Monday, September 7, 2015

Happy Labor Day!

It's Labor Day here in the U.S. snd here's an article from Wikipedia:

Labor Day (Labour Day in Canada) in the United States is a public holiday celebrated on the first Monday in September. It honors the American labor movement and the contributions that workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of their country.
Labor Day was promoted by the Central Labor Union and the Knights of Labor, who organized the first parade in New York City. After the Haymarket Massacre in Chicago on May 4, 1886, U.S. President Grover Cleveland feared that commemorating Labor Day on May 1 could become an opportunity to commemorate the affair. Therefore, in 1887, the United States holiday was established in September to support the Labor Day that the Knights favored.[1]
Canada's Labour Day is also celebrated on the first Monday of September. More than 80 other countries celebrate International Workers' Day on May 1 as their holiday dedicated to labor.

History

In 1882, Matthew Maguire, a machinist, first proposed the holiday while serving as secretary of the CLU (Central Labor Union) of New York.[2] Others argue that it was first proposed by Peter J. McGuire of the American Federation of Labor in May 1882,[3] after witnessing the annual labour festivalheld in TorontoCanada.[4] Oregon was the first state to make it a holiday on February 21, 1887. By the time it became a federal holiday in 1894, thirty states officially celebrated Labor Day.[3]
Following the deaths of a number of workers at the hands of the U.S. military and U.S. Marshals during the Pullman Strike, the United States Congress unanimously voted to approve rush legislation that made Labor Day a national holiday; President Grover Cleveland signed it into law a mere six days after the end of the strike.[5] The September date originally chosen by the CLU of New York and observed by many of the nation's trade unions for the previous several years was selected rather than the more widespread International Workers' Day because Cleveland was concerned that observance of the latter would be associated with the nascent socialist and anarchist movements that, though distinct from one another, had rallied to commemorate the Haymarket Affair in International Workers' Day.[6][7] All U.S. states, the District of Columbia, and the territories have made it a statutory holiday.

Celebrations

The form for the celebration of Labor Day was outlined in the first proposal of the holiday: A street parade to exhibit to the public "the strength and esprit de corps of the trade and labor organizations",[2] followed by a festival for the workers and their families. This became the pattern for Labor Day celebrations. Speeches by prominent men and women were introduced later, as more emphasis was placed upon the civil significance of the holiday. Still later, by a resolution of the American Federation of Labor convention of 1909, the Sunday preceding Labor Day was adopted as Labor Sunday and dedicated to the spiritual and educational aspects of the Labor movement.[2]
The holiday often marks the end of the traditional summer season (although summer doesn't officially end until September 21), as students normally return to school the following week, although school year starting days now vary.

Retail Sale Day

To take advantage of large numbers of potential customers free to shop, Labor Day has become an important sale weekend for many retailers in the United States. Some buyers retailers claim it is one of the largest sale dates of the year, second only to the Christmas season's Black Friday.[8]
Ironically, because of the importance of the sale weekend, some of those who are employed in the retail sector not only work on Labor Day, but work longer hours. More Americans work in the retail industry than any other, with retail employment making up 24% of all jobs in the United States.[9] As of 2012, only 3% of those employed in the retail sector were members of a labor union.[9]
In high society, Labor Day is (or was) considered the last day of the year when it is fashionable to wear white[10] or seersucker.[11][12]
In U.S. sports, Labor Day marks the beginning of the NFL and college football seasons. NCAA teams usually play their first games the weekend of Labor Day, with the NFL traditionally playing their first game the Thursday following Labor Day. The Southern 500 NASCAR auto race was held that day from 1950 to 1983, and on the Sunday before from 1984 to 2003, but is set to return in 2015, in Darlington, South Carolina. At Indianapolis Raceway Park, the National Hot Rod Association hold their finals to the U.S. Nationals drag race. Labor Day is the middle point between weeks 1 and 2 of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships held in Flushing Meadows, New York.
In the United States, many school districts resume classes around the Labor Day holiday weekend (see First day of school). Most begin the week before, making Labor Day weekend the first three-day weekend of the school calendar, while others return the Tuesday following Labor Day, allowing families one final getaway before the school year begins. Many districts across the Midwest are opting to begin school after Labor Day.[13]

Interesting days


Today - Labor Day, of course! As well as Buy a Book Day and Salami Day

Tomorrow - Pardon DayIguana Awareness DayAnother Look Unlimited Day,  World Physical Therapy Day and Literacy Day There seems to be a reading theme this week

Next Monday - Boss/Employee Exchange Day Earlier versions of the calendar had this day on the 7th. It's also Eat a Hoagie Day OK!

