Life has been so busy lately, work, home, kids, church, friends, GOLF, have been consuming, or at least that is my story and I am sticking to it. I think I have just been in an internal reflecting phase versus and not an external communication mindset.

Blogs are good for outputting to others and I suppose can be a cathartic tool for journaling and capturing what the mind is conjuring. Sometimes text just seems so 19th century, all the typing, the spelling the fonts, formatting, categories, I know what a whiner, sorry.

Have a blessed day…

Steve

I received this story via email today:

He  writes: My lead flight attendant came to me and said, “We  have an H.R. on this flight.” (H.R. stands for human remains.) “Are they military?” I  asked.

‘Yes’,  she said.

‘Is there an escort?’ I asked.

‘Yes, I already assigned him a seat’.

‘Would you please tell him to come to the flight deck. You can board him early,” I said..

A short while later, a young army sergeant entered the flight deck.  He was the image of the  perfectly  dressed soldier.  He introduced himself and I asked him about his soldier. The escorts of  these fallen soldiers talk about them as if they are still alive and still with us.

‘My soldier is on his way back to Virginia,’  he said.  He proceeded to answer  my questions,  but offered no words.

I asked him if there was anything I could do for him and he said no.  I told him that he had the toughest  job in the military and that I appreciated the work that he does for the families of our fallen soldiers. The first officer and I got up out of our seats to shake his hand.  He left the flight deck to find his seat.

We completed our preflight checks, pushed back and performed an uneventful departure.  About  30 minutes into our flight I received a call from the lead flight attendant in the cabin. ‘I  just found out  the family of the soldier we are carrying, is on board’, she said.  She then proceeded to tell me that the father, mother, wife and 2-year old daughter were escorting their son, husband, and father home.  The family was upset  because they were unable to see the container that the soldier was in before we left.  We were on our way to a major hub at which the family was going to wait four hours for the connecting flight home to Virginia  .

The father of the soldier told the flight attendant that  knowing his son was below him in the cargo compartment  and being unable to see him was too much for him and the family to bear.  He had  asked the flight attendant if there was anything that could be done to allow them to see him upon our arrival. The family wanted to be outside by the cargo door to watch the soldier being taken off the airplane.. I could hear  the desperation in the flight attendants voice when she  asked me if there was anything I could do.. ‘I’m on  it’, I said. I told her that I would get back to her.

Airborne communication with my company normally occurs in the  form of  e-mail like messages.  I decided to bypass this system and contact my flight dispatcher directly on a secondary radio. There is a radio operator in the operations control center who connects you to the telephone of the dispatcher. I was in direct contact with the dispatcher..  I  explained the situation I had on board with the family and what it was the family wanted.  He said he understood and that he would get back to me.

Two hours went by and I had not heard from the dispatcher.  We were going to get busy soon and I needed to know what to tell the family.  I sent a text  message asking for an update.  I  saved the return  message from the dispatcher and the following is the text:

‘Captain, sorry it has taken so long to get back to you. There  is policy on this now and I had to check on a few  things. Upon your arrival a dedicated escort team will  meet the aircraft.  The team will  escort the family to the ramp and plane side.  A van will be used to load the remains with a secondary van for the family.  The family will be taken to their departure area and escorted into the terminal where the remains can be seen on the ramp.  It is a
private area for the family only.  When the connecting aircraft arrives, the family will be escorted onto the ramp and plane side to watch the remains being loaded for the final leg home.  Captain, most of us here in flight control are veterans.    Please pass our condolences on to the family.  Thanks.’

I sent a message back telling flight control thanks for a good job.   I printed out the message and gave it to the lead flight  attendant to pass on to the father.  The lead flight  attendant was very thankful and told me, ‘You have no idea how much this will mean to them.’

Things started getting busy for the descent, approach and  landing.   After landing, we cleared the runway  and taxied to the ramp area.  The ramp is huge with 15 gates on either side of the alleyway.  It  is always a busy area with aircraft maneuvering every which way to enter and exit.  When we entered the ramp and checked in with the ramp controller,  we were told that  all traffic
was being held for us.

