« May 2006 | Main | July 2006 »
Posted at 08:46 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
This is how the BBC introduced Children's Tv in the 1950's. It followed on from their Radio format "Listen with Mother". Listen with Mother always began with the warning - "Are you sitting comfortably children?" There was a pause and we would respond "Yes" (I could never understand how they heard me but I was sure that they did) "Now we will begin."
There was an hour of children's programming from 5-6pm. At 6 there was the news and we would go to bed. I think that we got our first TV in 1956 when I was 6 and Di was 4.
Now when everything is available all the time to anyone at any time, it is hard to imagine the great cultural coming together in England at the advent of TV. Millions of children sat down at the same time and we all watched the same shows. The underlying assumption was that every child would have an adult with them. What a concept!!!
If you long to be reminded of Muffin the Mule, Andy Pandy and Bill and Ben (I was never a big fan of the Wooden Tops) then go to this wonderful site that has everything to take you back including video and songs.
At this time my favourite was Bill and Ben.
Flobadob to you and Weeeeeed!
I also liked Muffin the Mule.
I was less keen on Andy Pandy.
But he was very popular.
Above all I recall the feeling of innocence and how precious childhood was. It was understood that we as children lived in a world of imagination and of play. In this world Boys were expected to be naughty - not bad but naughty. Now they are diagnosed with ADD.
The exemplar of "Naughty" was Sooty who every episode did something awful to Harry Corbett while Sweep stood silently by.
The theme tune was all about being naughty
Sooty - ever so naughty,
Sooty - never gets caught,
He is a little rascal,
In trouble all the while. . .
Izzy Wizzy let's get busy,
Is his magic spell,
What will happen when he says it,
one can never tell
One can never tell !!!!
Boys could be boys.
Next - A Boy's world - Adventure - More TV Films and Comics
Technorati Tags: Boys, Children, Rob's Life, TV Watching
Continue reading "Recalled to Life Part 4 - TV in the 1950's in England - Innocence" »
Posted at 08:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (7)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
This is the book that I want. What do you think?
Me playing with friends in the pre TV age. What have boys lost?
Technorati Tags: Being Real, Books, Boys, Conn Iggulden
Posted at 07:18 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(1)
| |
| |
|
This is what you see when you arrive at the main station - hundreds - no thousands of bikes!
At first I thought that they were not locked but they have neat lock that goes around the back wheel.
Copenhagen is a very human city because it put bikes and public transport before cars.
If you put a coin into the slot - like a shopping cart - you can ride this bike all over the core and just replace it in another site and you get you coin back.
Every street has a bike lane - even bike lights. The risk of being run over by mad Island drivers is very low
One ticket gets you onto the commuting trains, the subway and buses. You can take you bike with you and there i tons of space for baby strollers.
Because most people, bike, walk or use public transport - masses live downtown and drive a busy set of neighborhood shops and even schools. Because people bike or walk and often live in walk up apartments I saw only 2 overweight people in 5 days. Because there are "eyes on the street" crime is low as is bad behaviour.
Copenhagen works because how people get around is part of an integrated whole. All the aspects of getting around have been connected to each other. A lesson for us here on PEI.
Can we not do this? Can we not take a step back from the parts and think of a holistic connected way of getting around in Charlottetown? Can we not "see" the city and the feeders as a "Whole" and start to connect the dots?
Oh yes and Copenhagen has its own wind farm
Technorati Tags: Biking, Charlottetown, Copenhagen, Public Transport, Wind Power
Posted at 02:33 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
Here I am in warrior guise, with my spear and shield off to battle the forces of evil in Airlie Gardens.
As I have told you already, inside the safe container of Airlie Gardens, Diana and I lived like wild things.
Back in the home though, we lived in a very structured space - the Nursery.
