It was not your typical lemonade stand. Oh sure, it had the typical card table, loaded with lemonade and cups. It was manned by two boys. They were probably about 8 and 6 years old. They even had a sign.
Lemonade: fifty cents
Pictures: $1
Turns out they were on commission. The eight year old was running the lemonade business, the six year old was the artist. They were new to our neighborhood. They’d moved into a house in a new development just one block over.
Their budding business empire was being watched over by mom and a future partner still in diapers occupying a stroller.
What can you draw?
Oh, I can draw anything you want.
His confidence was overwhelming. I also wondered what a six year old might specialize in. I opted for something safe.
Do you like the Avengers?
Sure.
Who’s your favorite Avenger?
Probably the Incredible Hulk.
Why don’t you draw me a picture of the Hulk. Can you do that?
Sure. Give me a minute.
And as I sipped my lemonade, the pint-sized artist went to work on his sketchpad. It turned out he was in high demand. As he was finishing up mine, another car pulled up and another customer got his lemonade and asked about commissioning a piece.
I was worried that the artist might rush mine since he had another $1 commission lined up right behind me, but fortunately he produced a crayon masterpiece.
It could have been a movie poster.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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1646
Five days per week. Fifty-two weeks per year for over six years.
That’s how many days/weeks/years I’ve been coming out here and scribbling a few lines and putting thoughts down.
Why is that number important?
Well, it’s really not. It’s not some special number. It doesn’t represent some special anniversary. It’s not even an exact number of weeks or years.
But, it’s important because it represents an unbroken chain. Many years ago my brother explained to me that the way you become an expert on the internet is a combination of persistance and presence. You show up, and keep showing up everyday.
It’s doesn’t matter how often you post to a blog. What matters is consistency. If you want to post three times per week, makes sure you post every week. If you are going to post once per week or once per month, the important thing is to maintain consistency.
That’s why I’ve made it a point to consistently update here. Of course, I try to add value to your day. I try to pick topics that will be educational, or entertaining, or at least interesting.
That’s why I don’t often post about blogging. Not that it’s not interesting, but if you are coming to this site, it’s probably not to find out how to be a better blogger.
So, I don’t post much about blogging. . .except for today.
After 1646 days, I thought I’d take a day.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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Well, Rodney, what did you think of the first day of the summit?
Honestly? I’m disappointed.
You probably deserve a little background. I was supposed to be camping this week. All week. I planned this scout camp with my buddy for nearly a year. And then just a few weeks ago, work called a meeting for this week. Not just a meeting, a summit. And not just a summit. A two day summit.
Today was the first day. You want to know what I was doing yesterday? I was fishing in a high mountain lake. I helped a young 11 year old boy name Jason catch his first fish, a 9″ Rainbow Trout.
Tuesday, I got two trout, and my friend got a trout and surprisingly a stiped bass. Monday we didn’t fish, but we set up camp and enjoyed Payson Canyon’s portion of the beautiful Rocky Mountains.
The weather has been perfect. The food has been excellent. The company has been inspiring. It’s been great!
And today I had to go to work. And the people running the meeting wanted to know what I thought?
Oh, it’s also helpful to know that the person in charge of the meeting was my boss’s boss’s boss. His title is Global CIO. (Now you understand why I couldn’t get out of the meeting.)
But, it wasn’t the missed day of fishing and playing in the mountains that disappointed me. In fact, the material that was covered in the summit was amazing. It’s going to help transform our business. As much as I hate to admit it, I’m glad I came.
But, I was disappointed because, another large account drove the innovation. That account did truly innovative things and then the company took it to share with the rest of us.
And that was the source of my disappointment. I realized that I like to be the innovator. I like it when it’s my account that is getting the credit for saving the company money and driving innovation.
I realized that somewhere I missed a chance to be the thought leader. I’m disappointed in myself.
However, the meetings also committed me to pushing for more innovation. I can’t wait to get back to work and start pushing for some of these new initiatives.
At the summit, each large account was also assigned an Executive Sponsor. The sponsor is supposed to work with the account owner to drive innovation and help overcome difficulties.
My sponsor? That same Global CIO.