‘There is a team in place to meet the  aircraft’, we were told.  It looked like it was all coming  together, then I  realized that once we turned the seat belt sign off,  everyone would stand up at  once and delay the family from  getting off the airplane. As we approached our gate, I asked the  copilot to tell the ramp controller we were going to stop  short of the gate to make an announcement to the passengers.   He did that and  the ramp controller said,  ‘Take your time.’

I  stopped the aircraft and set the parking brake.   I pushed the  public address button and said,  ‘Ladies and gentleman, this is  your Captain speaking I  have stopped short of our gate to make a  special  announcement.  We have a passenger on board who deserves our honor and respect.  His Name is  Private XXXXXX,  a soldier who recently lost his life.   Private XXXXXX is  under your feet in the cargo hold.  Escorting him today is  Army Sergeant  XXXXXXX.  Also, on board are his father,  mother,  wife, and daughter.  Your entire  flight crew is  asking for all passengers to remain in their seats to  allow the  family to exit the aircraft first. Thank you.’

We continued the turn to the gate, came to a stop and  started our  shutdown procedures.  A couple of  minutes later I opened the cockpit door.  I  found the two forward flight  attendants crying,  something you just do not see.  I wastold  that  after we came to a stop, every passenger on the aircraft  stayed in their seats, waiting for the family to exit  the  aircraft.

When the family got up and gathered their things, a  passenger slowly started to clap his hands.   Moments later more passengers  joined in and soon  the entire aircraft was clapping.  Words  of ‘God  Bless You’, I’m sorry, thank you, be proud, and other kind   words were uttered to the family as they made their  way down the  aisle and out of the airplane.  They  were escorted down to  the ramp to finally be with  their loved one.

Many of the passengers disembarking thanked me for the  announcement I  had made.  They were just words, I  told them,  I could  say them over and over again,  but nothing I say will bring back  that brave soldier.

I  respectfully ask that all of you reflect on this event  and the sacrifices that millions of our men and women  have made to ensure  our freedom and safety in these  United  States of AMERICA .

Foot note:
As a Viet Nam Veteran I can only think of all the veterans including the ones that rode below the deck on their way home and how they were treated. When I read things like this I am proud  that our country has not turned their backson our soldiers returning from the various war zones today and give them the respect they so deserve.

I know every one who has served their country who reads this will have tears in their eyes, including  me.

Prayer chain for our Military… Don’t break it!

Please send this on after a short prayer.. Prayer for our soldiers Don’t break it!

Prayer:

‘Lord, hold our troops in your loving hands. Protect them as they protect us.  Bless them and their families for the selfless acts they perform for us in our time of need. Amen..’

Prayer Request: When you receive this, please stop for a moment and say a prayer for our troops around the world.

GOD BLESS YOU!!!

I am very grateful for all of the connections, friends and followers I have accumulated over the years but it is hard to keep everyone current with my actions without being a pest so I thought I would write the post below as a form of update.

Employment:

I left CASNET last November after almost three years as VP of Sales and Marketing. I learned a great deal about the structured content management industry, from scanning to software it is an interesting marketplace.

In January of this year I started working with a company called AWH. They are a small (15 employee) software development firm that wanted to invest in me to help them take a product to market more effectively, the product is named GeoDocs and is the backbone for doing almost anything through a website. We had a good first 3 months and effective April 1 I came on board as what I call the Chief Growth Officer and am principally responsible for sales, marketing and channel development. It is a great opportunity as I now have at my fingertips a ‘best in class’ software development team that will let us be very responsive to our markets.

Hobbies:

Those of you who know me well know I have many interests, I love to learn and am always exploring. A couple of old friends of mine,Craig and Sue James and I have been brain ’storming’ together over the last several months things that range from lifestyle minimalization to short-form video, I am grateful for their contribution of time and love to this effort. We don’t worry about where it will lead but just enjoy the journey and trust that good things will happen.

Digital Storytelling – One thing that has happened for me as a result of these discussions is my growing interest in digital storytelling, what is it, how can it be used, why does it matter, how can it be accomplished and so on. Right now I am starting to work on one Digital Story for Geeta Morris a church member who died last October of cancer at age 35. A fellow member made up a great physical scrapbook with written notes but I intend to do the same thing with images and audio for her family.

