Wednesday, March 26, 2014

How to Retire Happy, Wild and Free by Ernie J. Zelinski

 
 
Canadian Ernie J. Zelinski provides an excellent book on planning for primarily the non-financial aspects of retirement.  I'd recommend it to anyone getting their first AARP card at age 50.   The advice is relevant for anyone out of college but the target audience is a bit older. 

He focuses on several aspects that affect the quality of retirement - Health, Creativity, Social Connections, Age of retirement, Mental Fitness, Travel and relocation.

Of interest to me was the graphic on health.  After the age of 50 the probability that someone will have very good to excellent health declines proportionally with age.  At 50 the chance is 50% with the formula (100 - age).  At age 70 you have a 30% chance of optimal health.  Health is a primary determinant of how well a person enjoys retirement. 

Having a passion or strong interest in continually improving yourself strongly determines success in retirement.  Continually working on improving a skill or working on learning new things at the edge of our comfort zone allows us to be fully alive. 

 
Ernie J. Zelinski - transition from work to retirement - 3 minutes
 

Spark by Julie Burstein




Julie Burstein has interviewed many creative people over the years at Public Radio's Studio 360.  This book explores the creative process of each individual in sections up to 10 pages in length. 

Some artists like Yo Yo Ma start each day with a ritual.  He plays the same Bach piece as a warm up on his cello named Petunia.  Each day it will sound different based on the temperature and the humidity. 

Other artists such as Kevin Bacon, Alexander Payne describe how their family or their background shaped their creative process.  Many artists describe methods for generating creative ideas and the long process of refining it until it is finished and celebrating the moment.

The book provides an eclectic look at creative people in the arts.  The artists describe the often nonlinear path to creative insight or the journey to find the appropriate medium for self expression.  I appreciated the variety from musicians, photographers, poets, film makers, actors and sculptures of art weighing several tons. 



Four lessons in Creativity TED talk - 17 minutes


Julie Bernstein - How Creativity Works 91 minutes

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Miracles and Massacres by Glen Beck



Glen Beck describes ten lesser known events from American History in gritty detail.  The events start with the Revolutionary War and end with 911.  Heroes and antiheroes share the pages.   Shay's rebellion and the attempted kidnapping of Thomas Jefferson provide information on lesser known events.

Each story is told as a narrative and the author clearly lays out parts of the story including dialogue that fit the facts but we have no way of knowing if these were the exact words spoken.  This allows history to come alive without being dishonest in its presentation. 

The stories illuminate  the history of an imperfect often unjust country that often makes snap judgments based on limited information.  Glen relays the story of a woman wrongly accused of being Tokyo Rose.  She was a US citizen trapped in Japan as the war started. She was convicted by the press based on inaccurate information.

The battle of Athens describes how GI's coming back from the war took back a town from a corrupt police department.  Unchecked power leads to corruption.

The  911 story describes the domino effect that resulted because 20th hijacker was not allowed to enter the US.  This hijacker did not make it on flight 93 that crashed in Pennsylvania.  In this case, the actions of ordinary citizens doing there job and trusting their instincts prevented additional tragedy and brought others to justice.



Tokyo Rose story - 5 minutes

 

The Measure of a Man by Sidney Poitier



Sidney Poitier's autobiography covers his life from Cat Island in the Bahamas through his journey through Florida to New York and eventually California.  This is a journey of a principled man who for significant part of his early life lived on the edge of failure and close to death.   The culture in Florida attempted to put him in his place and define his options by the color of his skin.  Because he grew up away from that culture he did not allow others to define who he was.  As a teenager, he traveled from Florida to New York because he has about thirty dollars in his pocket, the train fair is less than $13 and it is far away from Florida.

He fell into acting because of an ad for actors on the page opposite the job listing for dishwashers in New York.  He was thrown out of his first audition and told he should get a job as a dishwasher.  He learns English and proper diction on work breaks with the help of an older Jewish worker at the restaurant.  He spends years learning his craft.  Running an unsuccessful restaurant trying to scrape together money in between acting jobs while supporting a growing family.

Sidney talks about the mysterious process that turns the negative energy of anger into forgiveness and reconciliation.  Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela all went through the long process to make that transition.  Sidney uses that sense to survive life on his own terms.  He turns down movie parts that do not reflect on who he is or what he wants to represent.

Sidney honors the efforts of his parents.  They worked extremely hard for their family.  His mother would collect large boulders and break the rocks apart by hand into gravel sized pieces.  This would take one to two weeks.  She would then sell the gravel to a local company who would drive by and pick it up.  She would rest a week and start the process again. 

Sidney provides candid information about the effects of divorce on his children and the advice he received from Harry Belafonte about being there for them.  He found the relationship worked best was when he listened to them and didn't offer advice.  The effort paid off and he now has an excellent relationship with his daughters after several stormy years.



Sidney Poitier - daughters and book discussion - Oprah - 11 minutes