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  • Writer's pictureDavis Young

Yes, we CAN all get along.


A little more than 20 years ago, my wife and I made a three week trip to Zimbabwe in south-central Africa. This beautiful country is well-known for animal viewing.


In advance, I spent a lot of time thinking about what I would likely encounter. Animals eating other animals. Vicious fights over carcasses. Massive birds competing to carry off small game. In the time I was there, I did indeed see the animals and birds, but from an entirely different perspective.


Here are three lessons I learned.


Working Together Beats Working Alone. A long time ago, zebras and wildebeests discovered that working together toward a common goal makes each of them stronger and more successful. In the case of these two distinctly different animals, their common goals are to find food and to break bread in a safe environment. Wildebeests love to eat short grass. Zebras prefer high grass. To fulfill their needs, these partners travel great distances for the privilege of dining together.


On the African plains, there is always greater safety in numbers. A handful of zebras serve as sentries on the fringe of these combined herds to warn of danger in the neighborhood. Scientists point out the superior eyesight of zebras combined with the wildebeests’ better sense of hearing helps keep both of them alert and thriving. When danger lurks, they work together to fend it off. They operate as a team. They trust each other. Their combined success is far greater than either could achieve alone. Although their physical appearance is totally different, they operate as one unit. If you’re looking for team-building role models, zebras and wildebeests fit the bill.


Good Things Happen In A Positive Environment. One night, we went to a popular watering hole – not the kind humans might stop into after a day at the office, but a real one that serves just water. As with their human counterparts, water is an animal’s most precious resource.


There were easily a couple hundred animals at this watering hole all at the same time. Big strong ones. Small vulnerable ones. The disparity was clear immediately. The big ones were fully capable of imposing their will. But, they didn’t. There was no fighting, no pushing and shoving, no meanness, no cutting in line, no raised voices. Absolutely none. Every single animal was respectful of the others. All any of them wanted was their fair share of water.


Mentoring Matters. At dusk on another day, we found ourselves deep into a valley where we came upon a community of baboons on their way home from work. But, their work wasn’t done. At least 100 of these large animals came in our direction down a path toward a grove of big trees where they would spend the night. They sleep high up in trees to avoid the ever present danger of leopards.


The adults had well-defined roles. Some were sentries stationed along the path to watch and warn of danger. Others guided the young ones to different trees and helped them get way up high and settled for the night. When that was accomplished, the sentries followed up the trees. The group was totally focused on a single goal – safety for its members. It soon became very quiet as another day at the office ended for the baboons. It was so well-organized. For their children, it was akin to a teaching moment. Everyone had a job to do. Seeing this would convince you that all the adult baboons had received mentoring. And, indeed they were passing on what they had been taught to do.


Pulling together as a team. Thriving in a positive environment. Showing the next generation how it should be done. Isn’t that what we’re supposed to be doing? If the animals can do it well, we can, too.


When Los Angeles was burning a few years ago, Rodney King became famous for asking this question: Can’t we all just get along? I found the answer to his question in a most unlikely place – the heart of Africa.

We can learn a lot if we open our eyes and ears to the good and interesting things happening right in front of us. It’s indeed possible for all of us to just get along.


(This blog appeared in 2020 as a guest column in Crain’s Cleveland Business. DY the blogster will be back next Tuesday from Florida with new material. Have a great week everyone.)

 

DY: In Just a Few Words is a blog that comes out when something needs to be said or every Tuesday - whichever comes first. Davis Young is a communications professional who adds 50+ years of experience and perspective to issues of the day. His emphasis in DY: In Just a Few Words will be humor (a touch of sarcasm here, a pinch of facetiousness there...). Once in a while, he will touch on something a bit more serious - but hopefully not too deep or depressing.


This blog is a product of DY Author & Speaker LLC. Feel free to quote content with attribution. Respond. Agree. Disagree. Share the content with your friends. Heck - even invite him as a speaker for your group! Enjoy!

  • Writer's pictureDavis Young

We all need a Maxine.


White House: Good morning and thank you for calling the White House. Please listen carefully as our menu has changed. For President Biden, dial 1. For Vice President Harris, dial 1¾, not her former extension 2, as she is rising quickly. For former President Trump, dial extension 2024. As for the Trump children, well their phones have been cancelled. And, for Dr. Fauci and our new Vaccines For Everyone program, please dial MASKUP (or 627587).

Me: {Dials MASKUP}

White House: Thank you for calling our amazing new Vaccines For Everyone program! Maxine the Queen of Vaccines here. How may I help you? But please keep in mind this is the White House and no one person can ever truly help you. It takes a village, a committee and a task force to get anything done around here.

Me: Is there anybody in this morning I can talk with about getting an appointment for a vaccination? I tried and tried to book one online. My computer exploded after three hours of constantly hitting refresh and now I need wrist surgery.

White House: Perhaps I can be of some assistance after all, sir. I see you have been holding for several hours and we apologize for this “short” delay. We’re very proud to introduce you to our newest initiative to benefit all Americans. Okay, we have hit a few bumps in the road, but we are now able to offer you a multitude of options - color-coded no less - from which to choose. First, we have Pfizer in blue and Pfizer in pink, also known as shots one and two. We have Moderna in orange and green. And, Johnson & Johnson in one color…..yellow. An off-shoot of the J & J is a very attractive lavender vaccine produced in cooperation with Merck. And, of course, we are busy developing a variety of other colors for the new variants. So, lots of good choices. Which would you like and how many?

Me: No preference. Like the experts say, I’ll take the one I can get. What do you recommend?

