BE CAUTIOUS WHEN
TRAVELING NEAR SCHOOLS
Travel in the area of Sanford Street and Sailorway Drive was further
interrupted this week as crews work to complete construction for ongoing road
and facility projects. On Monday,
October 6 the south end of Douglas Street was closed for approximately 8 days to
allow tie-in of the water line and construction of sidewalks for the new
building. On Wednesday, October 8, the
north entrance to the high school was closed to allow concrete to be poured for
the apron from the driveway to Sanford Street.
We anticipate that the north entrance will be open by Monday, October
13. Traveling the various detours around
construction can be frustrating, but we ask that you consider safety first when
driving in the area of the schools. Please
be patient and watch for children and adults who may be walking or riding bikes
in the area. Parents are asked to allow
extra time as you transport your children to and from school. We are excited about the improvements in the
area and look forward to sharing them with you very soon.
HALL OF FAME
NOMINATION REMINDER
Nomination applications for the Vermilion High School Hall of Fame are
available on our district website, or by contacting Vermilion High School at
440-204-1701. The deadline to submit
applications has been extended to November 1, 2014. The ceremony to honor this year’s inductees
will be held on Friday, December 12, 2014.
ARE YOU CONSTANTLY
BUSY? CONSIDER THIS
Recently I came across the New York Times best seller, “Essentialism: The Disciplined
Pursuit of Less” by Greg McKeown. Below is an excerpt from that book that I
feel is worth sharing. If you are
interested in learning more, visit http://gregmckeown.com/essentialism-the-disciplined-pursuit-of-less/
“We
have a problem—and the odd thing is we not only know about it, we’re
celebrating it. Just today, someone boasted to me that she was so busy she’s
averaged four hours of sleep a night for the last two weeks. She wasn’t
complaining; she was proud of the fact. She is not alone. Why are typically rational people so
irrational in their behavior? The answer, I believe, is that we’re in the midst
of a bubble; one so vast that to be alive today in the developed world is to be
affected, or infected, by it. It’s the bubble of bubbles: it not only mirrors
the previous bubbles (whether of the Tulip, Silicon Valley or Real Estate
variety), it undergirds them all.
Here
are the three words: “The Busyness Bubble.”
The
nature of bubbles is that some asset is absurdly overvalued until - eventually
- the bubble bursts, and we’re left scratching our heads wondering why we were
so irrationally exuberant in the first place. The asset we’re overvaluing now
is the notion of doing it all, having it all, achieving it all; what Jim
Collins calls “the undisciplined pursuit of more.”
This
bubble is being enabled by an unholy alliance between three powerful trends:
smart phones, social media, and extreme consumerism. The result is not just
information overload, but opinion overload. We are more aware than at any time
in history of what everyone else is doing and, therefore, what we “should” be
doing. In the process, we have been sold a bill of goods: that success means
being supermen and superwomen who can get it all done. Of course, we
back-door-brag about being busy: it’s code for being successful and important.
Not
only are we addicted to the drug of busyness, we are pushers too. In the race
to get our children into “a good college” we have added absurd amounts of
homework, sports, clubs, dance performances and ad infinitum extracurricular
activities. And with them, busyness, sleep deprivation and stress.
Across
the board, our answer to the problem of more is always more. We need more
technology to help us create more technologies. We need to outsource more
things to more people to free up own our time to do yet even more. Luckily, there is an antidote to the undisciplined
pursuit of more: the disciplined pursuit of less, but
better. A growing number of people are making this shift. I call these people Essentialists.
These
people are designing their lives around what is essential and eliminating
everything else. These people take walks in the morning to think and ponder,
they negotiate to have actual weekends (i.e. during which they are not
working). They turn technology off for
set periods every night and create technology-free zones in their homes. They
trade off time on Facebook and call those few friends who really matter to
them. Instead of running to back-to-back in meetings, they put space on their
calendars to get important work done.
The
groundswell of an Essentialist movement is upon us. Even our companies are
competing with one another to get better at this: from sleep pods at Google to
meditation rooms at Twitter. At the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum
in Davos this year, there were, for the first time, dozens of sessions on
mindfulness. TIME magazine goes
beyond calling this a movement, instead choosing the word “Revolution.”
One
reason is because it feels so much better than being a Non-Essentialist. You
know the feeling you get when you box up the old clothes you don’t wear anymore
and give them away? The closet clutter is gone. We feel freer. Wouldn’t it be
great to have that sensation writ large in our lives? Wouldn’t it feel
liberating and energizing to clean out the closets of our overstuffed lives and
give away the nonessential items, so we can focus our attention on the few
things that truly matter?
People
are beginning to realize that when the "busyness bubble” bursts (and it
will) we will be left feeling that our precious time on earth has been wasted
doing things that had no value at all. We will wake up to having given up those
few things that really matter for the sake of the many trivial things that
don’t. We will wake up to the fact that that overstuffed life was as empty as
the real estate bubble’s detritus of foreclosed homes.
Here
are a few simple steps for becoming more of an Essentialist:
1.
Schedule a personal quarterly offsite. Companies invest
in quarterly offsite meetings because there is value in rising above day-to-day
operations to ask more strategic questions. Similarly, if we want to avoid
being tripped up by the trivial, we need to take time once a quarter to think
about what is essential and what is nonessential. I have found it helpful to
apply the “rule of three”: every three months you take three hours to identify
the three things you want to accomplish over the next three months.
2.
Rest well to excel. K. Anders Ericsson found in “The Role
of Deliberate Practice in the Acquisition of Expert Performance” that a
significant difference between good performers and excellent performers was the
number of hours they spent practicing. The finding was popularized by Malcolm
Gladwell as the “10,000 hour rule.” What few people realize is that the second
most highly correlated factor distinguishing the good from the great is how
much they sleep. As Ericsson pointed out, top performing violinists slept more
than less accomplished violinists: averaging 8.6 hours of sleep every 24 hours.
3.
Add expiration dates on new activities. Traditions have an
important role in building relationships and memories. However, not every new
activity has to become a tradition. The next time you have a successful event,
enjoy it, make the memory, and move on.
4.
Say no to a good opportunity every week. Just because we
are invited to do something isn’t a good enough reason to do it. Feeling
empowered by essentialism, one executive turned down the opportunity to serve
on a board where she would have been expected to spend 10 hours a week for the
next 2-3 years. She said she felt totally liberated when she turned it down.
It’s counterintuitive to say no to good opportunities, but if we don’t do it
then we won’t have the space to figure out what we really want to
invest our time in.
A
hundred years from now, when people look back at this period, they will marvel
at the stupidity of it all: the stress, the motion sickness, and the
self-neglect we put ourselves through. So
we have two choices. We can be among the last people caught up in the “more
bubble” when it bursts, or we can see the madness for what it is and join the
growing community of Essentialists and get more of what matters in
our one precious life.”
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