Lessons Learned – #3

We’ve made it to the Top 3 of the most important things I learned this year:

Ongoing Legacy – When a lifelong friend’s boys were beginning 7th and 9th grades, he wrote each a ‘life’ letter – and continued penning those words of wisdom from a loving father every fall until they married. Lee told me that Matthew and Bryan – soon to be 28 and 30 – occasionally bring up those many guidance lessons. He became a grandfather in July… and is looking forward to continuing the tradition with the next generation.

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Lessons Learned – #4

Here is the fourth most important thing I learned this year:

Everybody Helps – When I went to Ft. McMurray, Alberta, in October the visible devastation from May’s wildfire amazed me. My host told me that in three days they safely evacuated 90,000 people from the Oil Sands. (There is one road and you either drive north 30 miles to work camps or south 300 miles to the nearest city.) The oil companies placed tanker trucks along the route to provide free gas fill-ups, food and water – and housed displaced families in previously shuttered camps. Three Canadian airlines worked together to fly evacuees to Calgary and Edmonton. “Everyone was calm and focused on a safe departure,” he said. It’s often in the worst of times that folks show their best. Imagine if we did that every day.

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Lessons Learned – #5

Continuing the countdown of the ’10 Things I Learned’ during 2016. Here’s #5 on the list:

Softer Voice – In church one Sunday I leaned over to my 18-year-old daughter and quietly made a comment about the sermon. As we pulled out of the parking lot afterward, she told me: “Dad, you’re whispering isn’t really whispering. It’s just making your words more breathy and speaking slower. Everybody heard what you said.”

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Lessons Learned – #6

Sixth on the list of things I learned this year:

Information Please – My favorite customer service lesson this year? During our visit to the Charles M. Schulz Museum, I asked a docent how the cartoonist sent artwork to his publisher. She handed me a stamped postcard and said: “I don’t know, but if you’ll write that question down and self-address it, we have a gentleman who researches everything. He’ll mail you the answer.” Three weeks after we returned home, the card arrived in our mailbox explaining he would draw the strips weeks in advance, fold in the middle and mail to the syndicate, which would create photostats and send to the newspapers. That’s a Joe Cool souvenir!

 

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Lessons Learned – #7

Here is #7 among the most important lessons I learned this year:

Forever Young – Someone alive today might want to reflect on the Dalai Lama’s view. A U.K. scientist named Aubrey de Grey believes there is a person walking the earth who could avoid the illnesses of old age and live to be 1000. That potential deca-centenarian might want to take out a long-term care policy… really long-term.

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