• Painter and sketch artist LeRoy Neiman, best known for evoking the kinetic energy of the world's biggest sporting and leisure events with bright quick strokes, died Wednesday at age 91.

    via www.huffingtonpost.com

    My brother and I used to raid our Crayola box and create our own versions of Mr. Neiman's unique impressionism. How I wish I still had the portrait I sketched of my brother's t-ball team. I thought it looked like a true LeRoy Neiman original! Thank you, Mr. Neiman, for reporting the major events of the day in your colorful way.

    http://www.leroyneiman.com/index.asp

  • TransmissionVerdant, hilly terrain was coming into view. Lattice towers transporting 230 kilovolts of electricity made the cool mountain air hum. I smiled as I felt lift-off. In an instant I was soaring over the entire valley. I was finally getting up and out of here. That's when the scene changed. I was slammed back into the stuffy room I was trying to escape. I was curled up, immobile, on a hard, flat surface. I opened my eyes to see four white walls through the early morning darkness. My eyes were fogged over, and I tried to recall if I'd taken their medicine this time. I was having difficulty focusing on the door. I wanted to cross the room to get to it, but I was frozen in place, stuck to the mattress like blue-striped ticking. I had a neighbor once who always used to say there was more than one way to skin a cat. I wanted to move my body. Instead, something else stirred and stretched as a blue vapor leaked from my chest. I watched it rise upward, while at the same time I saw myself scrunched in a ball on the bed. This was the way out, and the sensation was energizing me with the same power that sang across the cables stretched high above that green countryside. All I had to do was let go and allow the lightness to do its work. My head bumped the ceiling as I took one last glance back down at my shell. It was all so very easy, the business of escaping. Then I remembered this was a one-way trip. I hadn't packed and I hadn't planned. The timing was wrong, too. I gritted my teeth as I repeated over and over: I'm not ready to leave, I'm not ready to leave, I'm not ready to leave. Dust motes flurried about my head and mildew filled my nostrils. I hit the rickety mattress frame hard. The dull throbbing between my eyes returned and I coughed just to hear the familiar rattling of my lungs.

  • Workplace Survey 2012

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    What would make your work feel more meaningful?

    For my team members to take on a more entrepreneurial attitude as they go about their workday. We need to have a greater sense of ownership and commitment in what we do. We also need to be held accountable for our actions and inaction. Employees just sliding by are a problem for all large companies, not just for this department or specific business.

    How could the company better encourage new ideas?

    In my workgroup, a job rotation policy after two or three years would truly keep everyone on her/his toes. This movement and exchange/re-arranging of talent would create new ideas and fresh perspective. It would also encourage a sense of adventure which could make the workday more fun. Fun is underrated in corporate culture.

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