Introverts


Hello, my name is Jim and I’m an introvert.

If you know me or ever met me, I doubt you would suspect that I am really an introvert.

I’m outgoing. I like people. I like to socialize. I like to go out to dinner, theatre, concerts, or other events. I am comfortable making presentations to large groups (and do so a regular basis). I meaningfully contribute in meetings.

So, how do I know I’m an introvert? A psychologist friend of mine offered me a simple test. He asked how I recharged my personal energy. If I was feeling tired and drained would I rather go out with people and socialize or did I prefer to be alone doing something of personal interest? My answer was the latter.

It can be much harder for some introverts, who are more uncomfortable in front of crowds or in socials situations. Take Kristen Stewart, the actress who played Joan Jett in the film The Runaways and portrays Bella Swan in Twilight and the sequels.

With wonderful performances in both independent and blockbuster films, Ms. Stewart is clearly a skilled and even gifted actress. When it comes to events related to the film industry – accepting awards, public appearances and doing interviews – she can be uncomfortable and awkward.

In the an interview published in the June 2010 issue of ELLE, Ms. Stewart acknowledged being an introvert when she discussed the loss of privacy that comes with fame, “I can’t be by myself, and I like being by myself.” Be aware that the full ELLE article may be not safe for work (NSFW) due to language.

Like many other introverts I know, Ms. Stewart is getting strong criticism for being uncomfortable in certain situations. Here’s a short except from the ELLE article:

What’s mystifying to Stewart — and likely to anyone with either a shred of empathy or a tendency to clam up in public — is the looking-glass reality in which her manner, rather than eliciting sympathy or mere shrugs, has made her a figure of derision. “I think it’s funny that when I go onstage to accept an award, they think I’m nervous, uncomfortable, and awkward — and I am — but those are bad words for them,” Stewart says. She still frets about her MTV Movie Awards appearance last year, during which she fumbled her award, a carton of golden popcorn (then blurted, “I was just about as awkward as you thought I was going to be. Bye!”).

Writing on the Introverts Corner blog for Psychology Today, Sophia Dembling compiled a list of some thoughts that annoy introverts.

She’s stuck up.Just ‘cause I’m not chattering at anyone within earshot, it doesn’t necessarily follow that I have judged people and found them wanting. Maybe I just don’t have anything to say at the moment. And really now, who’s judging whom here?

You don’t know how to have fun.I know how to have fun. It just doesn’t involve crowds, high decibels, or costumes. Maybe you’re the one who doesn’t know how to have fun–d’ja ever think about that?

You hate people.I do not. I like people, especially people I like. But even those I prefer in small numbers and controlled doses.

You’re not an introvert.Maybe I’m not what you think an introvert is, but if you’ll … let me explain, I’ll tell you what makes me an introvert.

Ms. Dembling’s full blog post is available here. Be aware there is some language that is NSFW.

If you interested in taking a short test to measure how introverted or extroverted you are, try this one by Susan Cain on the Psychology Today blog.

If you’re an introvert, what sort of comments do you hear about your desire (at times) to be alone? If you’re an extrovert, how do you engage and interact with introverts? Please add your thoughts by posting a comment.

Posted in New Skills, Quotes | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Pig and Cookies


Here’s something to help you get through the middle of the week with a smile. Thank you to LMM for pointing me to this video!

Warning! If your sense of humour is anything like mine, this short video will have you in tears. Also, people around you may look at you strangely because you are laughing so hard.

I wish I knew who the creator of this great bit of comedy is. If you know, please share in the comments. Thank you.

Posted in Videos, Wednesday Humour | Leave a comment

A Technique for Decision Making


Photo by Daniel Dale, used with permission http://www.flickr.com/photos/dandale/

It’s easy to get wrapped up in the decision making process when there isn’t a clear cut choice or there isn’t enough information to know which option is the most appropriate.

A common way to cut through the clutter of the decision is to simply flip a coin. Some times a coin toss is a great way to decide something – especially when any of the choices are beneficial or of low risk.

Another common way to deal with this situation is to collect more data and hope that leads to an obvious solution. Of course, the decision can become even harder when the extra information points out problems with all of the possible solutions. This is often the first step into the quagmire known as analysis paralysis.

One of my mentors in the advertising industry had a great technique for putting a limit on the amount of data collection or analysis that went into a decision. She would estimate the cost of the decision and then allow herself to spend up to half the cost in time and effort to make the decision.

To provide an example, let’s say you are making a decision on which scanner to purchase for the office (an item that would cost between $100 and $300). She would first average the expected cost ($150 in this case) and then she would allow herself to spend no more than $75 in staff time or research costs to make the decision.

Her belief was that too much time was being wasted on making small decisions (that had a limited impact on the organization) and not enough effort was going into the major decisions which could harm or benefit the organization for years.