October 7 - Bathtub Day and Frappe Day A nice cold frappe and a hot bath!

Sunday, September 6, 2015

The Funday Sunnies

Interesting days


Today - Pet Rock DayRead a Book Day and Fight Procrastination Day I think I'm fighting a losing battle

Tomorrow -  Buy a Book Day After reading a book yesterday, it's time to buy a new one today (Although the brick and mortar stores may be closed for the holiday). It's also Salami Day  A book and salami with some French bread (and some wine!)  sounds pretty good. Let's not forget Boss/Employee Exchange Day That is if you're not in business for yourself

Next Sunday - It's a busy day, including Fortune Cookie DayPositive Thinking DayPeanut Day and Grandparent's Day



Don't let your grandma go out to an empty mailbox on Grandparent's Day

October 6 - Physician Assistant Day and Mad Hatter Day


Saturday, September 5, 2015

Late blog today

I moved into my new place at about 5:30 this morning, slept until about noon, had lunch, showered and am now back at work. But I need to get my blog out to all my loyal fan!

Interesting days

Today - Be Late For Something Day I'm celebrating by being late with my blog!   Cheese Pizza Day I like any kind of pizza except plain cheese. International Vulture Awareness Day,  International Day of Charity and World Beard Day And I'm celebrating this!

Tomorrow - Pet Rock DayRead a Book Day and Fight Procrastination Day I think I'm fighting a losing battle!

Next Saturday - Chocolate Milk Shake Day Oh, yeah! And it's Video Games Day Are you more old school? Or do you like playing newer games?

October 5 - Country Inn Bed & Breakfast Day Yum! And it's World Teachers Day and World Habitat Day. It's also Chic Spy Day The name is Bartowski. Chuck Bartowski. OK...Chuck isn't quite as chic as James Bond, but he was pretty cool...in a nerdy sort of way


Friday, September 4, 2015

The Friday Fishwrap

All the news that's fit to wrap around a dead fish

The week in review


Monday - "Is your fixed income broken?" About how to stretch your fixed income dollars

Tuesday - "Cashflow 101" About the Cashflow game sponsored by my friend, Dennis Beckman

Wednesday - "The Top 5 Reasons to Be a Jack of All Trades" A blog post by Tim Ferris

Thursday - "Some things never change" A blog about what men complained about women 50 and 100 years ago by Brett McKay from The Art of Manliness

I'm not sure if I'll be able to do a Periscope today. I'm moving today and working tonight, but I'll try to fit one in

Interesting days


This week


Saturday- More Herbs, Less Salt DayIndividual Rights Day and  Franchise Appreciation Day

Sunday  -  International Whale Shark DayHolistic Pet DayPony Express DayToasted Marshmallow Day and Slinky Day

Monday - Love Litigating Lawyers DayWe Love Memoirs Day and Trail Mix Day


Wednesday - V-J Day

Thursday - Skyscraper Day and Welsh Rarebit Day

Today - Bring Your Manners To Work Day Yes please! Speaking of bringing your manners to work, it would be very polite to hug your boss since it's also Hug Your Boss Day. And let's not forget Lazy Mom's Day How many moms would enjoy a day off? And it's also College Colors Day and Newspaper Carrier Day Are newspaper carriers a vanishing breed?

Next week


Tomorrow - Be Late For Something Day,  Cheese Pizza Day,  International Vulture Awareness Day,  International Day of Charity and World Beard Day

Sunday - Pet Rock DayRead a Book Day and Fight Procrastination Day

Monday - Buy a Book DaySalami Day and Boss/Employee Exchange Day

Tuesday - Pardon DayIguana Awareness DayAnother Look Unlimited Day,  Literacy Day and World Physical Therapy Day

Wednesday - Wonderful Weirdos Day and Teddy Bear Day

Thursday - Swap Ideas Day

Friday - Of course it's Patriot Day. It's also Make Your Bed Day I'll be staying in a hotel, so I won't have to worry about it. Let's not forget No News is Good News Day My mother always said if you can't say anything nice, don't say anything at all. And since the news rarely says anything nice, I don't listen much. And lastly, it's Hot Cross Bun Day Does anybody know where I can get some in Anaheim?