My parents believed that children should be neither seen or heard. Diana and I lived therefore in a separate part of the house - far away from our parents. We were looked after entirely by a series of nannies - many of whom were definitely not Mary Poppins but more like Drill instructors at the Marine Corps. As at Boot Camp, our day was highly structured. Meals were at fixed times and you had to eat everything. One nanny would hold my nose and force feed me like a bird, ramming food down my throat with a spoon if I balked at something. After lunch - a Rest! One hour in our room in silence. This is when I started to read. Bed by 6pm. None of this waiting to see our parents. Our mother would have lunch with us in Thursdays, Nanny's day off. We never saw our father.
When we were not playing in the garden - like Marines, we wore very formal clothes. Oh I hated those button shoes. I could never get the button hooked up. We had to use a little hook to do it and manual dexterity was nver my strength. Diana learned how to tie laces before me too. How humiliating.
Sounds pretty grim. But it wasn't. The tight structure felt very safe and when we went into the garden we were on our own with all the other children in this wonderland of our imagination. Here is Diana as an Indian.
This emotionally cold environment also meant that Diana and I became exceptionally close. She was and is so much more than a sister. We became and remain soulmates. We could even visit each other in our dreams.
So we were happy. We had each other. We had a safe structure. We had paradoxically much more freedom than many children ever have. And then, one day - we had it all. One day, love entered our lives.
Until the age of 6, all our nannies had been the Drill Instructor, starchy types. They gave good care but it was a job. There is a lot to be said for structure. I know a lot of very unhappy kids who have lots of affection but no security because they have no structure.
Then "Fluffy" arrived on the scene and we discovered that we had been missing something all along. We had been missing love. By love I mean, we had been missing someone who cared for us deep in her heart. Being so young, a teenager, she could play with us but she was also quite firm. She expected a lot from us and because, we knew that she cared, we usually gave it to her.
Here we are again in the magic garden on a summer's day.
Fluffy was to come with us to Ghana - imagine that in 1958! - Would you leave home and go out to Africa to look after kids? Ghana was a pivotal experience for all of us as a family as I will expand on later. It was also for Fluffy where she met her future husband Bill and where she lived until 1980.
Why so much emphasis on our nursery and then Fluffy? We are surely shaped as adults by what we experience as children. Our view of reality is created by the kinds of relationships that we have when we are young. I am trying to find out more about who I am now by looking back at this formative period. I hope that you may also think of your own as you look at mine - sort of group therapy!
Many of us in later life do go into therapy because there are things about our parents that bubble up. I think that it helps to look more broadly than our parents as the sole shapers of this early experience. Surely this was the great value of tribal life - that we then all could draw on a wide range of adults as reality shapers.
We all get the parents that we get. Some are better than others. Some are pretty awful. No matter what parents we have, the most fortunate of us find someone like Fluffy who can give us the experience of a loving relationship that endures as the foundation for all our future relationships. She was the centre of our lives for 3 precious years from when I was 6-9. I think that if she had not come into hour lives at that important time, Diana and I would have never been able to break free from the institutional world and I don't think I would have been able to open my heart to another. What a gift!
This is how I felt about her. My heart sings when I think of her even now.
Thank you Fluffy
Technorati Tags: Children, Nannies, Fluffy, Rob Paterson, Rob's Life
Posted at 11:08 AM | Permalink | Comments (4)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
Posted at 02:57 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
Here is a thumbnail that I hope can open up large enough for you to see properly
Technorati Tags: Values Technology
Posted at 09:39 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
In my discussions with people in public radio over the last 10 months, I have heard many tell me that to move forward we need many more resources, (to build a digital back end, to produce more and better programming, to hire more talent etc), and that, by definition, will cost a great deal of money - something that Public Radio does not have when compared to the mass media.
As a 10 year resident of PEI, I hear all the time that we are condemned to be a sub optimal economy and hence society because we do not have enough financial or natural resources. If only we had much more money in equalization payments, we could offer the same standard of living as say Ontario.
Both these assertions - that it is a shortage of money that blocks progress - may have been correct by proxy only a few years ago but are now ABSOLUTELY WRONG!!!!!!!
What is happening now is starting to tell us that there is another way of looking at resources. The new model is of course the old model of Barn Building.
