Archive for the ‘random musings’ Category

You can’t win ‘em all… or can you?

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Life’s rough — I’m not complaining, I guess it’s just common sense at some point that life gets rough.

Sooner or later, you’re going to come up against a brick wall. You can try to move it all you want, but the best you’re going to do is take a few chunks out of it here or there.

What you want to avoid is having that brick wall collapse on you. So I guess what I’ve learned over the past few days is that sometimes walking away with the things you need in tact, and the ability to continue to do the things you feel are important — walking away with that is almost like winning. Hell, it’s better than losing.

Life - in the end - isn’t about winning and losing, it’s about what you do with the time you have. As long as you can continue to do those things you love to do, or be with those you care about, then who really gives a shit?

It’s 4-30 on a Thursday afternoon (I’m a night owl you know), but I’ve been up all day getting ready for Old Vinnie’s birthday and running errands - so I’ve had a lot of time to think about ‘crap’ in general. After all that ‘thinking’, I’m reassured of my decision — keep the things that actually matter, and to hell with the rest.

OZZY - OZZY - OZZY - OZZY

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010
Let me hear you scream like you want it.
Let me hear you yell like you mean it.

If you’re gonna go down,
– go loud,
– go strong,
– go proud,
– go on,
– go hard, or go home.

Let me hear you scream.

Summer 2010 - “Scream” debuted to my utter blissful praise. It’s a great album. It’s very ‘Ozzy’ in character, and a suitable followup to “Black Rain”. ‘Life Won’t Wait’ and ‘Fearless’ are truly classic tracks, although you can hear a bit of what I’m thinking is Auto-Tune in the background… I’d almost rather hear Ozzy sound harsh and a little shitty… I respect someone with as much time doing what he does best, and would not hold the pitfalls of age against him at all. I realize, however, that he is committed to putting out killer quality studio albums, and if he feels he needs Auto-Tune than so be it. His live vocals are still stellar though, just wish he’d realize it.

http://www.ozzy.com

“I’ve got to run to keep from hidin’; I’m bound to keep on ridin’, and I got one more silver dollar…”

Thursday, July 1st, 2010
I don’t do this for fame, not for you.  I do this for me.It soothes my soul and keeps my sanity.

I’ll only be here for today, puttin my misery on display.

… your lips, your breath up against my skin.

I don’t know any other way, and I’ll be gone by the break of day; puttin my misery on display.

– Gary Allan.

 Got on my dead man suit, my smilin’ skull ring,

my graveyard boots, and a song to sing.

I got a song to sing; it keeps me outa’ the cold.

I’ll meet you down further on up the road.

One sunny morning, we’ll rise I pray,

and I’ll meet you again further on up the road.

I been out in the desert, doin’ my time,

searching through the dust for something I don’t know…

– Johnny Cash.

 I don’t wanna live in yesterday, cross my heart until I die.

Don’t wanna know just what tomorrow may bring, because today has just begun.

No-matter whatever else I’ve done, I’m here for you.

– Ozzy Osbourne.

 My heroes have always been cowboys, and they still are it seems.

Sadly in search of and one step behind of themselves and their slow movin’ dreams.

Cowboys are specials with their own brand of misery; they could die from the cold in the arms of a nightmare knowin’ well that their best days are gone.

Old worn our saddles and old worn out memories with no-one and no place to stay.

My heroes have always been cowboys, and they still are it seems.

– Willie Nelson.

Half of my Mistakes.

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Half of my mistakes I’ve made stone cold sober.  Half of my mistakes I’ve made at closing time.  You can lean too hard on a prayer, but I don’t recommend it; ’cause half the good things in my life came from half of my mistakes. - Gary Allan

I’ve had, arguably, the last few weeks from ‘hell’; as a result, I’ve reflected a bit upon what I’ve done with my life, how I’ve affected others, the good - the bad - and the ugly.  Not that I suggest anyone make a habit of it; it’s not pretty, but a ‘personal inventory’ isn’t a bad idea now and then.

The conclusion I came to, as arrogant as it may seem, is plainly this… I’d like to spend some more time with the people I care for, I need to let go of angst / ill-will more easily, and I should probably quit smoking.

So, when you do you own personal inventory, if that’s all that’s bothering you, then I’d say you’re doing allright.  Don’t get me wrong, I’ve got my sins - against man, against God, against myself; but I’m at peace with them.

Ironic as it may be, half if not more of the best things in my life are a result of the fallout of mistakes I’ve made… and I’m O.K. with that.

You can’t have your cake and eat it too…

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Note: the following is not suggested or implied to be based on actual events.  Rather, it is an amalgamation of years of observed events and actions among various people and places.  It’s a comment on perception, and any references you may perceive to be based upon real persons or events are ultimately your perception, as no such claim is made here.

———————————–

I’m sure you’ve heard the saying, “You can’t have your cake and eat it too.”  … or perhaps the more readily understood, “You can please some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can’t please all of the people all of the time.

The moral of both ’stories’, at least as they apply to my current diatribe, is this, plain and simple — if you want the good [or insert some other desired artifact; such as ‘performance’, ‘longevity’, or ‘loyalty’], then you’re going to have to accept the bad [again, or insert some other undesirable artifact such as ‘cost’, ‘time to delivery’, or ‘absolute brutal honesty and potent reactions to perceived ill-taken or unwise paths’] in stride.

For some people, this is a given — they realize immediately that the above is the constant that binds most (dare I say all) of our existence.   Often, a ‘trade-off’ is necessary, where one will decide what is and is not important to their given dillema, and choose paths that may not be perfect, but satisfy the ‘mental compromise’ that the person has resigned theirself to.   Here’s a good example — you need a new car (keeping the old one is out of the question for whatever reason).  Now, you want a high output V8 engine, leather and the whole 9 yards, and you want it all for under $17 grand.  … that’s not going to happen.  It’s un-fucking-reasonable (yes, I just swore at you). You can pretty much have any ‘2 of the 3′, and that’s the compromise you make… give up a feature, or spend more money, but ultimately it’s a decision you make and you can’t blame anyone but yourself.  So, you accept it and you ‘own’ it.

