Personal
Authority and Authors, Social Media and Social Contracts
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 11/28/2012 - 07:00As part of the CT Health Leaders Fellowship program, I've been challenged to come up with "S.M.A.R.T." goals about my personal leadership. I've been thinking a lot about this, and trying to think out what goals make the most sense for me.
I have a certain ambivalence to traditional views of leadership, as I mentioned in my previous post, where I posted the old question, "Are you a leader, are you a follower, are those the only two options?" To a certain extent, we are all leaders, if we are willing to take up our leadership, or to toss in another quote, "One man, with courage, is a majority".
When I think about traditional views of leadership, I think about inside/outside strategies. Are you a leader on the inside? Have you been authorized to lead within an existing empowered social structure? Are you a leader of an outside group, perhaps authorized by a different existing social structure, the loyal opposition, to challenge the existing empowered social structure? Again, are these the only two options? Are the only two options inside the box, or outside the box? Is being outside the box, still defining you in the context of the current box?
I've attended several Group Relations conferences. Their titles often begin with the word 'Authority'. This begs a question, where does authority come from? How does it get formed? It is worth noting that 'authority' and 'author' come from the same root, to increase or augment.
To the extent that a person is writing within an established system, their authorship, their authority, is recognized by people reading what has been written; by the writings being cited by other authors. These ideas form a framework for a social contract affecting the way people deal with one another.
In the age of the Internet, just about anyone can publish whatever they want. It's easy, just set up a blog. That's what I did. But setting up a blog doesn't mean that anyone will read what you've written, much less, agree, share, or act upon your words, or that enough people will act upon your words to grant you any real authority.
Through using social media, you can reach a larger audience and potentially find others for whom your writing will resonate. You can use social media, within your existing social context, to ask people to join you and share your thoughts, to create new coalitions, new contexts, and from there, establish authority that is less anchored to existing empowered social structures.
Yet what are the things in our lives that prevent us from becoming authors and developing new audiences, new coalitions, and new authority? How does it relate to the social structures we grew up in, in our families, in our schools, churches and communities?
These are important questions that need to be asked, to help add a little meat to the bones of new ideas about authority, authorship, social contracts and social media. For me, this meat on the bones needs to be S.M.A.R.T., Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Timely.
So, my current challenge is to come up with Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant and Timely goals around using social media to reevaluate our social contracts in the Internet Era. It seems very relevant and timely, the question becomes, what is specific measurable and attainable and what is blocking me from reaching these goals?
142 Pine Meadow Road
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 11/25/2012 - 22:04If you look on a map of 142 Pine Meadow Road, you won't find a farmhouse there any more. It is long gone. The land was bought by the power company decades ago to build a pumped storage hydro-electric facility. I visited the area once several years ago for a family reunion. Fiona was probably about four at the time, and when we told her we were going to a family reunion, she asked, "Who died?"
Today, I read an article, How to Find Cool Stuff in the Newly-Released 1940 Census Data, or, Cyberstalking Your Grandparents. I followed the links and soon found the page about 142 Pine Meadow Road. The 1940 Census was shortly before my mother's ninth birthday and she was the youngest person living there. Her two oldest siblings were already married and living in different parts of town. Her father, eldest brother and one of her brother-in-laws were working at the tool shop; I believe that would have been Millers Falls Tools.
It would have been interesting to speak with my mother about the information in the 1940 census. Who did own the house at 142 Pine Meadow Road? Who were the neighbors? Alas, close to a month ago, the last person who was living at that house in 1940, my mother, passed away. The history became a little more remote.
Today, my middle daughter posted a cartoon with the caption, "Those who don't study history are doomed to repeat it. Yet those who do study history are doomed to stand by helplessly while everyone else repeats it." Until my senior year of college, I had always been taught that history mostly about white European men, the wars they fought, and who led them. Yes, there would be an occasional queen here and there, but history was all about who wielded what power. Art history was much the same. In my senior year, I took some great female studies courses and learned more about the forgotten parts of history, women, artisans, daily people in their daily lives.
Related to this, I stumbled across a video, American Tintype. It talked about spending time to capture and create things of beauty, a much more deliberate act than snapping a picture with a cell phone today. What can we learn from Harry Taylor, or from my mother that isn't taught in history classes? Instead of looking at what we might be doomed to repeat, what might we be doomed to forget?