We call it Open Source now. It is the use of Community Capital. Once communities become central to an organizing idea - Barn Building becomes available. This is surely a great source of potential competitive power for communities - as money based organizations cannot access Community Capital. A Community can always build a barn at a radically lower cost and at a radically higher quality than a commercial alternative. "Oh we all know about open source and open space - this is not new!" you may say.
But what mindset for resources are you using? If you are not using an Open approach, you are missing out. Of course what I am saying is not new. But what may be new is that some of the details of how this works and some of the details of its power are becoming more clear.
So first we look at the web and some information that is familiar to a few but which maybe has not sunk in as it should.
From the Church of the Customer
Here is the new 1% rule. If you seek resources in an open manner, it takes about 1% to gear up to a huge result.
So why would Public radio consider any other perspective for building its technology platform or indeed any infrastructure. Why would PEI rely on commercial models either for say a new local food system or wind energy?
While barn building as a model has always been available to a group that defines themselves as a community. Most communities themselves have forgotten the latent power that resides within them. So again the idea of Open Source while not new is still held too small.
Using an Open approach today also enables the community to cope with a massive increase in complexity. Has it been a lack of will. of intelligence and resources that has confounded Microsoft in building its new operating system? Surely the barrier has been complexity. The challenges that confront us today are building in complexity. This is why we used an Open Process of investigation in Public radio in the US to "discover" what was really going on and to help us find some pathways to a better future. We knew from the outset that no one of us was smart enough to see it all. Even if there was such a genius, we would not have believed him either.
Such a "distributed" approach to coping with complexity can be applied to business when the business leader adopts a legitimately distributed model. This effect of lowering the load, increasing accuracy and increasing pace of development is not anymore confined to the web , software or information. This process of "Opening" is now working at the highest levels in engineering.
Airbus announced recently that they will miss the release date for the A380. Why - Because they have been overwhelmed by complexity. Boeing is having no such problems with the Dreamliner. Why? They are using a genuinely Open Source approach.
If you see resources in a control and hence in a financial mode - you cannot access this new opportunity. So what is both the lock and the key to acting on this idea? It is Mindset or Culture. If you cannot understand the cultural aspect of the choice before you - you may be stuck.
The idea of Open has traction or not depending on the ability of any leadership to locate what they are doing in a cultural context. To do this, it helps to have a map. So here is a map that has helped me more than any other tool to locate any issue culturally
This was developed by Dr Brian Hall of Values Technology (More posts to come that will share his story and achievement)
The map represents many sets of supporting tools but let me give you a quick heads up of how this can help you reframe marketing, hiring, promoting, performance, teams, mergers and most important of all leadership.
At the top line you will see 4 phases of human cognitive development. These roughly approximate Maslowian but are more detailed.
Phase 1 (The world is a mystery over which I have no control) is called Surviving and has two sequential parts Safety and Security. We live in this world as a small child. To progress, you have to have most of the foundation issues in here well asssimilated. If you don't, then the chances are that you may be stuck here. You look like an adult but your needs are here. The test? When someone you know is all about ME! We all know this person. People stuck in Phase I are not people that you want on your team, in your department and certainly not as your leader unless yo are in extreme crisis and need a tyrant.
The map however is also dynamic. Under threat, we shift here as individuals and as groups. Germany did after their loss in World War I. Many Americans are moving there post 9/11 or post Katrina. In crisis, it is smart to go here. As a 2 year old you need to be here. As a mature person you need to have learned the lessons from here.
These shifts in Phase affect leadership styles. It is no wonder that a frightened and humiliated Germany looked for an authoritarian leader. This is the quandary of the Democrats today. Many traditional organizations that are under siege are moving here. Tyrants are defined here as having "oppressed followers who are totally dependent" Paternalist leaders have followers who are "Dependent and obedient". Anyone familiar with this? Of course we also know that living like this is very bad for your health.
