Milk The Corporation

I saw two disturbing movies last night: Milk and The Corporation.

 

I did not know much at all about Harvey Milk’s life before the film, and while I knew he was killed at the end, I did not expect to be so affected by the film. Was he really that much of an upstanding citizen who fought for the rights of those who had no rights? If so, which I tend to believe from what I have since read, then his death really was premature and a sad loss.

The Corporation was a documentary that chronicled how multinational corporations abuse and take advantage of people and the environment to whatever extent is “legal,” however and wherever that may be defined, as they pursue profits at whatever cost. There were a number of heroic people who were shown to have stood up to corporate power and the financial influence that comes to governments that collude with them.

The take-away? The world is a more complex and hostile place than sometimes it seems, though there are people who tirelessly work to make our world more just and fair and balanced.  What a choice at the beginning of a New Year.

Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2009-01-03

  • Headed to NYU Stern for my Business Communication class that begins today. #
  • Phew. #
  • Also finished tweaking the rubric for the Individual Presentation Benchmark presentation. #
  • Finished tweaking my slides for my Business Communication class tomorrow. #
  • The day is going surprisingly quickly for so few people in. Perhaps I am getting a lot done with so few introductions? #
  • Going with a colleague for lunch. #
  • In my one 2-hour workgroup meeting today. It is surprisingly productive. #

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Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2009-01-02

  • In the office; NYC is very very quiet today. Hope that means people have more rest and time to think about how to junp-start the economy. #
  • Walking to the office. Very quiet outside; perhaps many people took today off? #
  • Getting ready to leave for the office. #
  • End of the day. With all said and done, I hope the new year found many people happier and healthier. If not, there is still tomorrow. #
  • Finished tweaking my syllabus (again). Just posted it to Blackboard (again). #
  • Trying to get the hang of Blackboard version 8. Lots of changes in the Gradebook (now called Grade Center). #
  • Doing some final preparation for the new section of my class that I am teaching this Saturday — Business Communication (at NYU Stern). #
  • I also installed a new router and re-organized the 2 wireless networks into a single one. Hurray, I once again have wifi that works! #
  • Have been working in the apartment all day re-running wires and moving bookshelves and equipment. #

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Jeffrey’s Twitter Updates for 2009-01-01

  • Happy New Year! #
  • Piece of trivia; a colleague used to have (the) Dick Clark as a babysitter. What a cool real-life story! #
  • Time to watch Dick Clark. #
  • Delicious cake. #
  • Making Irish Coffees with fresh whipped cream. #
  • Delicious fondue, Jean! #
  • Getting ready for home-made cheese fondue New Year’s Eve dinner. The best! #
  • Opened a wonderful bottle of Chateauneuf du Pape. #
  • Getting ready for New Year’s dinner with a good friend. #
  • Just achieved Inbox 0 at work. Nice way to end the day and the year. #
  • Anybody out there a member of the Association of Internet Researchers http://aoir.org/ ? #
  • Ate Indian food for lunch. Nice and warm after walking through the snow that is falling in NYC right now. #
  • The office is quiet today. #
  • Spencer had an eye doctor appointment this morning. Headed to the office. #

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New Year’s Resolution—I Am Enough

Year after year I make New Year’s Resolutions for change. I have numbered them, listed them on paper, entered them into Outlook pop-ups, carried them in my pockets, put them around on Post-Its, told people about them, kept them close if they were personal, repeated them as a mantra, and other methods that have been forgotten just as the resolutions themselves have.

This year, I am planning something different. Rather than try for change, I am going to do just the opposite—accept what already is.

With my appreciation for Reflective Practice as a disciplinary methodology and my need to blog to help realize the results and the process itself, I am sharing my thinking on this resolution this year.

My resolution is a mantra I have tried out for the past few days and it feels right for me. It seems to fit in a way that I can understand and will try to incorporate into my life. In this regard, I understand I Am Enough as meaning that I will focus on appreciating what I have, already am, have accomplished, think, and feel. For some background, I at times think about what I am not or have not done or thought or felt, more than what I am, have done, thought, or felt. I tend to apologize (at least to myself) for my omissions and lack of, rather than appreciating and accepting what I already am all about.  I tend to think I am not smart enough, not in shape enough, have not written enough, have not worked enough, relaxed enough, socialized enough, taught enough, traveled enough, and on and on.

I am resolving to accept what I have done, not perhaps as being the best or most or highest or grandest or what have you, but in a much simpler way:  they are enough. This recalls a colleague years ago who was told by a professor, after slaving away on a paper that seemed to be going nowhere, that “sometimes good enough is good enough.” This is what I mean by I Am Enough.

Yes, this is a resolution that does involve some change I suppose, and changes in perspective can be as challenging as changing behaviors. However, I think this perspective is one that just feels like it may be the one that will help me move forward with my life by grounding me in my own very real experiences.

I hope my explanation does not appear as an apology, as it is not. I am explaining this to try to put words to what I have already decided. This is my resolution, and it is a good enough one as any.