Yeah, I’m disappointed, but I’m also hungry.
Good meetings will do that for you.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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My phone cut out as I was driving up the canyon. I was trying to help my team solve an outage that cropped up the day my vacation started.
I decided not to call back. They can handle it.
For three days I didn’t have my phone. I also didn’t miss it. I’m in Payson canyon. Sleeping on a cot in a tent in he middle of a boy scout camp. Fishing, in Maple Lake. My fishing gear was literally covered in dust. I went out sleep when as tired nad got up the the sun. And I loved it.
And then reality hit. Instead of a week in the wilderness, I’m headed back for corporate meetings two days early.
I live my job. But not today.
His name was Pete Mills, but I didn’t know that until later, ten years later, actually. He may have given me his name when we met, but I don’t remember. I doubt he remembers my name either. But, I will never forget what he did for me.
It was a cold winter’s night in 2009. We were living in Pleasant Grove, Utah. My son was recovering from a surgery. And his recovery wasn’t going well. He was in a lot of pain and had been for most of the night. About 2:30AM it got worse. His fever spiked. . .to 108.8. . .under his arm.
Had we been thinking better, we might have responded quicker. Our addled 2:30AM brains were trying to decide do we put him in a cold bath? Do we take him to the hospital?
All the while he was agonizing in pain. Complaining that his legs hurt. And his head hurt.
And then he wasn’t. He wasn’t complaining. He wasn’t even talking. In fact, he completely became catatonic.
I don’t panic in crisis. I become pretty focused on problem solving. I wasn’t sure if my son was dead. But, there was nothing we were going to be able to do for him in our house.
I bundled him up and raced to the car. My lovely wife stopped long enough to wake my oldest daughter to let her know that we were going to hospital.
She drove. I held my son. The hospital was about three miles. There’s very little traffic at 2:30 in the morning. And I can tell you if you rush into a hospital emergency room at 2:30AM with a limp child, you will get instant service.
I laid my unresponsive son on the table and the doctors started to work on him. His fever was still incredibly high. They started icing him down and pumping him full of antibiotics.
And then he started yelling.
It broke me.
Never before have I felt that much emotion. I started crying, and I was inconsolable. My lovely wife dismissed me to the waiting room while she finished filling out the paperwork for my son’s hospital stay.
I sat on one of those slick chairs clutching the blanket I’d recently bundled my son in. And I sobbed. At 3:00 in the morning, there’s no one else in the hospital waiting rooms. No one except the security guard.
After I’d cried myself out, he wandered over. Close enough to let me know he was willing to engage, but not close enough to intrude.
We talked. About nothing really. He didn’t ask why I was there. And I didn’t volunteer it. I think we discussed baseball. Possibly politics. Maybe a little religion. But, the topic I know we discussed was Masonry.
See, he was a Mason as well. He noticed my ring.
Masonry is a fraternity. It’s a club really. It’s old. It’s ancient. It was founded in the Middle Ages. But, the Masonic ritual references Solomon’s temple from the Old Testement.
George Washington was a mason. Many of the early founders of America were. I’ve been a Mason for years. I joined the fraternity partly because my uncle was a mason. And my grandfather was a mason. I’m not sure who else in my family may have been a mason.
But, after joining masonry I started to learn why the institution has stood the test of time for hundreds of years. My uncle put it best.
Masonry helps good men become better.
That night in the hospital waiting room, was the first time I truly understood what being part of a worldwide fraternity meant. He was exactly what I needed. A friend. A brother.
Masons are sometimes viewed as insulary. We tend to stick together. It’s not by accident. In fact, part of what Masons commit to do is to support their nation, their neighbors, their families and each other.
Most times it’s not that dramatic. Our meetings are boring with an occasional laugh at our own expense. But, sometimes we step up and have a chance to make a difference.
A friend called me the other night. He’s also a Mason. He reached out to me at about 10 PM.
Hey, can you talk?
He called me. We talked for a couple of hours. I didn’t give him advice. Well, maybe a little. But, mostly I just let him talk. We didn’t talk about anything very specific. We talked about politics and religion a little. We didn’t talk about baseball, but the one topic I’m sure we discussed was masonry.