As more people fear for their jobs in a global world, a very large segment of the population in the west will regress here. We can see the response in the mass media. The mass media has moved here and seeks to attract by using the most foundational appeal and stories of survival. Clear channel is the music media here - we tell you what to listen too. If you are a small radio station that fears for its future you are here. If you are PEI you may be here. In survival - cooperation is all but impossible. If you need to cooperate with a person or a group here - you have to deal with their fear first.
Phase II (The world is a problem with which I must cope) is called Belonging and has 2 sequential parts - Family and Institution. This is where most of us live today. This is where being controlled, orderly is vital. As is being obedient and fitting in. It is the world of a teen ager. You profess to be an individual but fitting in is the most important thing. Social affirmation, management, competence, duty obligation are all key values. Without a core here, any organization would not be competent. But if the leadership is all here, then the purpose of the organization becomes control itself as an end. This is the essence of bureaucracy.
Marketers love this group. This is all about using things to identify as myself. I have a BMW so I am good. Good people to have on your team, but not if they are in the senior leadership role. But you do need a group of people at the top who are really competent doers. Truly great visionary leaders have to have come through here on their way.
The quality newspapers and some aspect of NPR today feed the higher end of this group who seek to know more so that they can be more competent. These listeners trust the authority of the New York Times or NPR.
Until recently this was the leadership model though. The Manager Leader is efficient with followers who are loyally devoted to the organization. This was the GM of the 1930 - 1970's. Unfortunately it still is. But the bonds of loyalty have been broken and merely being efficient is not enough to cope with a complex world
Phase III (The world is a creative project in which I want to participate) is called Self Initiating. It has two parts as well. Vocation and New Order. You can see that phases I and II are on a linear progression. Phase III is a bifurcation in development. here the world is turned upside down. In phases I and II everything is extrinsic. In phase III everything becomes intrinsic. It's all about me but in a more evolved way. Here participation is central to being me. This applies to learning, to my health, to my work and to my leisure.
In the past there were very few people in this group. Now, higher living standards, have pushed an early group into this sector. This is where the back to the landers came from. This is where many of the geek community is. But now a trickle is becoming a tidal wave. What is driving this?
It is the social web. The social web is the key to the Self Initiating world.
It gives the individual their voice back. This is the essence of wikipedia and open source. This is what the web is facilitating. Where eBay now have 1 million self employed people in their system and growing. This is where blogging is awakening people. The social web is unlocking this deep need and people are flocking to be free. For until the social web, there was no structure to allow this - the pressures of the Phase II world were too great. In marketing this is where peer reviews count the most. In education this is where dialogue counts the most. In health this is where taking back my power counts. In teams this is where I take responsibility for my bit. In life this is where my word and my reputation mean the most. In competence this is where being acknowledged as being good counts for more than a credential. It is a personal world of adults who take legitimate responsibility.
In media this is the "many to many" idea made flesh. This is where distributed networks can be built because the idea of control has shifted from direct to a systems perspective.
The two leadership styles are very different from Phases I and II. Here the leader is either a Facilitator who is a listener, clarifier and supporter with followers who are also listeners, clarifiers and supporters. Or at the next level is a Collaborator who is a Facilitator, producer, creator with active peer participation. Here the doing, the listening and the ordering are all integrated. The reward is Wholeness and integration for the person. Knowledge Insight, Human Dignity Being self are the goals.. One of the tests of such a person is that they at least acknowledge their own limits and then celebrate them. A phase Ii person hides these and talks only of their successes.
This is is the future that represents a vision of what we want to become if we are fully developed as a person. This is the most compelling vision that we can imagine. It is not a place but a state.
The challenge is that we have to cross a divide from phase II to get to phase III. Many fear the loss of identity involved from going from extrinsic to intrinsic. Many will see phase II as their enemy and we see a reaction. This then is the real competitive arena today.
Southwest is a phase III organization - all the other airlines are phase II at best - most phase I. Southwest competes by culture. eBay represents a phase III market place. Google is a phase III working environment. Microsoft is phase II. Open Source is Phase III.
Where will the audience for Phase III radio come from? Is the future of Public radio to be found in phase II?