Next month


September 29 - International Coffee Day and World Heart Day

September 30 - Ask A Stupid Question Day,  Mud Pack Day and International Translation Day

October 1 - Older Peoples DayCD Player DayWorld Vegetarian DayPoetry Day and Lace Day

October 2 - Name Your Car DayCustodial Worker DayWorld Farm Animals DayWorld Smile Day and International Day of Non-Violence

October 3 - World Card Making DayVirus Appreciation DayBoyfriends Day and Techies Day

October 4 - Improve Your Office Day and Ship in A Bottle Day I think a ship in a bottle would improve an office. It's also Taco Day and Vodka Day Hmmm...an interesting combination. Although, since I'll be working that night I may celebrate Vodka Day a day earlier. And it's World Animal Day and Change A Light Day


Thursday, September 3, 2015

Some things never change

I wasn't originally going to blog today, but then I saw this blog from the Art of Manliness and thought I'd share it:

It's very long so I'll just give you the gist of it and you can refer to the link above to find out more.

What Men Complained About Women 50 and 100 Years Ago

It often seems that men and women have never before held such a low opinion of the opposite sex. Women complain that there are no more real men out there, that today’s generation of males are akin to a tribe of rude, crude, lost little boys, who won’t commit and are drifting through life. Men lament that modern women are the worst crop of females the world has ever seen — that on a whole they’re flighty, crass, and prickly, and come in two equally unpalatable flavors: angry social justice warrior and entitled princess.
Have women and men really devolved from a past golden age, when ladies were ladies and men were men?
While the Art of Manliness has a nostalgic bent both in our aesthetics and in the way we often draw lessons from history, because we spend so much time researching that history, few know as well as we do what was and was not in fact true about the past. In particular, as a collector of old books, ephemera, and vintage men’s magazines, I’ve gotten a unique look at how men actually used to feel about women back in the day. And the truth of the matter is that there’s never been a time when men haven’t complained about women (and women haven’t complained about men).
Some of the complaints of yore are unique to the time, but many have held surprisingly consistent through the ages. Indeed, though folks often react to the “red pill” sites out there as if they’re some kind of new, unprecedented phenomenon, pretty much everything brought up on those forums, both in content and tone, can be found in the men’s magazines of the 40s, 50s, and 60s.
Don’t believe me? Let’s take a look at just a few excerpts (edited for length) from books and magazines, not only from the mid-century “golden age” of sex relations, but even farther back to the 1800s, and see what men used to complain about women.

Interesting days 


Today - Skyscraper Day and Welsh Rarebit Day Even though I have the day off today, I'll probably be too busy packing for my move on Friday to indulge. Plus I'm going to Bobbette Grasty's event

Tomorrow - Bring Your Manners To Work Day Yes please! Speaking of bringing your manners to work, it would be very polite to hug your boss since it's also Hug Your Boss Day. And let's not forget Lazy Mom's Day How many moms would enjoy a day off? And lastly, it's also Newspaper Carrier Day Are newspaper carriers a vanishing breed? And it's also College Colors Day What are your college colors?

Next Thursday - Swap Ideas Day Do you have ideas that you want to share? I'm open to guest bloggers

October 3 - World Card Making Day Whether you use cardstock, scissors, crayons and markers; or you use a computer with a program like Card Maker; or you use a system like SendOutCards, let your creativity shine through today. Virus Appreciation Day I don't think I'll be celebrating this one. And it's Boyfriends Day and Techies Day In my day, we were called nerds and these two celebrations were mutually exclusive




Wednesday, September 2, 2015

The Top 5 Reasons to Be a Jack of All Trades

I was going to put this idea into my own words, but Tim Ferris did such an excellent job, I'll let him do it:

