January 2007
Monthly Archive
Monthly Archive
Posted by funky uncle mustard on 31 Jan 2007 | Tagged as: Brit Rice, Creativity, Drumming, Encouragement, Matt Rodgers, MP3, Music, MusicalMustard, MustardCasts, Passions, Podcasts, Polydream, Producing, PunkMustard, Pursuing Dreams, songwriting
I really enjoyed listening to this interview as I edited it. I know you will enjoy it and learn from it as well. This is not just for musicians, but for anyone seeking to make their passions a bigger part of their life. I’ve broken the interview into two MustardCasts and used a less “high fidelity” setting to make the file sizes a bit more manageable. I hope you audiophiles will be ok with that.
Part I (MustardCast 3a)
Length: 16:27
Play or Download MustardCast 3a
Play MustardCast #3a, interview with Brit Rice, in iTunes
Download the .mp3 file of MustardCast 3a, interview with Brit Rice (5.6mb)
Brit’s recommended listening:
Part II of the MustardCast (3b)
Length: Approx. 19 Minutes
Play or Download MustardCast 3b
Play MustardCast #3b, interview with Brit Rice, in iTunes
Download the .mp3 file of MustardCast 3b, interview with Brit Rice (6.6mb)
Learn More About Polydream
Listen to samples and buy Polydream music at iTunes
Polydream’s MySpace site
Polydream’s Website
Posted by funky uncle mustard on 25 Jan 2007 | Tagged as: Being Yourself, Beliefs, CareerMustard, Meaningful Work, MustardMusings, Passions, Peter Block, PunkMustard, Purpose, Pursuing Dreams, Satisfying Work
In reading Peter Block’s The Answer to How Is Yes: Acting on What Matters, I came across an interesting revelation. It was, really, quite simple.
Ambition seeks recognition.
Block suggests we need to lose our ambition. And do things that simply matter to us. Not do things that we think others will find interesting or approve of.
How many things are you working towards right now in an effort to gain recognition? It might be working extra hard at work in hopes of a promotion, raise, or some sort of “attaboy.†It might be trying to write a book or song that you feel could be a worldwide hit. It might be trying to gain a large audience in the blogosphere.
Block argues that all of those goals put others in control of our lives.
I cannot distill it well here in a short post (without much more thought and effort). But think about it: Are you doing things that you love to do – regardless of who might notice – or are you doing them to impress or seek recognition from someone else?
It’s a scary question to ask. But it might help you align your life with the things that are truly important to you.
Posted by funky uncle mustard on 15 Jan 2007 | Tagged as: CareerMustard, Meaning of Life, Meaningful Work, MustardMusings, Passions, Peter Block, Poem, PoeticMustard, Purpose, Satisfying Work
Calm, but frustrated
At the tension between
What works?
and
What matters?
There’s something
- Right here
That matters
But what?
–
15 January 2007
1st comment explains what I was thinking.
Posted by funky uncle mustard on 14 Jan 2007 | Tagged as: Being Yourself, CareerMustard, Encouragement, Flaws, Meaningful Work, Motivation, MustardMusings, PunkMustard
It finally snowed a bit here in Madison, WI yesterday. Not a ton of snow, but enough that it made sense to shovel. This year, I went all out and bought this semi-fancy shovel with a thick handle and, to really ensure I get it all, a metal edge along the bottom of the “solid†plastic scoop area. Seriously, this is supposed to be a great shovel.
After a clearing a small portion, however, this shiny new shovel was really disappointing. Sure, it’s got metal along the bottom, but it doesn’t seem to hit the pavement evenly. So, while fine for some types of snow, it wasn’t clearing my walk all that well. Looks great, but doesn’t really deliver.
I went back into my garage and grabbed an old, all metal scoop shovel that a retiring family gave to ours as they headed to Florida. This thing is old, orange, beat up, bent, rusty – some would look at it and simply put it out with the trash.
But this shovel worked perfectly. It cut right down to the pavement and performed exactly as I needed.
The shovel reassured me of something. So often I’m worried about improving myself, learning more, developing more, looking better or more impressive, or getting ready to – someday – be truly useful in this world. But my bent, rusty snow shovel shows me that sometimes the perfect tool for the job doesn’t look perfect at all.
Most of us don’t look perfect. But we wish we did. I love my bent, rusty snow shovel. It’s perfect for just the right job.
So are we. Right now. As we are.
Posted by funky uncle mustard on 06 Jan 2007 | Tagged as: Being Yourself, CareerMustard, Dreams, Jim Collins, Meaningful Work, Motivation, MustardMusings, Passions, PunkMustard, Pursuing Dreams, Satisfying Work, Taking Risks
This is one of my favorite quotes from Jim Collins’ books. He is talking about business. I’m talking about life.
One of my friends and I talked about this a bit recently. He is between jobs and trying to figure out the right next step. One step would involve going back to school to get an advanced degree in a discipline that he says he “could get excited about.â€
But he’s got something else that burns within him already – music. My question to him was
“are you settling for good, when you should be shooting for great?â€
Damn it’s hard to be a good guy (or gal) and try to make a living as a musician (artist, writer – fill in your own creative passion here).
Over my career, I made a lot of choices that led to more money, more resume clout, and more bragging rights. But none of those choices led me closer to my passions.
A lot of those moves led me to jobs where I was good – even really good – but never great.
Like Collins, I believe passion is one key ingredient that enables us to achieve greatness. Sure, we have to be skilled, work hard, etc., but without passion we’re just posers, faking our way through life. I realize that may sound a bit harsh.
I cannot tell my friend what he is passionate about. Nor can I tell him how to feed a family while working towards his passions. That’s the struggle for most of us creative types – finding that balance of moving in the right direction and taking care of our responsibilities at the same time.
I don’t really have the answers to this. Just a hypothesis. And I’m still trying to prove that myself. It’s really a lifelong experiment.
Without encouraging you to take harmful risks, allow me to suggest that shooting for great, while likely involving some risk and surely some challenges, is worth it.