Golf – I have been working all winter on my golf game and I hate to say but I think addiction is setting in, actually I am really enjoying the process being followed for improvement and learning how to self-diagnose errors and problems.

My Faith:

I continue to work on discovering and evolving my personal spirituality, I just finished a program during lent called Unbinding Your Heart which aided this personal exploration through small groups and conscious prayer. I was re-elected to our Vestry in January (kind of a board of directors) and continue my work with several community missions. I have also started a new one that aims to bring prayer to those in need in our community, prisons, halfway houses, women’s shelters, food pantries and more are opportunities for what I call applied prayer.

My Family:

Everyone is healthy, allergies, colds, tooth decay, braces continue but nothing major, we are blessed. Adam (age 26) is going to school full time in Minneapolis, Liz (Age 15) is doing well in school and has really evolved into a good video editor, Hannah (Age 12) is also a great student and is our Ace of Cakes, she has taken 10 weeks of cake decorating lessons and is amazing. Melinda (the wife) continues to really drive her knitting group in new service directions, she can crank out a scarf in minutes I swear.

Thanks:

If you took the time to read this thanks, I am grateful for your support, even if it is just psychic energy in nature. I hope everyone keeps looking at the glass half-full and remember, you move toward what you think about.

Here are some of my social bookmark locations, let’s connect:

My Twitter Page

My LinkedIn Page

My Facebook Page

Steve

Public vs PrivateYesterday through two different forms of media, a local newspaper and a global TV network I heard the same news story, that being about the new definition of ‘Two Americas.’ Now it is probably not what you think, it is not black vs white nor rich vs poor but rather private employment vs public sector employment.

From July 2008 to July 2009 public sector employment (government) increased by 238,000 workers and private sector shrunk by 5.2 million workers, public sector employees averaged $79,197 in wages versus a private sector average of $49,935.

In addition it was announced that for the first time public sector union membership surpassed private sector union membership and with continued stimulus spending the odds are that these trends will continue.

So the new ‘Two Americas’ definition is public sector union employees versus private sector non-union employees. There seems to be a great deal of anger evident today and I think this new reality as evidenced above is a growing contributor to the tension and anger. It is not a good situation and will have unintended consequences.

Here is one such consequence, our local school district failed to pass a levy last November, is was a large levy and it lost significantly. So the school board held public forums to listen to citizens (a good thing always) and what they heard overwhelmingly was that until labor gets under control don’t dare bring up a levy. Comments were made like; the teachers need to share the burden, they need wage freezes or cuts, they need to pay more for their benefits, their generous pensions should be reduced. Hey, us in the private sector are experiencing those things and so should the public sector before we think about giving you more money.

It just so happens that the labor agreement is up for negotiations so the school board delayed putting the levy on the ballot for May until the labor issue is solved and that the citizens see evidence of progress. So in this local issue the ‘Two Americas’ defined above are doing battle at a distance today but I predict it will probably get worse before it gets better.

Now to make this personal; in the meantime the school district is going to cut over 100 teachers, this means less classes choices for my high school freshman, of course the majority of cuts seem to come from advanced placement and honors courses and my daughter is mad. She says “Dad it is the choice to attend those future classes that keeps me motivated to do well now’ she knows that to have more college and life choices that high school classes are critical, she sees that her choices are being reduced, and she is mad. Mad at the people who won’t vote for the levy and mad at the school board for not managing better.

I can’t say that I blame her for being mad, your thoughts?

The American Spirit I am sorry, I just have to get this off of my chest.

President Obama was in Ohio yesterday afternoon speaking at Lorain Community College with his latest theme ‘all jobs all the time.’ While I have no problem with the President speaking about jobs what continues to shock me is the citizenry reaction and expectation.

Most of the local TV networks the day before had multiple interview spots with the citizens of Lorain County which has been struggling for at least a decade with job losses, you know auto plants, steel mills, etc. What continues to frustrate me is how many people actually expect the President to be able to create a job for them, he will make it better is what they feel.

When did this patriarchal (someone who is the father figure and can fix all things) orientation begin? When did people stop taking personal responsibility for themselves and expect a politician to magically out of thin air give them a job. Maybe it is the fact that the government has branded itself as the solver of all problems, the caregiver to all that created the expectation.