As our phone call was winding down, my friend mentioned how much he apprecaited me taking time to talk. I told him the story of my son and the conversation with the security guard.
I never even knew his name.
I do. His name is Pete Mills. He’s from Texas, right?
Yeah, that’s what he said.
He lives in Spanish Fork now. I’ll let him know.
And that’s why I’m a Mason. That’s what being a Mason means to me.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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Where are you guys?
From your position, if straight ahead is 12:00, we are at about 10:00.
Are you up near the top?
No, just to the left of Portal D.
It was really just a text conversation to pass the time. There was no way my daughter was going to see me. We were in the BYU Marriott Center. It’s the basketball arena and seats 19,000. The arena was about half full. With a graduating class of about 650 students and their friends and families, there were thousands of people in the arena.
Here’s a question, how do you find someone in a crowd that size? We could see my daughter because she was in the choir. And honestly, a pretty, short black girl in a white graduation gown kind of stood out.
So, I could see her, but was trying to help her see where we were sitting. It was myself, my loving wife, my daughter, her three kids, and five other of our kids.
I thought about how you find a spot in your software code, or in a computer system. In software testing you look for exceptions. During the development process, you might actually put in an intentional breakpoints. An intentional stopping point so that you could check the status of your code.
But, how do you add a breakpoint in an arena full of 10,000 people?
I have an idea. Flash your light and I’ll flash you back.
…
Oh, I see you guys now!
There were some interesting speeches delivered as well. And eventually my daughter got to walk across and receive her diploma.
But the high point of my daughter’s graduation was finding flashing lights across a darkened arena.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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Two years ago, I was in nasty car accident. I drove my car into a creek. (Anything Is Amphibious if You Can Get It Back Out Of The Water.)
It was Bennion Creek. There’s a campground there. My friend Juan and I organized a scout camp there two years ago. We decided to organize another one this year. Honestly, Juan did most of the organizing. But, I help where I can.
I fixed his truck so he can pull the trailer. That’s the kind of “help” I’ve been.
Anyway, the camp is next week Monday through Saturday. But, it’s not at Bennion Creek. The road that claimed my car two years ago is even worse this year. I was planning to take my Yukon SUV. Unfortunately, not even my all wheel drive SUV can get past a washed out road.
So, we changed the venue. From Spanish Fork canyon, we moved one canyon to the South. We are now planning to camp in Payson Canyon. It has paved roads, and we’ll be at a lake with fish in it.
But, the changes didn’t stop there.
We’ve been planning this thing for a year.
A month ago people at work announced a global conference for support teams working with large accounts was going to be held in Salt Lake City. . .next Thursday and Friday.
Because the teams working with large accounts are all over the world, the option exists for dialing in remotely. I decided I could probably take some time out and dial in from the scout camp.
Lydia, I’ll be dialing in to the conference.
You’re going to dial in? But, Rodney, you’re LOCAL!
Lydia is one of the people from corporate whose opinion carries a lot of weight. I’ve now decided I’ll be at scout camp on M-W and I’ll be in SLC Thursday and Friday.
So, I’m going camping next week and I’m going to a global company summit. I’m only going to request three vacation days, but I’m pretty sure at least one or two of those will end up as work days.
So, next week, I’ll be going to the mountains. . .sort of.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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Go home. . .it’s over!
The first End Credit Scene I ever remember was at the end of Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. After all the credits have rolled, the screen went blank. Then, a door opens. Ferris Bueller walks out in his bathrobe and tells us all to leave the theater.
I’m old enough to have seen FBDO in theaters. I don’t remember why we were waiting around. Maybe my friends and I were simply talking. Maybe we were waiting for traffic to clear out. Whatever the reason, it was a complete surprise to see the End Credit Scene.
Current movies, especially Marvel movies have turned End Credit Scenes into an important marketing tool. The only question is how many End Credit Scenes a movie will have.
They’ve become so common, in fact, that when Avengers Endgame didn’t have an End Credit Scene, it became noteworthy.
But, what comes after the End Credit Scene? You leave the theater. Throw away your paper popcorn bucket and get on with your life. The brief suspension of your disbelief is complete. Time to get back to normal stuff.
