Alec's Web Blog
Thursday, December 6, 2012
Music Is In Us
Wednesday, December 5, 2012
I Choose To Disagree
The paradox of choice...I too find myself wishing I had made a different decision on the meal I chose at a certain restaurant, that there were less options on the menu so that my girlfriend would pick already, and at times wanting more options. However, I believe that these issues root from the faults of our human nature. I do not believe that because we have more options we now have more regret. The grass is always greener, and it has always been. If I chose a candy bar A over Candy Bar B I will question my decision. If I only have Candy Bar A to choose from I will wish I had more options. If I have hundreds of candy bars to choose from and choose candy bar A, I will say I should have chose one of the other candy bars. Humans are always taking hindsight into consideration. When we had less choices we wanted more. Now that we have more we think it is probably better if we had less. I call BS. I say that we are naturally unsatisfied beings. The only thing that I agreed with was that with more choice we now have to put the blame on ourselves. I believe this is a very good thing, but it does not come with more choice. We have always been solely responsible for the outcome regardless the amount of choice we have. Having more options does not pass responsibility from one person to another, it just removes the ability blaming it on someone else. We are always responsible for the choices we make. The doctor does know more about medicine than me. But if he did not give me the choice and something went wrong I would blame him. Would it be his fault? No I made choices to get into his chair in the first place. So now he gives me the choice and all I want him to do is choose for me. There is major flaw in this. But it is not due to the amount of choice I have, there are far too many other variables at play.
Maslow, not so fast....
I recently stumbled upon this video on TED talks. This gentleman, Tony Robbins is a life coach and addresses the question of why people are happy, and what drives our success. As he speaks he asks the audiance why the people in life that have been given all the luxuries money can buy throughout lives usually end up in and out of rehab. He then states that on the other side of the spectrum there are people who have gone through strugles upon strugles. These people have been abused, harrased, and suffered, yet they usually end up happier than the oposition, and they contribute more. He explains that he believes that there are six major needs humans face, that emotion drives excelence and that decisions equal destiny. The human needs he describes are certanty (stability), uncertantiy (variety), signifigance, love, growth, and contribution. He states that these needs are the cause to all human activity including violence, terrorisim, and acts of love. The differnce comes because these needs are not of the same signifagance in all of us. Some people require more certantity others the opposite. To continue he states that are decisions then define where we will take those needs and how we utilize them. He states that we all have different maps that we use to make these decisions. And lastly our emotions ultimately define how we percieve it all. If you have disbelief that your decsion is not going to end well it probably won't.
I found this video very infomative and given its nature on why we as humans (consumers) behave the way we do to be very fitting. This information can be applied to all areas of life including why we buy what we do.
here is the link : http://www.ted.com/talks/tony_robbins_asks_why_we_do_what_we_do.html
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Make It Count
Monday, November 26, 2012
Legends
My father’s side of the the family is form Terry, a town located in the eastern part of Montana. My grandparents owned an ran a bar and cafe up until I was around nine years old. As a child the bar was the best place to go and visit, my cousins and I turned the restaurant into our playground. After my grandmother retired and sold the restaurant my memories changed from the playing in the cafe to watching movies in my grandmothers living room. My grandmother had one VHS film that was worth watching and it was ‘Legends of the Fall.’ My mother would watch the American classic every time we visited. At first I hated the film. I was too young to understand it. However, As my younger brother and I began to revisit the film when we got to an age where we could appreciate it, became one of our favorites.
Terry became our thanksgiving destination as it allowed us to hunt while enjoying the common thanksgiving traditions. From these visits and our previous in the past my brother and I birthed a Thanksgiving ritual. Every year him and I sneak away from all of our family members within a few days of thanksgiving to watch Legends by ourselves.
I don’t fully understand what it is exactly about the film that we relate to thanksgiving, or what urges us to watch it every year. I'm sure that we connected the film to terry and then terry to Thanksgiving, and thus the connection. However, I know there is much more too it. The nature of the film is about a family growing up in the state of Montana in the 1800s. Its story contains love, war, hunting, brotherhood, and more. The characters in the film live a self sustaining life in the mountains, which is something I only dream of doing. My brother Chase and I have a connection with this film through our personal relationship. We correlate with the season of giving thanks and remembering the pioneers that once founded our country. And we pay our respects every year in our ritualistic viewing of the film.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Nike's "Write the Future" campaign :http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBZtHAVvslQ
Forbes' Article: http://www.forbes.com/sites/dorieclark/2012/11/11/the-end-of-the-expert-why-no-one-in-marketing-knows-what-theyre-doing/
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