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much love and gratitude, madia

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Category: Introspection

09 Oct

What do Phoebe Logan and Steve Jobs have in common?

What a week. Last Friday morning my grandmother took her last breaths and the following week, as I rushed to finish her funeral program, Steve Jobs passes away. My grandmother was 93 and the hardest moment of my life thus far was watching that casket slowly descend into the ground.

I have to chuckle though at the thought of Steve Jobs and Phoebe chatting while waiting at the gates. He’d say something courteous like hello ma’am and then strike up a conversation with a question like what did u do with your life? My gran would say something like well, I raised my children, and was a foster parent to over 140 children. I worked for UNICEF, and traveled extensively teaching and learning. I opened the first SDA church in Sanniquellie, Liberia and I also ran a 300 acre farm that was primarily rubber and cocoa but also grew other things like pineapples.

I’m sure Steve would have the generational sensitivity to understand that Gran was 93 and had no idea what a iPod was but I imagine he’d tell her about his family and that he co-founded a company that changed the way we use and see computers.

This odd pair share some real commonalities though.

1. very strong personalities.
Phoebe stood at a maybe four feet, six inches but she had a 6’7″ personality. They were both demanding, aggressive, and sometimes forceful. I think that sometimes it was intentional because they knew people needed to be pushed.

2. pioneers to lead the way
Phoebe Amanda Reeves Logan was born in 1917 in Liberia, West Africa. How common do you think it was that an African woman would and could lead a 300 acre farm and have a career as an educator, traveling to foreign companies? Steve left Apple, started over and ended up having his old company (Apple) buy his new company (NeXT) for a pretty penny. The whole time, he was clear on his objective and comfortable in the low moments that came along with his vision.

3: the void they leave:
Not sure if the death of a 93 year-old should be shocking but there’s really no other way to explain it. She’d always been here. At the funeral I heard my dad say “I never thought my mother would die.” We didn’t know life without her.

When I heard about Mr. Jobs i paused in disbelief. How could they let this brilliant guy die? I was disappointed that we couldn’t keep him longer and I wondered how Apple would continue to innovate without their not so secret weapon. They both expected greatness, showed fearless leadership and lived with conviction

- and they will both be missed.

madia

26 Aug

Hurricanes, Earthquakes and the like

When you live in a place like D.C., you tend to worry about things like terrorists bombing the Pentagon or people attacking the President.  Don’t get me wrong.  Winter here is horrible.  Whoever said it was mild has never lived through a Phoenix summer.  But this week – I experienced an Earthquake.  NO, I wasn’t visiting California, I was on the 16th floor of my work building and felt a shaking.  You didn’t have to tell me to leave the building — but first (and here’s the tie in with my regular themes of technology and social media)

I went to google, typed in earthquake and looked at the news tab.  NOTHING.  So… I went to Twitter and BOOM!!! There were all kinds of comments.  Did you feel that?  DC earthquake started trending as a topic.  And yes… I tweeeted before I packed the laptop and ran down the stairs.  (all 16 flights thank you very much)

Twitter was first on the scene.  People were talking about traffic (so I avoided it) and my relatives and friends were communicating with me that way when the cell phone was just not working.

Now with the Earthquake behind us, Hurricane Irene is upon us.  There are a lot of cool things going on to keep people informed.  I love the google map links to Hurricane Irene information.  You can see the path and it’s really interactive. I also appreciate President Obama’s remarks and then the fact that the White House tweeted links to keep people prepared and informed.  Then again, Barry doesn’t play when it comes to social media…

So in a time of unexpected weather, Twitter was used to confirm and share stories and when there was expected weather, Twitter was used to inform and prepare folks for the weather.  Not bad.  Not bad at all.

@madia for my digital tweets @lovemadia for my music tweets.

 

17 Aug

Embracing Otherness – TEDTalk with Thandie Newton

You should know that I am a big fan of TEDtalks.  These are short lectures about varied topics that are so interesting and informative.  Thandie’s 15 minutes was about constantly feeling different.  The way she references “the self” is similar to the way Eckhart Tolle references “the ego”.  Her point is that the self can sometimes be an effective barrier to a strong connection to the world around you.  I actually agree with her there.  When we’re so caught up with ourselves, our ego, our needs – it helps us focus less on others’ suffering.  Check it out and let me know your thoughts!

http://www.ted.com/talks/thandie_newton_embracing_otherness_embracing_myself….