Yearly Archives: 2011

Knife Fight Between Political Consultants

Knife Fight Between Political Consultants

The dateline NICASIO caught my eye in the NYTimes, on the National page. Chris Lehane, a former political operator for Bill Clinton, was interviewed as he edited “Knife Fight” the movie he wrote and produced at Skywalker ranch for release in a few months.

The article compared “Knife Fight” to “The Ides of March” which is currently in release and starts Ryan Goslin as a political operator for a candidate who has sexual relations with an intern. Ryan Gosling’s role is based on Jay Carson who used to work for Bill Clinton.

Interestingly, there is a cameo performance by Paul Giamatti of a rival political operator in The Ides of March, someone a lot like Chris Lehane. “Jay is earnest and great,” Chris told the NYTimes. “I like sticking the knife in people.”

Eli Attie, himself a former Democratic consultant in Washington who came to Los Angeles to write for “The West Wing” and who knows both men, said: “Jay is the kind of politics we hope for,” he said. “And Chris is the politics we have to have.”

 

Rob Lowe will be playing the Chris Lehane-type operative in Knife Fight. “From what I hear, Rob Lowe is considered better looking than Ryan Gosling,” Mr. Lehane said (or “jokingly noted,” as he said by way of an e-mail clarification to Adam Nagourney, the NYTimes writer). I enjoyed the Ides of March and am looking forward to seeing Knife Fight.

Grrr Mercury Retrograde

Grrr Mercury Retrograde

Mercury goes retrograde Thanksgiving Day 11/24 and stays there through 12/14. Not so good for signing contracts or initiating new plans, but great for reviewing and learning from your past. Just take extra care.

Yesterday I drove to San Francisco to attend the Bay Area Bloggers Society meeting, skipping a jQuery class, because the BABS topic was “Focused Creativity for Compelling Content.” Doyle Drive has been revised but the sign has not. It says “right lane must exit to 19th Ave.” but actually TWO right lanes must exit with the recent roadway changes. Well, I was forced down 19th Ave when I wanted to go to Lombard St. But it got worse.

I found a parking spot, but it was one cliff below where the meeting was, so I got back in my car at 5:45 p.m. to find the 6 p.m. meeting. No headlights, and it was almost dark. Checked the fuses, they looked good. Called Howard, he drove from Santa Rosa with more fuses. Not the problem. I locked up the car and left it in San Francisco because I could not drive home in the dark with no lights. At 5 a.m. today, Howard drove me back to SF. I waited for the streetlights to go off indicating that it was safe to drive without lights. Got back to Santa Rosa by 8 a.m., just as the auto repair shop opened.

The problem? A loose relay. The repair shop guy pushed it back into place and sent me on my way, no charge. Howard smashed his side view mirror on a pillar a few hours later.

Mercury. Bah!

Doctorow – How to Change Future

Doctorow – How to Change Future

I guess the way you change the future is to change people’s narrative.  Change the story people have imagined the future will be.  Change that and you change the future.  Everything else is far too complicated and out of a single person’s control — but just change the story we tell ourselves about the future and you change the future itself.

The Tomorrow Project Anthology

If We’re So Smart, How Come the Boomerang Came Back To Whack the Stock Market?

If We’re So Smart, How Come the Boomerang Came Back To Whack the Stock Market?
If We’re So Smart, How Come the Boomerang Came Back To Whack the Stock Market?

Interesting watching the stock market gyrate as I read Boomerang by Michael Lewis, the guy who wrote Moneyball and The Blind Side. The EU did not know, when they accepted Greece in 1981, that Goldman Sachs would later teach the Greeks even more sophisticated ways of acquiring and hiding national debt, eventually bringing the Euro to the brink, says Jim Hoaglandin his editorial in The Washington Post.  He agrees with Michael Lewis that historicaly, the Greeks refined milking their government into an art, and they were certainly not going to treat the distant, generous European treasury in Brussels differently.  Hoagland quotes a Friench friend who was in the government that championed Greece’s entry to the EU.  “Bringing Greece in and expecting the budget figures to add up was a romantic policy.”

Michael Lewis is a “disaster tourist,” visiting countries that are on the brink of economic collapse due to spending more than they earned. It is fascinating to see how each country behaves differently when “in a dark room with a pile of money.” I laughed out loud when I finished the chapter on Ireland. The Irish are not like other people!

This frequently-updated graphic from the NYTimes that tracks the European debt crisis clarifies the shifting sands of exposure to crisis that the Euro faces. I had to look up the statistics for the US (missing from the chart). We have about 100% debt-to-GDP and about 10% unemployment as I read the statistics. So much seems to hinge on the credit rating, which we know from reading Michael Lewis’s “The Big Short” is sometimesfanciful, almost magical, and not in a good way. Like magical thinking.