I know that my mother, like all of us, had her struggles, but the parts that I chose to remember, to hold on to, were the simple parts of the life of a farm girl growing up on the banks of the Connecticut River. My mother and all her siblings are now dead. The house they grew up in is now long gone. The memories of the simple joys of that life are fading. Before it fades much further, perhaps all of us needs to spend more time deliberately creating things of beauty.
Thanksgiving Memories
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 11/24/2012 - 18:19The steel grey sky hangs over the small black pond, supported by the dark brown barren tree trunks that were not felled by the most recent storm. Even inside the house it feels damp and chilly. It feels like life is finally catching up.
There was the campaign, the storm, the death of my mother, the long days without electricity, the election, a high school reunion, Thanksgiving, and stress at the office. I've kept my head down and pushed onward, like I would as a child coming home in a blizzard.
At night, I go to bed early, exhausted. My dreams haven't been tormented but they've been complicated; intricate and chaotic. They flee in the morning, leaving little but additional fatigue and a sense of… A sense of what? It isn't dread or foreboding, nor is it of some happy resolution just around the corner. No, there's something more to come, I just don't know what.
So, I rest. I try to find moments to write. My mother's death has left me reflective, and I think back on the Thanksgivings of my childhood. As a kid, there would be nuts and grapes. There would be celery with peanut butter or with cream cheese. There would be pillow mints. We would snack on this as we watched the Thanksgiving Day parade on our small little black and white television.
My mother would be busy in the kitchen. The turkey would be cooking. She always covered it with bacon. I guess that was to keep the white meat from being dry, but we always viewed that as the best part and would snitch pieces of bacon off the bird when it was taken out of the oven. We would have five kernels of corn to remember the Pilgrim's Thanksgiving. We would make turkeys and pilgrim hats out of construction paper. Living in Massachusetts, the shadow of the pilgrims was always near by.
Years passed. I went off to college and would come home for Thanksgiving. I remember heading off to church on Thanksgiving morning. I would sing, "Now thank we all our God." It reminded me of my earlier days and hymns I imagined my pilgrim ancestors might have sung. I got a job and moved to New York City. Some years, I cooked Thanksgiving dinner with friends in New York. The first time, I didn't find where the giblets where in the neck cavity and they cooked in a plastic bag inside the turkey.
Other times I would come home for Thanksgiving. It was during those years that I started skiing avidly. Jiminy Peak often would open on Thanksgiving day, sometimes just with a single run available. I would ski hard all morning and then come home with a large appetite for the Thanksgiving dinner.
Eventually, the trips to Williamstown subsided as I had Thanksgiving dinner with my own children. One year, during my divorce, I had Thanksgiving dinner with relatives of some friends. I was the wounded stranger. I sat at the Thankgsgiving table, trying to make conversation while I suffered from deep depression. Soon afterwards I met Kim. Her mother died before Thanksgiving so we had our first Thanksgiving dinner together at an inn in Vermont. It was a difficult time for both of us.
Yet time rolled on, healing old wounds and bringing new ones. Mostly, we had Thanksgiving Dinner with Kim's family. One year, we rented a house out on Cape Cod and had a large family gathering there. We walked on the cold wind swept beeches. We visited the Pilgrim's Tower. We even put oysters in some of the stuffing.
This year, we had Thanksgiving dinner at Kim's parents' house. It was quiet and uneventful. I drifted off into a turkey induced slumber afterwards. Yesterday, we gathered at the house of some friends in Woodbridge for a 'day after Thanksgiving' gathering that was also quite enjoyable.
Now, the sky outside has darkened. The wind has picked up and the dog as barking at something unknown out in the dark. Soon, we will have dinner and I'll see what sort of dreams tonights sleep brings.
Let Us Now Praise High School Friends
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 11/18/2012 - 21:16Life is the process of gathering an intricate mosaic of emotional scars. Reunions can be times to pick at the scabs and develop new scars, or to find the beauty in some of the patterns. For me, my thirty-fifth high school reunion fell more into the later category.
