Convulsed?
The Times headline this morning reported the country "convulsed" over impeachment. I'm in Manhattan at the moment, and I can't find any convulsing. It looks like business as usual. "Eye of the beholder," I guess.
Episode 115: The Ugly Side
Those aspects of humanity from which we should all learn some lessons. Some human habits are just disgusting, and I need to vent about this.
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ – 12/18/19
Today's word: sessile.
Proposals
A business proposal from a consultant to a prospective client is not an exploration or a negotiation. It is a summation of conceptual agreement reached in person and recorded in the proposal. If you don't have that prior agreement with
The Mysterious Case of the Non-Hospitable Hostess
I'm at the St. Regis, one of the high-end hotels in New York City. I went for breakfast, and there were six tables occupied, the hostess showing me to mine. Yet there was only a single waiter on duty, apparently,
Looking Up Every So Often
This was reported in today’s Wall Street Journal by Johan Norberg from The Cato Institute. During this past decade: Extreme poverty fell from 18.2% to 8.6% (source: World Bank) Malaria in Africa declined by 60% and HIV by more than
Small Talk
I'm waiting in a dentist's office and two other patients, who are both in the construction business, are talking about customers of theirs whom I happen to know, and the comments weren't very positive. I've heard people on trains screaming
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 12/16/2019
The managers of the restaurant where we are the best customers secretly loaded (so others wouldn't see and expect it) a huge gift basket of Italian goodies into the trunk of my car parked out front last night. A non-profit director
Typo
Let me be very clear about this: When someone unsolicitedly points out a typo in your work (especially a published book, but even a column or an article) without also commenting on the content of the work, it's merely passive/aggressive
Want to Play A Little Game?
It's absolutely depressing to listen to people who bemoan what they can't do any more. They were athletes in school, but can run as fast and jump as high now. Their kids were home and being raised, and now they're