Do you think the Euro will stabilize promptly or deteriorate further?

Margin Call Absorbing

Margin Call Absorbing

First-Time director J.C. Chandoor, who also wrote “Margin Call”, somehow gets us to see the human side of the bankers that brought the world economy to its knees. If you understand that things are only worth what you can sell them for, and that the investment banks held certain “tranches” on the synthetics they were selling, you will quickly grasp how the math model projections stumbled upon by the junior risk manager portend the end of the financial markets as we know them.

How could we ever care about the fates of these greedy men, much less sympathize with them. They wiped out our retirements funds, and yet, at the end, we see what drove them. Some were venal, some were greedy, some were desperate and some were just resigned to their fate. What is stunning is that the caliber of acting draws us in and makes us care about these men.

Demi Moore, whose real name is Demetria, looks more Russian than ever. Deep fear flickers in her eyes behind the hostility of a wolverine defending her economic projections. When she faces off against Jeremy Irons, it is like watching smooth poison being spread before her.

The movie belongs to Kevin Spacey, however. Chandor’s savvy direction gives him a chance to show the conflicting emotions playing out as he tries to prevent the implosion of the company where he has spent his career. He wants to protect the young brokers working for him, he wants to protect the clients of the firm, but most of all, he wants to protect himself. Do we care? Yes, because of a brilliant performance by Spacey, which barely stands out in a stellar cast including smooth, charming, brilliant and ruthless Jeremy Irons as the guy who has to make the decision on when to pull the trigger and where to aim the gun.

It is playing in Santa Rosa at the Summerfield Theater and I hear it is available on streaming TV. Worth a watch.Simon Baker in Margin Call

Margin Call Movie

Margin Call is Absorbing

Learn JavaScript Not Dreamweaver

Learn JavaScript Not Dreamweaver

HTML5 CSS3
A self-taught web developer with an engineering degree posted a question on list-serv. "What certficates or degrees should I get to become a web developer?" Here is the feedback from Estelle Weyl, the Bay Area luminary who wrote the book on CSS3.

You don’t need certifications to be a web developer.  In fact, unless you are considering .Net roles, certifications are kind of frowned upon since there is no single respected source that provides them.

You also don’t need a masters degree. You have an engineering degree, so you have the “technical” background they are looking for. Not sure what type of engineering you did, but if it’s not CS related, a course in programming logic and OO fundamentals is REALLY helpful.

It takes about a month to learn to be a web developer, and a lifetime to master it. So, take a month and learn the basics of HTML, CSS and JavaScript, or if you want to be a mid tier, focus less on the CSS and more on the PHP, MySQL and Ruby.

My recommendation is to deep dive into Javascript. JS is required for so many roles, and there are very few people who are good at it. But, it is really what YOU want to do. What part of building the site did you like the most.

Do NOT learn Dreamweaver, jQuery or any other programming software until you have attained a certain level of expertise in markup and code, as having a crutch that does the work for you can be debilitating to your learning curve.

First Rain

First Rain

Yesterday was the first substantial rain of the season. The paths along the creek had absorbed the moisture, transforming from the hard and dry of summer to soft, springy and organic. The raindrops had battered the bay leaves so that this morning at sunrise the fragrance of bay leaves burst through every 100 yards or so. The creek was running fast enough to be audible. Sonoma County is so beautiful in October.

Logout, go outside! – Alison Chaiken

Logout, go outside! – Alison Chaiken

I went to a linux meeting last night and the speaker was a GIRL! MIT graduate, Lawrence Livermore Lab and Stanford Linear Accelerator Center physicist, but she was FIT! Skinny, muscled, Jane-Fonda-in-the-70s arms, trim tight body under a relaxed polo shirt tucked into herringbone slacks. God, is she smart.

The linux guys were more animated than usual (I was the only other female in the room) and her talk was on linux in CARS. Cars! The guys loved it. And she was funny. At one point she grumbled, “I’m too old and bitter to think they will fix that…” The audience laughed.

Then I realized she was bike lady. http://www.exerciseforthereader.org/ I had found her page months ago from her postings on the devchix listserv.

My take away is how she manages stress. Her website is simple and full of info. It says “Logout, go outside!” This woman has fun. She apologized to the guys for her attire. “I had to go to Intel today for a developers conference and I knew I had to dress up to cope with the scary grownups.” She got a laugh. She likes Chrissie Hynde’s advice to women:

Chrissie Hynde's Advice

I think Christianne Northrup is right, your body is a barometer of how you are doing in your life — in the largest, spiritual sense. I think I am going to change my attitude about work being more important than exercise. I can exercise more and accept a lower work output. I don’t want to be forced into taking care of myself due to a bad diagnosis. I want to choose it.