But hold on, I know life is difficult for many people, I just helped feed a hundred families at church today and many of those don’t have the physical or mental capacity to be gainfully employed. I understand and have compassion for all humans but I pray they will take self-responsibility for their situation and do what they can to make it better and not rely on the ‘hope’ that our government will pull off a miracle for them.

Ok, I feel better now, thanks for listening. I have complete faith and ultimately know that what will make this economy better (we all act as if this has not happened before) is what many belittle today, the American Spirit. There are millions of individuals going to school to learn new skills, millions more looking for a way to start their own business, millions are working hard to find a job and millions more working even harder at the job they currently have.

Making our lives better happens one person at a time, repeated millions of times.

Twitter ImageryI have been reading the book by Maggie Jackson titled “Distracted, The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark Age.”

While the title peaks my curiosity the idea of a ‘Dark Age’ really gives me pause. As the title states the books major premise is that our instant message, twittermania and the ever faster pace of new communication modalities is crowding out our ability to ‘go deep’ on anything, human relationships included.

Here are a few of the questions she asks and attempts to answer:

Does intimacy survive a seemingly limitless realm of infinite prospects?

How does lives of perpetual movement shape our attachments to each other and change our experience of place?

My comments: First I think we need to keep in mind that only about one-sixth of the world’s population even has internet access, a smaller number have cellphones, an even smaller number use Twitter and many of the other technologies she discusses to make her point. So I caution the reader from joining in with some of the broad generalizations that are made in the book.

I think the author does a great job at making some surprising historical analogies to today’s technology landscape, like the stories of how early telegraph operators use to develop long distance love relationships with the new tool of which all the operators could monitor as well. Sound familiar?

Now to the ‘Dark Ages’ term. I am a half-full person so I have to work hard to see anything as only half-empty or dark without seeing the good and positive aspects of a technology. Of course I am not a culturalist or studier of the human condition.

I think there are many other signs and risks we are in a ‘Dark Age’ like starvation, wars, AIDS, Malaria, terrorism, self-explosion, child abuse, pedophilia, poverty, in fact we may already have ‘hell’ on earth without going anywhere.

Anyway, I suggest reading the book if you have an interest, it will provide a good snapshot of the author’s opinion of the impact of current technologies AND a historical perspective and even possibly help in learning to operate in today’s world.

For years I have been a PC user, always wanted to have a MAC but never made the switch. Over the last 2-3 years I have really tried to push myself to use web-based applications so that maybe one day I would only need a browser as my computing technology tool. I thought I might write a bit about my progress for those of you who might be thinking of a similar technology work style. Remember I am on a journey here, I don’t use everything yet, in fact only a fraction.

Of course the clear leader in this movement is Google. I will also mention some other web-based applications I use in addition to Google’s. I like Google, love the way the try to operate as a business, harness and use brainpower and best of all bring to the market a real wealth of great, smart, always improving web-based applications.

If you have comments, suggestions or questions just leave a comment.

Here are the web-base applications I currently use:

Personal Productivity

Google Gmail – I find Gmail has all of the functionality of any email tool I have ever used in a corporate setting. I really like how historical emails can be managed  and that strings of one email are broken into separate slices making it easy to access just the content that is important at that time.

Google Docs – Document creation, spreadsheet, presentations, forms and folder and file management is all done very well with this application. The key feature I like is I can share folders and documents with non-Google people. They can view and edit various documents without having to email them around.

Google Calendar – Easy to use, full featured calendar that again is shareable and I can also view or even integrate other calendars into mine, for example I have the Green Bay Packer schedule calendar integrated with mine.

Google Contacts – I use this as my contact management tool.

Google Reader – I use this to aggregate all of the various RSS feeds I follow into one location.

iGoogle – Not a big user here yet, kind of a way of creating your own web portal in an effort to get your arms around the incredibly large stream of content that is flowing. Probably will replace Google Reader for me.

Google Chrome – this is my web browser of choice, it is fast, easy to use and is continuously improved and extended.

Project Collaboration

Google Site – Build a simple personal website, enable others to share and contribute, a simple way to aggregate communication and elements of a project.

