Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Ever feel like you're losing your mind?



This is a mature Sea Squirt. It's really beautiful, isn't it? Translucent and 'Avatar' Blue, and all.

In its larval state, the Sea Squirt has a tail. It swims around to eat and get out of the way of danger. But when it matures it attaches itself to something and just absorbs the nutrients it needs from the water.

Oh, and it goes through one other transformational step -- it 'auto-digests' its brain. You see, like its tail, the Squirt no longer needs its brain, which was handy when there was a lot to do. So no more brain.

What an efficient bit of evolutionary adaptation!

And that's why I moved out of the suburbs.

Thanks to Dr. Stuart Brown and his book Play! as discussed on Dr. Ginger Campbell's always wonderful Brain Science Podcast.

Monday, January 04, 2010

How stories make sense of life ... and sometimes get in the way



Outliers is a sneaky book.

On first glance Malcolm Gladwell's title sounds like a statistics text; then just another book about outstanding achievers -- those plucky mail room clerks who end up running the company. But that's just the storyline he's trying to overcome.

He acknowledges that those clerks have to be smart, ambitious and hard working to rise to the top but notes that they'll never make it unless they have a lot of help -- and luck -- along the way.

'Well, that's a profound statement of the obvious!' you might say.

But it seems to me that myths like those peddled by Horatio Alger have contributed to our current plight. For thirty years we've been told that great men (and women) will rise to success if they can follow their own interests in a free marketplace and that society will benefit as a result. Great men rise up and society benefits from the trickle down.

Alan Greenspan was among the most powerful advocates of that kind of idea -- thanks a lot Ayn Rand! But in October of 2008 he testified before Congress that the current 'Great Recession' had caused him to question the narrative underlying his entire life.

For generations we've idolized men like Henry Ford and FDR, Reagan and Jack Welsh (more on him later) -- and Alan Greenspan -- while forgetting that each rose from communities that made their success possible.

The message I take from Outliers is to stop waiting for someone to save us and start building the kinds of communities that make it possible for the next generation to stand out.

Epilogue - By the way, when asked the secret of his success Jack Welsh said that it was his ability to tell compelling stories. While that's a great skill for 'outliers' maybe all of us could pay closer attention to the messier truths behind the stories we tell.