I've always worried about how much I can say in my blog posts about family members, classmates, and coworkers. Will my words upset some? Am I saying more than I should? I self-edit my comments, and so some of what happened at the Williams Inn will stay at the WIlliams Inn.
Prior to the reunion, I agreed to go on a hike in Hopkins Memorial Forest. As I waited for other classmates to show up, I looked for some reading material to help me enjoy my time waiting for the hike to being. I stumbled across Look Homeward, Angel and started reading. I've read parts of this and other works by Wolfe at other times, it it seemed somehow appropriate.
The walk ended up being just a classmate of mine and myself. Both of us had recently had a parent die, in very different circumstances and so our memories were intermixed with grief. We talked about other classmates that had been mutual friends that were not going to be able to make it to the reunion. The emotional scars of these recent losses were still bright, and yet we were able to find some beauty.
At the reunion, we all soon broke into our traditional groups. Popular students gathered boisterously around the bar. Others, oblivious to some of these dynamics sat quietly at tables and talked. One of my classmates spoke about how her husband had been oblivious to her overtures to him in the early days of their courtship. Another spoke about how he didn't really think there were cliques in our class. I sat amongst the oblivious, looking for patterns.
Perhaps cliques are too strong a word, and I spoke about stratification. We all tend to self-select people that we are most comfortable being with and this self-selection stratifies a population by various factors, interests, socio-economic status, which town we lived in when we were young, and many others.
As we get older, we experience more losses, we develop new emotional scars and hopefully, we learn a little bit along the way. These losses in our later years can be very profound, but often those emotional scars from our high school years can be much deeper and hurt much more.
I was timid in my youth. I didn't share my thoughts or feelings readily, out of fear of being laughed at or ridiculed. Then, I would be hurt because no one seemed to be aware of my thoughts of feelings. In retrospect, my folly is obvious, but at the time, all that was obvious to me was my own hurt.
Another thing that was not obvious to me was that others had similar suffering. Even those, whom to me seemed the happiest and most popular, I later found had similar pangs of self-perceived inadequacy.
With thirty-five years of emotional scars layered upon those of my high school years and the revelations that come along with it, I was less timid and more open to listening to my classmates. I found I could move beyond the group of people I was most comfortable with and talk with a wide array of classmates.
I found the stories of my classmates beautiful and moving, fitting nicely along side the great writings of people like Thomas Wolfe, James Agee,William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald. I found the beauty in the patterns of intricate mosaics of emotional scars of my classmates.
It was a wonderful reunion and I thank all the friends from high school, especially those whose friendships I had never really recognized or appreciated.
Getting Ready for High School
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 11/14/2012 - 07:37They say that time heals all wounds, yet I sometimes wonder if that applies to the wounds from the high school years. Those wounds are some of the smallest, but also some of the deepest.
I remember going to a high school reunion decades ago. Maybe it was ten years after high school. All of the old feelings came back, all of the old hurts, inadequacies, and old patterns of being. Yet high school wasn't really difficult for me. I wasn't really bullied, at least as far as I was aware or could remember. Sure, I wasn't part of the cool kids table, but I had my fair share of friends.
Now, a quarter of a century after that reunion, I'm heading up to Williamstown for another high school reunion. Things that would bother me back in high school, are now minor things that I probably wouldn't even notice these days. It will be difficult. The past few weeks have been exhausting, between the storms, the election, and my mother's death.This will be my first time in Williamstown since her death.
Yet this time, I am going to relax. Kim and I are going to stay at the Inn and not at my mother's old house. We're going to enjoy dinner and discussions. I won't be as desperately seeking approval as I did during the high school years, and if I don't get noticed by one person or another, it won't hurt the way it did in high school.
I'm older now, hopefully much wiser too. I realize that much of the pain was self-inflicted. I suspect that most of the slights that hurt me most in high school were probably unintentional. Most likely, most of them were unintended and the person that so aggrieved me didn't even know it.
Perhaps this time, instead of remembering feelings of inadequacy, my friends and I from high school will be able to remember some of the best parts, for they really were wonderful magical years.
It is often said that youth is wasted on the young. If I could relive those high school years without the traumas and dramas, they would have been so joyous. Yet, perhaps it is the painful growth and transformations of those high school years that also allowed for some of the most spectacular moments.
Maybe, I'm finally ready for high school.