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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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‘Creative Engineer’ is not oxymoronic!

by Rick Baker
On Oct 11, 2013

‘Creative Engineer’ is not an oxymoronic pairing of words.

I know this for a fact.

For example…

  1. Take a big bowl right out of its box. 
  2. Take a handful of entrepreneurial spirit. 
  3. Add a sprig of philosophical curiosity. 
  4. Blend these and some other stuff together vigorously until you get stuff on your shirt, on the counter-top, and on the floor.
  5. Using your mind's eye, lay the result out on a multi-coloured whiteboard.
  6. See the surprising things that rise to the top, even while they are half-baked. 

Tags:

Beyond Business | Curiosity - Invention, Innovation & Creativity

Thought Tweet #844

by Rick Baker
On Oct 10, 2013

Thought Tweet #844 Trust is gained in small increments, one understood-consistent action at a time.


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

Trust is lost in large lumps, one misunderstood-inconsistent action at a time. 

So, the scale is weighted against you...or, is it weighted for you?

You can perceive it either way...it doesn't matter as long as you are objective about it and do not begrudge the reality of it.

When it comes to trust, the scale is weighted: it isn't just about your perceptions of your intentions and your actions; it's about other people's perceptions of your actions and your intentions; small understood-consistent actions build trust in small increments; small misunderstood-inconsistent actions destroy trust in large lumps.

 

PS: Trust: an interpersonal juxtaposition: so fragile, so essential, so egoic...Perceptions of Interests and Actions...laced with biases that are somehow and somewhy ingrained to protect egos. Trust: the fundamental human-to-human consideration.

Popeye said, "I am what I am" but in the end he always ate his spinach.

by Rick Baker
On Oct 9, 2013

Really, I don't want to get too philosophical about Popeye....although, I must admit, he possessed a unique character well worth the time and effort of concerted philosophical exploration.

Anyhow...

I first met Popeye via black-and-white TV when I was a young [and possibly impressionable] child. From the get-go, Popeye annoyed me. It seemed to me he wasn't very bright. He tolerated all that Brutus-abuse for no good reason at all. While he was a man of questionable vigor and fighting ability he knew he had a secret weapon...that can of yucky cooked spinach...that yucky spinach that made him invincible. He had the tool right there with him. Yet, episode after episode Popeye refused to eat his spinach until the very last minute...placing me in a situation where I was perilously close to failing to make it back to school before the bell.

So, I grew up perceiving Popeye as:

  • A rather weak-minded fellow...yet, his "I am what I am" confirms he had a level of self-knowledge and a grounding for an at-least-somewhat pleasing personality.
  • An obstinate character, the kind of person who ignores that excellent Mary Poppins' spoonful-of-sugar-helps-the-medicine-go-down advice [in Popeye's case...helps the spinach go down]...yet, at the end of the day, a guy who does his best and gets the job done
  • A loveable guy who was doomed to struggle through each and every battle.
To this day, and defying all logic, I like cooked spinach!
 
[I must remember to bring some cans of it to work.]
 
 


Tags:

1-Page Tools | Beyond Business | Change: Creating Positive Change | Hero Worship

Thought Tweet #840.5

by Rick Baker
On Oct 4, 2013

Thought Tweet #840.5 "I'm too busy". That's a real good way not to be thinking.


The Thinking Behind The Tweet

I favour abundance thinking over scarcity mindsets. 

If I think "I'm too busy" then I have a scarcity mindset with respect to time, the most-precious commodity...or darned close to it.

So - I must not think "I'm too busy."

And - I must leave "I'm too busy" to the people who embrace those scarcity mindsets. 


Thought Tweet #840

by Rick Baker
On Oct 4, 2013

Thought Tweet #840 You can lead a horse to water & through hell and high water. But, it's not a good idea to make him drink from a fire-hose.

 

The Thinking Behind The tweet

Clint Eastwood accurately stated, "A man's got to know his limitations." And, as you know, Clint Eastwood treated horses and mules even better than he treated most men...he understood both. It's fair to say he was rather rough on men. Now, I suppose all of that could have been made up because of those movies he had a habit of playing in. Regardless, he never made a horse or a man drink from a fire-hose: [even if it's just metaphoric] that's going too far.

Tags:

Beyond Business | Thought Tweets

Thought Tweet #839.5

by Rick Baker
On Oct 3, 2013

Thought Tweet #839.5 Misery enjoys company...but it makes a lousy dance partner.

 

The Thinking Behind The Tweet

A parody of Wisdom of the Ages wrapped in a tribute to Nietzsche's Zarathustra.

Tags:

Beyond Business | Hero Worship | Humour | Thought Tweets

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