Friday, September 28, 2012

Creativity, Collaboration, and Coffeehouses


This is starting to become familiar...

Please check out another guest post, and this time, on not one but two terrific blogs:  Groupon Grassroots, and Chicago Ideas Week.

Not many places will you find tomes tying together Vincent Van Gogh, Bruce Springsteen, and the wonderful independent coffeehouses of Chicago.

Check out "How to turn coffee into creativity," and hopefully we'll see some of you at our Chicago Ideas Week lab on Monday October 8.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

5 Ways to Make Writing Easier …Before You Even Start Writing

Today the Twist Blog can be found at this blog!  Orbit Media is a web design and development company made up of very nice and very smart people who were kind enough to ask me to guest blog for them.  Check em out.

And be inspired (or at least helped) by my 5 tips to make writing easier.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Why Labor Day could be the best and most meaningful holiday of the year (or should be)



Anyone out there know why we celebrate Labor Day?

According to the United State Department of Labor website, it’s “…a  creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.”

So initially, it was a crucial recognition and reminder of the importance of the laborers of this country, created in a time when they weren’t valued much more than a horse. 

The first Labor Day was celebrated in 1882.  Crowds gathered, speeches were made, parades where marched in and watched by thousands.

Things are different now.  The reason Labor Day is celebrated is because most of us get a day away from laboring. 

Which is a pretty great reason to celebrate.

I recently had a debate with a friend about which is better:

•Work at a time-consuming job that takes you away from your family, is not all that enjoyable or fulfilling, but financially rewarding, which allows you nice things to live in and drive and wear, and nice, vacations and a comfortable, potentially early retirement.

•Or a little more flexible, pretty fulfilling, still hard-working but not crushing job, where you have more control over your life but need to stretch to make ends meet, get less nice cars and houses and few if any vacations, driving and staying in motels along the way, and working later and longer into your life.

The answer? 

Whichever you think is better, of course. 

We all make our own choices. We all have different things we want to get out of work.  And we all work differently. 

I ascribe to the theories laid out in Rework, one of my personal bibles.  I’ve seen co-author Jason Fried speak and I’m buying everything he’s selling.  Which, basically, is “Build it, and they will come.”

When it comes to work, one thing is undeniable and unarguable:  We all need to work.  Which means we all need time away from work. 

So the fact that there’s a day expressly designed for us to not work is pretty awesome and should be celebrated.

Hope you did absolutely nothing but not work yesterday.