Through the years since learning this technique, I have used it hundreds of times and always find it helps me break out of analysis paralysis.

What strategies do you have for making tough decisions or for avoiding analysis paralysis? Please share them in the comments.

Posted in New Skills | Tagged , | Leave a comment

TAL Online


Last week I wrote about The Alberta Library (TAL) and how it assists individual public libraries and their patrons to access more materials than are on the shelves of the local library.

One of the may services provided for library patrons by The Alberta Library is TAL Online, an easy way to search the library collections of TAL member libraries. With virtually all public and postsecondary Alberta libraries being members, this one search can check hundreds of libraries for the item you’re seeking.

There are several ways to use the TAL Online search engine. The video below, which I created for the Shortgrass Library System, will give you some suggestions.

Posted in Public Libraries, The Alberta Library, Videos | Leave a comment

Advertising Myths


There was a time in my 20′s when I was an Advertising Account Executive (isn’t that a great title?) for several radio stations. I really enjoyed working with clients to develop advertising campaigns and was very successful.

The radio stations I worked with were either rural stations that didn’t subscribe to audience measurement services like the Bureau of Broadcast Measurement, or metro stations that had older audience demographics. At the metro area stations it was difficult to sell advertising to many clients because they believed that the audience they wanted to talk to were adults (or specifically women) between the ages of 18 and 49.

What was interesting about this demographic demand was that when you looked at the individuals actually shopping and buying in these businesses they were often older than 49. Because many of these firms offered special discounts to customers over 55, it was possible to track sales (to a limited degree) to this demographic group. In many cases these customers would account for at least a third of all sales. Even in the face of this reality, the clients would still insist that they only wanted to reach customers between the ages of 18 to 49.

Clients believed that this audience had more disposable income to spend. Even though I had anecdotal evidence to the contrary, the clients dismissed the information.

Because of these experiences, I was delighted when I heard the episode titled Ageism in Advertising during the fifth season of Terry O’Reilly’s The Age of Persuasion on CBC Radio One. This episode originally aired on May 28th, 2011.

Here is CBC’s own description of this episode:

For the past 30 years, the advertising industry has worshipped at the altar of youth – because people 18 to 49 have the most disposable income. There’s only one small problem with that – it isn’t true. People 55+ spend the most money in almost all categories. They buy the most cars, spend the most on electronics, and control the most wealth. Yet advertisers aren’t chasing them. Join us this week, as we try and figure out why a touch of gray keeps advertisers away.

You can listen to the episode (or download it) here. It is about 27 minutes long and well worth listening to in it’s entirety.

Why I’m writing about this episode isn’t so much about personal vindication (although, to be honest, there is some of that). Rather it is to show that myths can blind us to what is really in our best interests. My clients could see and document that at least a third of their sales were being made by customers over 55 and yet they refused to act on this information to increase the success of their businesses.

There are other examples of this type of blindness to the real situation. In the aviation world one adage states “the average life expectancy of a novice pilot flying into clouds is about 30 seconds.” This is because the novice pilot loses sight of the ground and then refuses to believe what the aircraft’s instruments are telling him, believing instead what his body is feeling. This disorientation leads the pilot to make errors that cause the plane to crash. The Top 10 Pilot Errors article from Plane & Pilot will give you more information on this type of error.

What myths are we blinded by when we work in public libraries? Do we doubt the evidence that we can easily collect, in order to chase after a story we wish to be true? Do we test our beliefs empirically or do we follow myths?

Posted in Advertising, History, Public Libraries | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Sleep, Dreams and Insanity


Photo of Dr. William C. Demment

Dr. William C. Dement

“Dreaming permits each and everyone of us to be quietly and safely insane every night of our lives.”

This is a quote by Dr. William C. Dement, who is often referred to as the Father of Sleep Research. Dr. Dement is a professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science (Sleep Center) at the Stanford School of Medicine in Palo Alto, California.

If you have every suffered a bout of insomnia, you know that a lack of sleep can cause you to become irritable, forgetful and nauseous. A continued lack of sleep can led to hallucinations, disorientation and paranoia. There is even a fatal, and fortunately very rare, form of insomnia known as Fatal Familial Insomnia. Here is a link to a short documentary from the American ABC Television network about this illness.

Researchers and scientists still don’t have full answers about why humans need sleep or why we dream. Still, sleep must be valuable to humans in some way as John Medina, writing in his book Brain Rules, points out:

“Sleep makes us exquisitely vulnerable to predators. Indeed, deliberately going off to dreamland unprotected in the middle of a bunch of hostile hunters (such as leopards, our evolutionary roommates in eastern Africa) seems like a behavior dreamed up by our worst enemies. There must be something terribly important we need to accomplish during sleep if we are willing to take such risks in order to get it. Exactly what is so darned important?”

