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Book Review: Hurt Yourself

And in the end, it’s not the years in your life that count. It’s the life in your years.

- Abraham Lincoln

“‘Hurt Yourself’ is the worlds first “self-hurt” book.  As such it is the dialectic opposite of self-help books.”  Thus begins an amazing tale of one man’s desire to live a life of adventure and fun.  In the tradition of George Plimpton, author Harry Hurt III is in pursuit of action, danger, and a decent looking pair of swim trunks.  In Hurt’s book Hurt Yourself, we are invited to tag along with the author as he engages in what he calls, ‘executive pursuits’, the notion of facing your fears with fun.  His premise is that life is a high pain, low gain proposition, it can be just or unjust, but it always boils down to just us.

Hurt Yourself began as as a series of articles in the New York Times that chronicles the exploits of it’s author as he seeks adventure in the most unlikeliest of places. From buying a custom made suit in Chinatown to buying handmade jewelery for his wife, flying a vintage TF-51 Mustang or being a professional quarterback for a day.  Hurt’s wry sense of humor and self is entertaining and engaging.  It truly is a lot of fun…and it makes you want to embark on your own executive pursuits.

I’m following Harry Hurt on Twitter and I look forward to seeing his future exploits. And I have plans on having a few ‘pursuits’ of my own.  I would recommend that you pick up a copy of Hurt Yourself and think about how your life would benefit from you being Hurt a few times.

QUOTABLES

  • “Like death, taxes, and circumcision, shaving is also an inescapable fact of life for most males.”
  • “What could be more real – or more necessary – than a lay preacher of an Eastern religion who has a Ph.D. in nuclear physics and the wisdom and humility to quote lyrics of a country-western singer?”
  • “Overcome with joy, I realized that polo and pain had a lot in common – they both made you feel so alive even though you sometimes wished you were dead.”
  • “Tuck forward, chill out, and wait for the Hands of God.”

Book Review: Walt Disney-An American Original

There will never be another Walt Disney. Walt was made from a mold that was broken the minute he was born. Driven by creativity, often gruff and bull-headed, Walt Disney built an entertainment empire through his shear will and determination. And it all started with a mouse.

In WALT DISNEY: An Amercian Original, author Bob Thomas unpacks the AMAZING story of a young man from Marceline, Missouri (which would later become the template for Main Street, USA in both Disneyland and Walt Disney World) who grew up to become a pioneer of cartoons, movies, sound, television, and theme parks.

If you have ever been to any of the Disney Parks, you can understand the magic that they contain.  If you have ever looked into the eyes of child who has just ridden Pirates of the Caribbean for the first time, or watched Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, you know that there was something altogether different about ANYTHING that bore the Disney brand.  And Walt Disney was the driving force behind that magic.

After reading WALT DISNEY: An Amercian Original, I lost track of the number of innovations that the Disney Studios invented and employed to create their cartoons and shows.  And the untold numbers of buisinesses and industries that were either created or resurrected because of Disney.

And in the final chapters, reading about the decreasing health of the Disney patriarch, my eyes welled with tears, as I began to mourn for a man that had passed over 40 years prior.  While reading, I grieved for his family and I long for visiting Walt Disney World again, but with a renewed love and appreciation for the man who dared to dream of the impossible.  Because for Walt Disney, nothing was impossible.

QUOTABLES

  • “We are not trying to entertain the critics. I’ll take my chances with the public.”
  • “You can design and create, and build the most wonderful place in the world. But it takes people to make the dream a reality.”
  • “Your dead if you aim only for kids. Adults are only kids grown up, anyway.”

Book Review: Made to Stick

From the Made to Stick website:

Why do some ideas thrive while others die? And how do we improve the chances of worthy ideas? In Made to Stick, accomplished educators and idea collectors Chip and Dan Heath tackle head-on these vexing questions.

I loved Made to Stick.  Chip and Dan Heath unpacked their research in a memorable (sticky) fashion that was challenging, insightful, inspiring, and often, humorous.  In Made to Stick, they unveiled their pattern, not template, for ideas to become “sticky”.

Six “sticky” traits: Simple, Unexpected, Concrete, Credible, Emotional, Stories = SUCCES(s).

Chip and Dan used several real-world stories as examples of ideas that were simple and unexpected, using concrete, credible terms, drawing  upon emotions, usually by utilizing stories.  We can educate, lead, challenge, and communicate better with ideas that are as sticky as possible, and Made to Stick helps us accomplish this.

I believe that every leader should read this book.  It will help them to be better communicators and will make their teams more productive and successful.

I also believe that every pastor, small group leader, church leader, and minister should read this book.  We have the GREATEST story EVER told, the Life of Jesus, and the Bible is FULL of stories that fall right in line with their SUCCESs pattern.

A sticky idea is understood, it’s remembered, and it changes something. Sticky ideas of all kinds—ranging from the “kidney thieves” urban legend to JFK’s “Man on the Moon” speech—have six traits in common. If you make use of these traits in your communication, you’ll makeyour ideas stickier. (You don’t need all 6 [traits] to have a sticky idea, but it’s fair to say the more, the better!)

- Chip and Dan Heath, Made to Stick

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