I choose it now.

Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff, Ph.D.

Self-Compassion by Kristin Neff, Ph.D.

There is an interesting and welcome change in self-help and brain biology books these days. “The Social Animal” by David Brooks strings recent scientific discoveries about social behavior on a framework of storyline about several intersecting fictional lives. Kristin Neff interleaves her academic study of self-forgiveness and self-compassion with stories from her own life. The books intersect on the brain studies of Buddhist monks during meditation, but her stories are non-fiction and much more compelling.

Reading examples of how self-compassion works in her life brings it into sharp focus, especially the stories about her autistic son. The best is at the end of the book… a compelling story of the journey to Mongolia with her husband, son, and a film crew to have the revered shaman, reached by horseback in the high steppes, cast out the spirits that were causing the son’s autism. What happened next is amazing and worth the read.


This posting on Facebook exemplifies Dr. Neff’s message of accepting one’s mistakes as part of being human, and of calling up the memory of a loving caregiver who could be counted on to soothe the emotional pain. All the more interesting because the Mom and Dad that she misses are both dead. The mother, of a drug overdose and the father (my first cousin) of chronic alcohol abuse. Yet they continue to be a source of comfort to their young adult daughter.

Dr. Neff’s mantra to remind herself to practice compassion is:

May I be safe
May I be peaceful
May I be kind to myself
May I accept myself as I am
May I accept my life as it is

She recommends distracting oneself from dwelling on the bad feelings by taking a walk or plunging into a physical chore like cleaning or gardening while practicing the mantra and self-compassion. She points out that “Forgiveness does not mean condoning bad behavior or that we need to interact with people who have hurt us.” Other notes:

P. 156. People who invest their self worth in feeling superior and infallible tent to get angry and defensive when their status is threatened. People who compassionately accept their imperfections however, no longer need to engage in such unhealthy behavior to protect their egos.

Not only is High self-esteem is linked to narcissism but, in contrast, high self-compassion is not linked to narcissism.

Love allows us to feel confident and secure (oxytocin) while fear sends our amygdala into overdrive and floods our systems with cortisol.

p. 170 Failure is less likely to damage the self-efficacy beliefs of self-compassionate people.

P. 45 John Bowlby argues that early attachment with parents created the “internal working model” of self in relation to others. Betrayed and abused children become insecurely attaches, tend to feel unworthy and unlovable and that other people cannot be trusted. This creates pervasive feelings of insecurity, long-terms emotional distress and impairs the formation of close, stable relationships. Not surprisingly, they turn out to have low self-compassion. These internal working models can be changed through healthy romantic partnerships and skilled therapy. (also compassion meditation) and consistently giving ourselves nurturance and understanding we come to feel worthy of care and acceptance.

Self-criticism is associated with activity in the lateral prefrontal cortex and dorsal anterior cingulate (error processing and problem solving) Kindness and self-reassurance is associated with the left temporal pole (left pre-frontal cortex) and insula activation.

Physical touch releases oxytocin, provides a sense of security and soothes cardiovascular stress. Hug yourself.

p. 119 There are four elements to self-compassion mindfulness.
This is a moment of suffering (mindfulness of emotions)
Suffering is part of life.
May I be kind to myself in this moment (be in the present)
May I give myself the compassion I need. (set the intention to be self-compassionate)

Christopher Germer (The Mindful Path to Self-Compassion) observes that his client typically go through several distinct stages during therapy. People who feel worthless can experience a backdraft, like when a door is opened on a fire and the rush of fresh air suddenly fuels an oxygen-starved fire causing flames to blast through the newly open door. Through mindfulness, the backdraft may be experienced with compassion. Then, sometimes, infatuation follows and the self-critical person is suddenly tender towards oneself.

p. 225 Rather than relying on your partner to give you exactly what you need, try meeting your own needs first. Identify what you’re craving (validation, care, support, etc.) and see if self-compassion can help give it to you. This will help take the pressure off your partner. As you learn to rely more on self-healing, your would, given the care and attention they need, can heal.

Dr. Neff also refers to John Gottman, famous for identifying the four horseman of divorce: criticism, contempt, defensiveness and stonewalling. Her insights into her own failed first marriage in light of her father’s abandonment of her family, and her stresses with her second husband illuminate the academic information. A useful and readable book. I recommend it.