Whte House: We think they’re all good, but I’m sure you can appreciate it’s just not as simple as saying send me two Pfizers and one Moderna. Unfortunately, supply lines are a tad clogged at the moment. You wouldn’t expect perfection, would you? We are the government, after all. Like I said before - a few small bumps in the road. If you live in the far northwest corner of Idaho, for example, a late winter blizzard is holding up all deliveries. In Texas, the big storm cut off power to our COVID vaccine distribution center. Mudslides in California have made it nearly impossible for UPS and FedEx to make deliveries. And, on and on it goes. The best thing I can tell you is to get a good wrist brace, a new computer, and an army of friends and family to help. Then think local and just keep hitting refresh till you find something. If you can’t get a vaccine, settle for high powered Tylenol. I hope that helps.

Me: Wait. Please don’t hang up. I need more information. Tell me more.

White House: I’m sorry sir. This is all of the information I am allowed to release. The rest of the report has been redacted. Thank you for calling the White House. You have been speaking with Maxine the Queen of Vaccines. Please remain on the line to take a brief survey about your satisfaction with our Vaccines For Everyone program.

If for any reason you are unable to find a local vaccine resource within six months, please contact us again.

P.S. Some blog readers may think COVID-19 is heading for the exit, but it’s not there yet. My daughter and blog editor, Tracy, tested positive just last Friday after spending the last year taking a ton of precautions. This thing is everywhere.

Wear a mask. Wash your hands. Watch your distance. We are almost there!

 

DY: In Just a Few Words is a blog that comes out when something needs to be said or every Tuesday - whichever comes first. Davis Young is a communications professional who adds 50+ years of experience and perspective to issues of the day. His emphasis in DY: In Just a Few Words will be humor (a touch of sarcasm here, a pinch of facetiousness there...). Once in a while, he will touch on something a bit more serious - but hopefully not too deep or depressing.


This blog is a product of DY Author & Speaker LLC. Feel free to quote content with attribution. Respond. Agree. Disagree. Share the content with your friends. Heck - even invite him as a speaker for your group! Enjoy!


  • Writer's pictureDavis Young

They call me Modem Man.


I was surrounded by techie people (aka geeks) when I was growing up in Princeton, New Jersey. Not an iota of that ever rubbed off on me. To be clear, I am not anti-tech. It’s just that I don’t think in a way that leads me in that direction. Just last week I spent the better part of an HOUR trying to login to my Facebook and LinkedIn accounts on our new laptop. Let’s just say it involved several go rounds of wrong passwords, inadvertently closed tabs, multiple “change password” codes, my wife’s email account, extended phone consultation with my daughter and more inadvertently closed tabs. I got it, but it was ... a process.


In the 1950s, we lived in a two-family house. Separated from us by nothing but a wall was the internationally acclaimed mathematician Atle Selberg and his family. Dr. Selberg spent more than 50 years on the faculty of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, which is described as one of the world’s leading centers for theoretical research and intellectual curiosity (37 Nobel Prize recipients). Go on the internet and you will see this description of Dr. Selberg’s fascinating focus: known for his work in analytic number theory and the theory of automorphic forms, and in particular for bringing them into relation with spectral theory. I couldn’t have said it better myself. How did that not rub off on me?

On one side of our two-family house lived the Brown family. George Brown, a scientist, was a key mover and shaker in development of what is now color television. He was based at RCA’s R & D campus.


On the other side of us was the Dick Melville family. He worked in what resembled a WWII quonset hut across the street from the Institute for Advanced Study. One weekend, he came over and asked my father if the two of us would like to go to where he worked and look at something new called a computer.


I will never forget entering that rundown building. Think of it as one room perhaps 20’ x 40’. When I close my eyes, I can see it today just as it was all those years ago.


Inside that room was a lot of noise – clang, clang, clang – the sound of metal hitting metal. Overhead were hundreds of different color wires resembling airborne spaghetti. All around the room were large, gray metal boxes of various heights and sizes, all connected to each other. It was obvious something important was happening in that room. Dick Melville said, You’re looking at the future. To me then, that was crazy talk. Little did I know the significance of what I was seeing.


Much later in life, I remember the first FAX machines. We had one in our office. It ate lots of shiny slick paper. About two-thirds of the way down each page was a large black line about an inch from side to side. We knew we were on to something great. How can you beat six minutes a page? Surely, we had reached man’s limits with respect to technology.


When the internet first surfaced (thank you, Al Gore), I remember telling a colleague it was a passing fad. As I recall, Bill Gates said something similar at that time. Because of my accumulated technological expertise gained over a lifetime of intense study, our office manager came to call me Modem Man. That was a rank I wore proudly.


It’s been a long technological journey for me. Thanks to a lot of hard work, I am now able to turn my desktop computer on and off, cut and paste copy for my weekly blog and send a text message on my phone. At last I understand the difference between FacedIn and LinkBook. It hasn’t been easy, but I have persevered. Modem Man is alive and well and catching up.

 

DY: In Just a Few Words is a blog that comes out when something needs to be said or every Tuesday - whichever comes first. Davis Young is a communications professional who adds 50+ years of experience and perspective to issues of the day. His emphasis in DY: In Just a Few Words will be humor (a touch of sarcasm here, a pinch of facetiousness there...). Once in a while, he will touch on something a bit more serious - but hopefully not too deep or depressing.


This blog is a product of DY Author & Speaker LLC. Feel free to quote content with attribution. Respond. Agree. Disagree. Share the content with your friends. Heck - even invite him as a speaker for your group! Enjoy!


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