Sunday, 21 June 2009

 

The end of an era



"This is the end of an era."
GEORGE SOROS, billionaire hedge fund manager, speaking on the global financial crisis in a recent television interview.

What do cigarette companies, alcohol suppliers and banks have in common? They all market their products in ways which create addiction.

Once the addiction kicks in they run for cover - shunning responsibility, unless legally implored to do so.

Hence the banning of cigarette and alcohol sales to minors, and rules about how and where their products can be consumed ie generally not in public, spaces for example.

Cigarette companies, alcohol suppliers and banks are also deceptive in the knowledge they provide. In the case of cigarettes, for many years the unstated side effects and irreversible health consequences were deliberately kept from consumers. Until a flood of law suits and the need to take evasive action. Now we have very graphic images on cigarette boxes. Click here to see some more graphic image and phrases. However cigarette companies still ply their wares as attractive, socially desirable products that "make" you look and feel sexier, happier and more successful. So do alcohol companies and banks. Happy images always accompany their marketing drives.

To date alcohol suppliers have largely avoided censorship - no images of people dying of liver cancer, chundering, drink driving, beating up their spouse or getting into brawls.



But what about the banks?
Yes the dearly beloved banks - bastions of safety, security and conservatism. Or at least that is how they have marketed themselves to the general public. Just look at how easy they make if for people to have what they want. As the image above shows, they make it easy for people to get credit.


Banks have also been allowed to mis-inform consumsers about the risks of their productsAs yet they haven't been forced to take financial responsibilty social consequences of their free and easy lending. Instead, even now in the wake of the biggest financial melt down of all time, they continue to reinforce messages that it is ok to consume. No images of people being tossed out of their homes, made bankrupt, or losing massive amounts of money as a result of shonky investment advise.

Instead their relationship marketing claims that they'll help you if something goes wrong lull people into a false sense of security. As many an indebted customer has found, the relationship is only one way. It's their way or the highway. My experience is like many, they'll harass you on a daily basis if you have missed a payment, but won't return calls or act expediently when you wish to restructure your finances. Motivated by their own self interest, why would they allow you to easy consolidate debt at a lower interest rate when they can lock you into higher fees?

Instead, these fairweather traders (and those that own their shares) try to avoid taking responsiblity for the social and economic consequences of their actions. In the case of the banks - these very actions have brought down economies, evicted people from their homes, cost people their jobs, ruined relationships, negatively impacted on health and even forced people to take their lives.

As Deepak Chopra writes in the Seven Spiritual Laws of Success, "Responsibility means not blaming anyone for your situation, including yourself. Having accepted this circumstance, this event, this problem, responsiblity then means the ability to have a creative response to the situation as it is now. All problems contain the seeds of opportunity, and this awareness allows you to take the moment and transform it to a better situation or thing."

Come on banks - heed the call for change. Stop shirking responsibility and sticking to your dry old polices. Collaborate creatively to help us all survive and thrive. Or as the Beatles once sang, "Come together. Right now."


Friday, 19 June 2009

 

How to create a positive mindset



The other day after an incredibly stressful week out of the blue I received this email. It came from a lady who had come to view  my house:

I am totally in love with your art.  The little white painting over the dining table is singing in my heart still. I was so thrilled that I found your web page! I would really like to know if the small white painting is available. If not, I'd like to look at any work that is.” - Violet

These few sentences totally transformed my mind in one quick brushstroke and illustrates the power we all have to uplift each other.

Tip - go forth and sow the seeds of kindness. Give unsolicited positive feedback as often as you can. The benefits are two fold - the recipient will feel better and so will you. Try it and see:)

The  painting Violet fell in love with was inspired by the work of CJ Twombly an American artist well known for his large-scale, freely scribbled, calligraphic-style graffiti paintings, on solid fields of mostly graytan, or off-white colors. 

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Monday, 8 June 2009

 

green design - creating more humane spaces


Architect Norman Foster discusses his own work to show how computers can help architects design buildings that are green, beautiful and "basically pollution-free.

As he says, the green agenda is probably the most important and topical issue of the day. It isn't about fashion, it is about survival. "Green is cool," he says. "All the projects that have in someway been inspired by that agenda are about a celebratory lifestyle. In a way celebrating the spaces and places that determine the quality of life."

Norman quotes Thomas Friedman, who wrote in the Herald Tribune in 2006,  "I think the most important thing to happen in 2006 was that living and thinking green hit Main Street. We reached a tipping point this year where living, acting, designing, investing and manufacturing green came to be understood by a critical mass of citizens, entrepreneurs and officials as the most patriotic, capitalistic, geo-political and competitive thing they could do. Hence my motto: green is the new red, white and blue."

Norman in turn asked himself, "When did that kind of awareness of the planet and its fragility first appear?" And I think it was July 20th, 1969, when, for the first time, man could look back at planet Earth."

I found this talk particularly inspiring as I prepare to enter Architecture School. One of the things I have been creating a bit of a wall about is digital design. But as Normal Foster says not only can the digital world enhance design but it can enhance our relationships and response to the issues we grapple with. "I think that that digital revolution now is coming to the point where as the virtual world, which brings so many people together here, finally connects with the physical world, there is the reality that that has become humanized, so that digital world has all the friendliness, all the immediacy, the orientation of the analog world." 

"The answers to our problems lies with buildings" - claims Foster

Watch this inspiring talk here

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