Archive for the 'writing' Category

Download chapter 1 of “Night without Marie”

I’ve started writing again in the last weeks – writing for myself. Writing longer passages of text just for the sake of it, preparing to write more, to write prose, to write something that others might enjoy reading in the end.

Today I’m taking it to the next stage – publishing something small. It is a first try, please be gentle. So far only this exists, it is a first draft of a first chapter. There could be more. Let me know what you think in the comments, I’d appreciate it.

DOWNLOAD: Night without Marie – Chapter 1 (PDF)

What keeps me from blogging – and what my “life title” is

A long preface (or: What keeps me from blogging these days)
My relationship with writing has taken a steep downturn since I started working. Not that I don’t write at work – quite the contrary. I write all the time – but the style required in consulting is quite different from what I write elsewhere, for example in a blog. It’s not prose – I hardly touch a word processor, so most of my writing has come down to concise half-sentences in bullet points on powerpoint slides. That’s an art in itself, for sure – making a precise argument in limited space… but I find it all the harder to get back to the keyboard and write a “real” text.
That’s what keeps me from blogging. Looking back at how the syllables just flowed into the keyboards a few years back, especially during my stints abroad… I miss that ease of writing. To some point, the carelessness as well. The hurdle to just sit down and write has become higher, and most often, I don’t jump it.

Today, though, a late Saturday night – I’m trying again. This, as I am on vacation for the next three weeks, is one of the things I want to do right now: Get my fun and ease of writing back.

My life title
You’ve been wondering what that “life title” thing is, right? Well, most people have a job title. I’m a “Consultant”. That says something – though not terribly much- about what I do for a living, and it describes that part of me… but that is not and shouldn’t be all there is to me. Over the last weeks, I have stumbled across two little things that came almost as a revelation to me. As most great things, they are terribly simple – almost mundane – but they have a profound impact on me.

Little thing #1: I read an article of the author/trainer/old school “management guru” Tom Peters, where he states:

Enthusiasm is the sine qua non of success … at anything.

Hence, I command:

The Very First Item on EVERY job criteria list shall hereinafter be:

“Enthusiast.”

Every.
Job.
Enthusiast.
First.
Period.

That rang a bell with me. That was me. An Enthusiast. I am at my best when I am enthusiastic about something, and I live for moments, ideas, people, things, plans, projects, visions to be enthusiastic about. There’s a good reason why I chose the saying by Charles Kingsley (which is often falsly attributed to Einstein) to be my motto in our graduation book:

We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us really happy is something to be enthusiastic about.

That’s me: Florian Hollender. Enthusiast.
But WHAT am I enthusiastic about? Is there a common theme? A denominator that carries all through life? I found it, that is…

Little thing #2: As I said, it is really simple, no surprise at all, but I never saw it in that light. Lying awake in bed one night (cheese, but not made up), I realized the common thread that spans through all my hobbies, all the things I carry a torch for: It is people, and it is technology. I love climbing, because it requires technique, technical equipment and teamwork. Same goes for diving. I love photography, because it enables me to a creative outlet through technology. I love computers, because they enable me to a whole universe of possibilities and activities, to connect and communicate in new ways. And so on, and so forth. Technology in itself is great, but when you put people and technology together, the world changes. Mine certainly does.

There you have it, my life title:

Florian Hollender.
Enthusiast for people and technology.

This week will be on fire

Wow, this week I’ll be burning. Instead of the usual two week assignment I now got a job for just five days, and it is a presentation that a VP will give to the CEO of a big company. I better not screw this up.

Have you read some of the free stuff from Tom Peters yet? Did you look into Lawrence Lessig’s book? Boy, it is almost Tuesday. Time to get moving!
Seriously. Look at Fran – she is going for it. There’s energy in the air. TIME TO GET MOVING!

The Saturday tip

It is Saturday folks, time to relax, enjoy time with friends and family, and to

  • listen to great music: Listen to Tubular Bells from Mike Oldfield. It is a historic piece, and you should listen to it on a real stereo, without having any distractions, in your living room. Get comfy, put it on, and get happy. I am not kidding – listening to this record actually makes me smile (and dance through the room, but that is a different story). I got this record as a gift from my father, which makes me realize that maybe I have grown up – at least partly – because isn’t it growing up to do something although your parents said it was right?

  • Write a real letter: Yep, the one with paper and pencil. But do it right – use a blank sheet of high quality paper (take one out of your printer if you have nothing else around), don’t use paper with lines and holes and whatever else on it. Don’t use the block of paper with a company logo on it you got at your last conference. And get your old fountain pen back to work: Using it does not only improve your handwriting that has been crippled by ballpoint pens, but the blue ink also looks classy.
    If you have trouble writing in straight lines, put a lined sheet of paper underneath. Write a letter to a friend, to your parents, to your grandparents – whoever you think of who has not heard from you in a while. Send it next thing Monday. I guarantee you, they will be amazed. Why do I know? Well, because of the letter I received yesterday that amazed me, and that now caused me to get paper and ink out again.