I did not allow for two busses in a row to by full)
6:30 - start riding to work, very quickly.
6:53 - POP! my rear tyre actually makes a loud noise as it explodes. I am 1/4 mile from downtown milwaukie. At this point I realize that short of time stopping (the sun, which will not rise for another hour doesn’t offer to stop, besides which I am not carrying the right staff for the job) I am not making it to work on time. I call work to inform them as much and then start walking toward the Milwaukie transit center to bus the rest of the way to work.
6:57 It starts raining. Perfect.
7:30 I make it to work.
moral of the story: lateness sometimes happens, no matter how hard one might try to prevent it.
epilogue: when I got home this evening and set to fixing said flat tyre, I noticed how torn up it is. Now, let me explain, this is no ordinary tyre - under the rubber is a layer of kevlar (the stuff used for bullet-proof vests), so popping this tyre was no easy task. The rubber is pitted in at least a dozen places from road crap. so please, next time you are driving down the road and are finished chewing on that nail, or sucking the soda residue off the broken glass bottle, don’t just spit it out the window. dispose of it properly. for my sake. for my bike’s sake. please.

Other than having to work at Starbucks today, the rest of my day has gone better. So perhaps I will not move to Australia just yet.

Oh My! Now This is cool. Go there now.Virtual Bubblewrap - Pop Now! Pop bubble wrap online - since 1996