Phase IV (The world is a mystery for which we care on a global scale) Has two parts - Wisdom and World Order. Mandela, Gandhi, Havel fit this phase. The leadership styles are Servant - interdependent administrator with collegial participation and Visionary - Liberator with a global network of visionaries. It is rare but it also has a powerful attraction. This is the point. The bigger the potential for a future vision the more powerful it is.
Any new kind of organization that will be sustainable in calling the energy and the hearts of people to act as collaborators in the grand mystery that is life itself, has to put part of its vision out here.
Summary - For me the choice for all of us in the future is this. Where best can we locate ourselves on this map? If we locate ourselves in Phase III - what does that mean for all our supporting processes?
If you are in phase II you had better be big. Because in the end game for phase II it will be a battles of the giants. The giants will die anyway. For Phase III can act more surely, more quickly and for much less cost.
Sorry that this has been such a mouthful but I will explore this values map a lot in the near future as I struggle to make sense of how best to see a better way through. I will do my best to explore the parts that make up this systemic view of values in later posts
Technorati Tags: Brian Hall, Culture, Organization, PEI, Public Radio, Values Technology
Posted at 09:28 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
The Babyguard is a rare northern breed of dog. In northern climes, with resources scarce tribal populations had to be low and all had to work. So the Babyguard was bred to do the work of child rearing and guarding.
Babyguards are naturally inclined to spot defenseless babies
They then use a special cuddling technique to get into the "Guard" position
Finally they set at the Guard position
If you have a rare breed and want it to be added to this gallery please email me at robertdotpaterson at gmail dotcom
Technorati Tags: Dogs, Rare Breeds of Dog
Posted at 08:33 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
Phew - our sick goose did not have the H5n1 strain it only kills birds!
How can we protect ourselves from Bird Flu - or from any disease that crosses over from animals. Stockpile drugs, feed more drugs to the animals, keep animals more concentrated and inside. These are the suggestions from the experts.
Which brings me onto my point. Our entire approach to animal health is wrong. WRONG!!!!!!!!!!!
At the heart of disease in humans, in animals and in plants are a combination of a weak immune system, poor diet, stress and overcrowding.
These are the upstream conditions that if you are unfortunate to experience, you will get ill. For instance this is what drives TB in humans. TB was all but eradicated in the UK prior to 1945 and the introduction of antibiotics.
Thousands of chickens, in a barn eating processed chicken food are just an antibiotic dose away from disease. No wonder you have to cook a chicken well. I learned recently that you cannot cook and serve a pig on PEI that weighs less than 100 pounds because they are loaded with growth hormones and antibiotics at a lesser weight. When cows are kept in feed lots, killed at the rate of 400 an hour - you are smart to well cook hamburger.
Our health inspectors make it impossible for us to raise animals in a healthy way. They only look at what happens downstream. If you have hens laying eggs, they want you to refrigerate them. Hello. When you refrigerate an egg it dies. An egg laid by a healthy free range chicken, living in space, being able to run around and that eats food that chickens eat - insects and seeds etc. will keep for weeks. The worst that can happen is that it may go rotten. You will not get salmonella from it because to get salmonella, the chicken has to be raised in factory conditions.
By insisting on the costs of refrigeration, they make it impossible to be a small holder.
Our health inspection system has swept away small slaughter houses where animals had short journeys to slaughter, were killed in very small batches by skilled people who cared. Now we have death camps where animals are trucked for long distances in fear and discomfort. This spoils the meat. Long distance trucking means that when there is an outbreak such as foot and mouth in England, that it is spread in days all over the country. Killing floors where animals are killed at the rate that they are now would be banned if we all saw film and it dehumanizes its workers. But no, the official line is that this is better than the local butcher. See a post by Bob Herbert from the NYT attached.
What if we started to support niche animal husbandry? More later
Technorati Tags: Animal Health, Food Health
Continue reading "We are saved! - Our bird flu is the "good type"" »
Posted at 05:26 PM | Permalink | Comments (5)
Reblog
(0)
| |
| |
|
Recent Comments