If you occasionally have trouble sleeping, or if you’ve ever had a period of insomnia, you may find some useful information at the End Your Sleep Deprivation website. This website is maintained by Dr. Dement and his Stanford students.

Posted in Quotes | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Panorama of the Sistine Chapel


This is one of those amazing opportunities that the Internet occasionally offers.

The Vatican Museum (Musei Vaticani) has created a panorama of the Sistine Chapel. Be sure to turn on your speakers, too. There is a beautiful choir singing hymns a capella.

This panorama allows you look up at the ceiling or look closely at the walls. You can zoom in and out and twirl about. In short this panorama allows to do things that would not be possible or would at least be frowned upon if you were to do them inside the real building.

Zoom in on the chapel ceiling frescoes by Michelangelo or the other frescoes by Botticelli, Perugino and Pinturicchio.

Michelangelo began the ceiling frescoes in 1508 and they were unveiled in 1512. Botticelli painted three fresco panels: The Temptation of Christ, The Trials of Moses, and The Punishment of Korah, Dathan and Abiram. Perugino completed several frescoes in the chapel between 1481 and 1482, however only his Giving of the Keys to St. Peter survives. Two of the frescoes that are credited to Pinturicchio are the Baptism of Jesus and Moses journeying to Egypt.

Irving Stone wrote a fictional account of the struggles between Pope Julius II and Michelangelo as he worked to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling. The book is titled The Agony and the Ecstasy. In 1965, this book was made into film of the same name, starring Charlton Heston as Michelangelo and Rex Harrison as Pope Julius II.

For more information about, or images of, the Sistine Chapel visit the Vatican Museums website.

Posted in History | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Who Knew?


At the APLEN Marketing and Promotions Committee meeting on Monday, November 21st, Caroline Vandriel of the Northern Lights Library System showed members of the committee the amazing poster you see to the left.

APLEN stands for the Alberta Public Library Electronic Network and it is a part of The Alberta Library.

This poster was created by Caroline and the Northern Lights summer student Alexis Millar, who did most of the design work on the poster.

This is an amazing poster. It is graphically arresting, it draws you in and it does a great job of showing the breadth of the collections of Public Libraries in Alberta.

The full size version of the poster (which is 11 x 17), in PDF format is available here to download.

Thanks for letting me share your great work, Caroline and Alexis!

Posted in Public Libraries, Success | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Make It Fly!


Another Wednesday! To inspire you to do amazing things with the rest of the work week, I offer these two videos of perseverance and ingenuity that result in amazing flying machines.

Radio controlled aircraft, especially helicopters, have always fascinated me. They pale beside the creations of Rupert Brandon-King and his friends.

Starting with the slightly absurd idea of wanting to see a washing machine fly, Rupert begins to wonder what would happen if you combine radio controlled helicopters and common devices around your home, like a clock radio, gas barbecue, lawn mower or front load washing machine?

Initially, you get lots of headaches trying to figure out how to make it all work. Then you end up with wild flying machines and this remarkable video. (Don’t miss the take off at the 2:14 mark – it’s beautiful, odd and surreal.)

This next video shows much more polished versions of these flying machines, including a clock radio that looks and behaves rather like a dragonfly (at about the 30 second mark). And don’t miss the flying egg beater at the 39 second mark.

These devises are whimsical and yet to me they show that imagination and wonder linked to ingenuity and perseverance lead to amazing results and are the key elements in creating all of the wonders of our 21st Century world.

Posted in New Skills, Videos, Wednesday Humour | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

The Assassination of John Fitzgerald Kennedy


Today marks a sad day in the history of the United States and the world. Because, 48 years ago today, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States, was gunned down in Dallas, Texas. You may have seen the various movies about this assassination or even the silent color film that Abraham Zapruder caught with his home movie camera on that awful day in Dealey Plaza.

The news of the assignation stunned America. Even veteran news reporter Walter Cronkite was shaken by the reports coming out of Dallas on November 22nd, 1963.

The tragedy of the day was compounded by the promise that was bound up in President Kennedy. He was youngest elected President (at the age of 43 years and 236 days). He had a young family with his beautiful wife, Jacqueline Lee Bouvier Kennedy. Just weeks after winning the 1960 presidential election, his son John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Jr. was born.

Kennedy brought a new vigor and enthusiasm into the White House, after years of lackluster leadership much as the election of Barack Obama did in 2008.

To get a sense of what might have been lost with Kennedy’s death, I invite you to watch this amazing inaugural address that John F. Kennedy made on January 20th, 1961.

Posted in History, Videos | Tagged , , | Leave a comment