Jpd2h's Weblog

Entries categorized as ‘takeaways’

a mother’s love

November 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I just finished watching “The Bridges of Madison County” for the first time.  It happened to be on the tv while I was doing some work in my apartment living room, and I ended up watching closely the second half of the movie.

For me this movie told the story of a mom’s love for her children.  My grandfather was right about moms.  Moms are almost not human in that they selflessly live for their children.  They so deeply love their offspring that they sacrifice, and would sacrifice, their own life and happiness for the sake of their children.  My mother has always been like this.

I cannot describe the love I have for my own mom.  Perhaps the best way to understand how much I love her, is my own willingness to make sacrifices for her sake.   I am motivated to work hard, so that I can one day be successful enough to take good care of her.    Lord knows she deserves it!

Thanks grandpa for teaching me this important lesson!

More information about “The Bridges of Madison County” :   http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0112579/

Categories: movies · takeaways · wisdom

Apartment For Peggy

November 6, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Apartment For Peggy is a movie I stumbled upon.  It happened to be on the TV–about half way through to the end–when I turned it on today, and I sure am glad it was.  I watched the entire last half of it, because it was so well written and articulate.    Perhaps I read into movies too much, but I think the movie is great, and perfectly fitting for a young leader.  I think the movie does a good job of illustrating a number of lessons.  In addition, the movie was surprisingly watchable for being so old.  Some of these lessons include:

  • focusing on money, makes you short-sided,and unable to see the forest among the trees
  • a tree takes a long time grow big and tall, but it is beautiful once it has
  • don’t raise peoples hopes prematurely
  • philosophy means the love of wisdom
  • leadership may naturally follow passion
  • a positive attitude is infectious
  • the wise continue learning all through out their lives
  • anything worth doing, isn’t easy
  • times sure have changed (women are treated much differently nowadays)

 

Watch the movie, and maybe post some lessons you took from the movie as comments to this post!  I would love to read them.

Categories: insightful? · movies · psychology · takeaways · wisdom
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life experiments

October 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Tonight, I learned some interesting things from the experimental man, author, and Esquire magazine editor at large: A.J. Jacobs.   He came to the university to talk about what he has learned from the series of “life experiments” in which he has immersed himself.   He is famous for these experiments because he commits himself to the project, for better or worse, then writes about what he learned.

Some of the experiments he has undertaken, and the books or articles that resulted, include:

  • The book The Know-It-All: One Man’s Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World (2004)  –   He spent an entire year reading all 32 volumes of the Encyclopedia Britannica.
  • The Esquire article “My Outsourced Life” (2005)  –  For 30 days, he out-sourced his life to two personal assistants in India and who did everything for him from answering his e-mails, to reading his children good-night stories, to arguing with his wife.
  • The Esquire article “I Think You’re Fat” (2007)   —  He, for 30 days, practiced radical honesty, which required that, among other things, he verbally express whatever thought that came to his mind at the moment that it came to his mind.
  • The book The Year of Living Biblically: One Man’s Humble Quest to Follow the Bible as Literally as Possible (2007)  –  He lived for one year according to a strict and literal interpretation of all the instructions that the Bible provides for how people should live their lives.   This included, as examples, that one should stone adulterers, blow a shofar at the beginning of every month, and refrain from trimming the corners of his facial hair (which, he followed by not trimming his facial hair at all, because he didn’t know what the corners of his facial or head hair were).

 

The takeaway

So what was did I take away from his speech and talking with him afterwards.  First, that he is a nice guy who has a very loving/patient wife, but also that we can learn so much about ourselves, and each other, as very social and political animals, when we put ourselves in these extreme lifestyle experiments.   Most importantly, the experimenter learns a great deal about their own personal moral code.   Jacobs, for example, shared with us that he learned a great deal about how he feels about religion and how he came to the conclusion that he wants raise his children to be exposed to at least some form, from his Living Biblically experiment.  There are other lessons, but the important take away is that if you want to learn about yourself, conduct an experiment, with you at it’s center.

Categories: takeaways · wisdom