The last month at work has been an IT Adventure movie. Some stuff I can tell. Some I’ll never tell. But, it’s pretty much complete.
Like any good adventure movie, I bounced from crisis to fire to executive briefing without time to slow down much.
Now, I’m back to my normal job cadence. I found myself today, wondering what crisis I was supposed to be focused on. It was unsettling when I couldn’t figure out which one was most pressing. . .because I didn’t have a pressing crisis.
If life has any sense of irony, about the time I get comfortable with my work/life balance again, something will blow up and catch on fire.
But, then explosions are a part of good action movies. Until that one starts I think I’ll take Ferris Bueller’s advice and just go home.
It’s over. (For now, anyway.)
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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One of the first signs of the breakdown of a civilization is when they stop picking up the garbage. Caracas Venezuela used to be a garden spot. It was one of the jewels of South America. Today, it’s much different. There are mountains of trash littering the streets. People rummage through them for food.
Even American cities are not immune to trash heaps. San Francisco is struggling to solve their problem of trash, drug needles and human waste. Seattle is also struggling with issues of trash, especially drug paraphernalia on the streets.
Garbage is a constant in our lives; first world, or third world, or even prehistoric peoples. Much of what we know about prehistoric cultures we learn from their garbage piles.
Today was Wednesday. It’s garbage day in my town. We all have those nice 50 gallon plastic roller bins. As I drove home from work today, I noticed that the garbage guys were running late today. I could tell the cans hadn’t been emptied.
Even on my street, where they are typically pretty early, the cans weren’t empty.
And then I remembered. This week Monday was a holiday. That means that instead of Wednesday, garbage day is Thursday. Even people who remembered, put their cans out on Wednesday just in case they forgot.
I got to take Monday off. I didn’t even get a call. I really got to take it as a holiday. As a salaried employee, I got paid for Monday. I don’t really have to make up my Monday work. The workweek just became four days instead of five.
But, what about the garbage men? Sure, they didn’t work on Monday. But, they didn’t really get to take Monday off. Our town still generated the same amount of garbage this week as any other week. The garbage men now have four days to pick the same amount of trash they normally pick up in five days. A holiday week for them means the same amount of work, just completed in fewer days.
I’m glad I’m not a garbage man. Especially on holiday weeeks, I appreciate what they do.
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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Rodney, agents are telling me that they get a Citrix error when they try to log in.
How many agents?
So far about three.
Okay, have them call helpdesk and report it. They can try switching seats and see if it clears up. If you get more than five having issues, call me back.
Sounds, good. Thanks.
I got a couple of calls Saturday morning. But, they didn’t turn out to be long. After the appove exchange they didn’t call back.
Sunday also came and went with no phone calls.
Monday, the holiday, also went by with zero calls.
You probably don’t worry about getting calls on the weekend. Some of you do, but most people don’t think too much about work between Friday at 5:00 and Monday (or in this case, Tuesday) at 8:00AM.
I’m not like most people. For the last three weekends, I’ve spent hours on the phone. Even Mother’s Day was spent working through issues. I went 20 days working every day.
Fortunately, I don’t have a physically strenuous job. But, mentally, it started to take a toll. By last Friday, I really wasn’t focused on the deliverables I had outstanding.
I wasn’t focused on anything.
Today, we had an issue that I had to be on the phone for hours to resolve. And, to make it worse, I had a project meeting I needed to attend at the same time. I had two headsets on and the mute button working to be on both calls at once.
That’s not a particulary unusual situation for me. Last Friday, it would have frustrated me immensely.
Today? Meh, I got both calls completed successfully. And incidentally neither call knew I was on two calls at once.
I had reports that are due in two days, but my VP asked, “Can you get those for me, asap?”
SURE, I can. No problem. I realized that today, I love my job. Even the hard parts.
It’s amazing what a couple of days off will do. And I didn’t even have to take an personal time for it. Although it certainly felt like it.
Break’s over. Everyone back on your heads!
Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren.
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or email him at rbliss at msn dot com(c) 2019 Rodney M Bliss, all rights reserved