The same [dare I say ‘exact’] scenarios occur within any environment, and among any group of people.

But what if you weren’t buying a car?

What if you were tasked with running a company or an organization.  On any given day you could be faced with decisions and tasks that may either be too numerous for any one person to handle, or you may be confronted by decisions or tasks which are not in your area of expertise.  Under such circumstances, you would assign that task to someone that you have entrusted or have been assigned to handle such things, someone whose area of expertise it is.  Typically, one of these entrusted personnel would then report back to you with 2 or 3 ‘options’ from which you could then choose… you could use your ‘mental compromise’ [of cost versus performance / time versus cost / time versus performance… or whatever] to pick which road you will ultimately travel down.  However, over time, and when the facts are blatantly obvious to said entrusted person, you may only be presented with one option… for example, when finances are very tight, you may only be presented with the cheapest option, because the entrusted personnel are aware that it is the only path you will be able to take.

Occasionally, if you’re lucky, you’ll find yourself with a seemingly peculiar colleague [the term ‘odd bird’ comes to mind] that makes many of the daily troubles transparent — simply handling them, making the ‘mental compromsie’ for you [usually trying to keep in stride with your wishes, but occasionally deviating for various reasons - but ultimately solving the problems].  If you’re worth you’re salt, you take note of this, and you cut that person slack.  Such a person may regularly put in extra hours, work on ideas and solutions at home, perform research and troubleshooting that is beyond the scope of their job-description, and pitch-in to lend a hand with just about anything if they see you could use some help.  That is, obviously, the ‘good’.  The ‘bad’ is that such people are often highly driven and take their jobs very personally.  You have to take it personally if you’re going to be good at it.  And the better you get, the more personal it becomes.  The finest people in their craft never work “9 to 5″… they work until the job is done — period, and it doesn’t bother them.

What does, however, bother them is disregard for their craft, whatever it may be.  Now, whether that disregard is based upon budgets and costs, time and available labor, or even upon a simple mis-communication or having forgot something… it doesn’t matter… it still bothers them.  Here’s the ‘pisser’ though… if they respect you (and we’ll get to that in a minute), they’ll bring it up to you — addressing you directly.  But if they feel you’ve shit on them or that said disregard is based upon arrogance, then you’ll send you what is commonly known as a ‘nasty gram’ [a snippy little email, describing the issue, the pro’s and con’s of it, and their ultimate standpoint on it].  ‘Nasty grams’ serve a good purpose, they cover the sender’s proverbial ass in such an event that a governing body may take action based on an action or lack of action by yourself.  They also convey the senders general displeasure.

You can, however, avoid said ‘nasty grams’, maintain a good working relationship with valuable subordinates, and generally ‘keep the peace’ by doing one thing; it’s so simple, its scary — c’mon, you can guess it.  No?  Ok, I’ll tell you…

EARN THEIR RESPECT.

 A person’s position, in itself, does not warrant the respect of a skilled professional [skilled professionals include doctors, laywers, engineers, tradesmen, drafters, smiths, scientists, etc. etc… - basically, anyone who if removed from their job would still be a ‘whatever’ because they earned the right to be recognized as such by either completing a lengthy training, having several years of on-the-job training, completing a degree, or any similar deal].  Some skilled professionals will never ‘bite back’ when you push them; this may be because they’ve been through the mill enough times and know that you’re not worth their breath, they simply hate conflict and desire to have a fluid working environment, because they honestly couldn’t care less, or because they’re not confident enough in their abilities or opinions to confront you — this goes back to the whole “the better you get, the more personal it gets” concept.  (Be advised, if it is either of the last 2 options above, then you would be better off without them.)  Either way, don’t for one minute dillute yourself into thinking that they respect you if you don’t deserve it.

A good leader will walk the oh-so-often-referenced ‘walk’ — he’ll accept facts produced by entrusted personnel, weigh opinions accordingly, follow up on requests for assistance / resources / or information, give feedback when rejecting proposals (”No… because [x, y, and z]”  — rather than “No” — and just to be clear, “No, beause I’ll get yelled at” is not an acceptable answer), know when it’s time to reign in his personnel when they’ve gone off on a tangent, and ultimately know how to manage his people.

When one of your subordinates confronts you about a safety issue / NEC violation due to either a mis-step or conscious action on your part, and you respond by telling him that he shouldn’t be confronting you in such a blunt manner / shouldn’t be trying to push the responsibility or liability onto you / and should generally be ‘nicer’, then youjust dropped the goddamn ball.

You didn’t give an intelligent response - you didn’t even try.  In fact, when you realized that you couldn’t come up with anything to refute the subordinate, you then add icing to the cake by chastizing him for his casual work hours (start / stop times)… then guess what you just did.  You f-u-c-k-e-d up.

Had you addressed the subordinate’s legitimate concern directly, and then either agreed with the subordinate or explained with sound reasoning and legitimate facts why you disagreed, then the subordinate would respect your judgement due to your display of competence.  You could then later bust the subordinate’s chops about his casual work hours, and the subordinate would be very likely to absorb and be ameanable to improving his ways.

Instead, you turned a dedicated skilled professional into a disgruntled ‘clock-puncher’… someone who will surely be there on time every day, and will leave on time every day, and will give you no less than what is required to maintain his employment — but no more than what is required to maintain his employment.  And you will have lost out on one of the most dedicated people you’ve ever had the chance of working with.