Google Wave – Brand new, I just started learning this tool this week, this is designed to enable live collaboration integrating any type of content or communication form that you can think of, looks promising and once developers starting writing extension applications this will be very powerful.

Box.net – This is another web-based document sharing site with a widget that will display within Linkedin.

Multimedia

Google You Tube – Aggregate all of your various various videos into your own channel or for personal sharing with family or to serve as your personal portal to all things video.

Google Picasa – Image management that connects your desktop with web-based image locations, I use it for keeping my family updated with all of our kids pictures and things. Nice image editor included and the ability to make movies and publish DVD’s from within the tool itself as well.

Flickr – A non-Google application that is like Picasa that I used early on to provide images for some other websites I started for some friends and organizations.

SlideShare – A non-Google application that lets you share presentations with the public including audio if you choose, so sort of like presentations as a movie.

ScreenR – A web-based tool that lets you make screencasts, record your screen and voice and share it with others, easy integration with iPhones, Twitter and others. Simple to use.

Networking

Twitter - I try to follow people who contribute value in my areas of interest and try to provide information and links of value as well. Some interesting global connections can happen here. Need something, anything, ask Twitter.

Facebook - I primarily use Facebook as a personal communication tool to family and friends, fun easy to use and has enable discovery of friends I haven’t seen in decades.

Linkedin – This is more like a business networking event, or facebook for business. A great tool for connecting, marketing yourself. I find Groups as a function in Linkedin is a very powerful way to connect with those in your industry or to do research on a topic.

Hootsuite - This is a tool that let’s you manage your content, track the results of your entries into the tools above, kind of like a dashboard for your various online networking tools.

Website

Wordpress – I am a big wordpress fan, this site is managed with Wordpress, it is free, open source and continously gets easier to use with new functionality.

Awstats – I use this tool through my web-hosting provider, almost all do. It is an excellent way to obtain stats about your website.

Conclusion

I never realized until writing this just how many different web-based applications I already use and I know there are thousands more out there to be discovered. Note: This movement is so pervasive that Google will be launching Google Chrome OS, a browser based operating system.

So if your thinking of diving into web-based applications, I say come on in the water is fine.

For years I have believed that this title was accurate. I haven’t always practiced it well but the belief is still there.

One of the things I have done during my current career transition is to do more self-discovery and self-analysis so that moving forward I can be my best self and represent myself effectively to whomever I might work with.

During this discovery and analysis a friend on Linkedin suggested that I check out the book ‘The Secret’ which I did. I also acquired the book ‘The Answer’ which expounds the principals of the The Secret as applied to business.

The main premise behind the secret is that our thoughts are literally physical, material things in our brains and as such they create the opportunity to interact with all other matter within the universe. As it turns out this explanation resonated with me and I have been pursuing some of the tenants of the book.

As it turns out you not only move toward what you think about but that other things move toward you that you think about. I know many people are skeptical of this whole line of thinking but our minds are powerful devices and it may behoove us to spend portion of our time better understanding how they work.

The video below is one basic affirmation piece that can be used to shape our thoughts, because the one thing we are the master of is our thoughts.

Abraham Lincoln 1864Up until 1863 each state in the U.S. chose their own day to celebrate Thanksgiving. In the middle of a civil war that originated based on preserving the union, Abraham Lincoln issued a proclamation to unite Thanksgiving to a common date for all states.

By the President of the United States of America.

A Proclamation.

The year that is drawing towards its close, has been filled with the blessings of fruitful fields and healthful skies. To these bounties, which are so constantly enjoyed that we are prone to forget the source from which they come, others have been added, which are of so extraordinary a nature, that they cannot fail to penetrate and soften even the heart which is habitually insensible to the ever watchful providence of Almighty God. Read the rest

Geeta Morris, Rest in Peace KiddoThis is a picture of a friend of mine from our church, Geeta Morris, this photo was taken in July of this year, sadly she died October 21.

She battled breast cancer for 6 years starting at age 28, without early detection, testing and many ‘on the edge’ treatments she would have died much earlier.

She was a mother of two, and touched the hearts of thousands here in little ol’ Medina, OH. She had such a great spirit and lived every day as if it were the last, unfortunately she was right way too soon..