1951_Plymouth_Assembly_Line___Little_did_we_realize_in_1951_…___Flickr_-_Photo_Sharing_Specialization isn’t always a good thing. Photo from 1951 assembly line.
Are the days of Da Vinci dead? Is it possible to, at once, be a world-class painter, engineer, scientist, and more?
“No way. Those times are long gone. Nothing was discovered then. Now the best you can do is pick your field and master it.”
The devout specialist is fond of labeling the impetuous learner–Da Vinci and Ben Franklin being just two forgotten examples–“jack of all trades, master of none.” The chorus unites: In the modern world, it is he who specializes who survives and thrives. There is no place for Renaissance men or women. Starry-eyed amateurs.
Is it true? I don’t think so. Here are the top five reasons why being a “jack of all trades,” what I prefer to call a “generalist,” is making a comeback:
5) “Jack of all trades, master of none” is an artificial pairing. 
It is entirely possible to be a jack of all trades, master of many. How? Specialists overestimate the time needed to “master” a skill and confuse “master” with “perfect”…
Generalists recognize that the 80/20 principle applies to skills: 20% of a language’s vocabulary will enable you to communicate and understand at least 80%, 20% of a dance like tango (lead and footwork) separates the novice from the pro, 20% of the moves in a sport account for 80% of the scoring, etc. Is this settling for mediocre?
Not at all. Generalists take the condensed study up to, but not beyond, the point of rapidly diminishing returns. There is perhaps a 5% comprehension difference between the focused generalist who studies Japanese systematically for 2 years vs. the specialist who studies Japanese for 10 with the lack of urgency typical of those who claim that something “takes a lifetime to learn.” Hogwash. Based on my experience and research, it is possible to become world-class in almost any skill within one year.
4) In a world of dogmatic specialists, it’s the generalist who ends up running the show.
Is the CEO a better accountant than the CFO or CPA? Was Steve Jobs a better programmer than top coders at Apple? No, but he had a broad range of skills and saw the unseen interconnectedness. As technology becomes a commodity with the democratization of information, it’s the big-picture generalists who will predict, innovate, and rise to power fastest. There is a reason military “generals” are called such.
3) Boredom is failure. 
In a first-world economy where we have the physical necessities covered with even low-class income, Mazlow’s hierarchy of needs drives us to need more for any measure of comparative “success.” Lack of intellectual stimulation, not superlative material wealth, is what drives us to depression and emotional bankruptcy. Generalizing and experimenting prevents this, while over-specialization guarantees it.
2) Diversity of intellectual playgrounds breeds confidence instead of fear of the unknown. 
It also breeds empathy with the broadest range of human conditions and appreciation of the broadest range of human accomplishments. The alternative is the defensive xenophobia and smugness uniquely common to those whose identities are defined by their job title or single skill, which they pursue out of obligation and not enjoyment.
1) It’s more fun, in the most serious existential sense. 
The jack of all trades maximizes his number of peak experiences in life and learns to enjoy the pursuit of excellence unrelated to material gain, all while finding the few things he is truly uniquely suited to dominate.
The specialist who imprisons himself in self-inflicted one-dimensionality — pursuing and impossible perfection — spends decades stagnant or making imperceptible incremental improvements while the curious generalist consistently measures improvement in quantum leaps. It is only the latter who enjoys the process of pursuing excellence.

Don’t put on experiential blinders in the name of specializing. It’s both unnecessary and crippling. Those who label you a “jack of all trades, master of none” are seldom satisfied with themselves.
Why take their advice?
Here is a description of the incredible Alfred Lee Loomis, a generalist of the highest order who changed the course of World War II with his private science experiments, here taken from the incredible portrait of his life, Tuxedo Park:
Loomis did not conform to the conventional measure of a great scientist. He was too complex to categorize — financier, philanthropist, society figure, physicist, inventor, amateur, dilettante — a contradiction in terms.
Be too complex to categorize.
Look far and wide.  There are worlds to conquer. 
###
What do you think? Is it better to be a generalist or a specialist? In tomorrow's blog post I'll tell you why we're all becoming generalists whether we like it or not!

Interesting days


Today - V-J Day

This:




Not this:

Martha Quinn - MTV veejay

Tomorrow - Skyscraper Day and Welsh Rarebit Day Even though I have the day off tomorrow, I'll probably be too busy packing for my move on Friday to indulge

Next Wednesday - Wonderful Weirdos Day and Teddy Bear Day I'm not weird because I have a teddy bear! I'm weird for many other interesting reasons

October 2 - Name Your Car Day My current car doesn't have a name. My 1st car, a VW Beetle, was named Wilbur (I think my brother named it). I also had Sofia Fiat, Prince Valiant, and the boys called my white Nissan Sentra "White Shadow". There were several other cars in the mix that never had a name. How about your car? Does it have a name? It's also Custodial Worker Day and World Farm Animals Day I'm sure a lot of the custodial workers think that we're a bunch of pigs! And it's World Smile Day and International Day of Non-Violence Now that's something to smile about


Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Cashflow 101

I've written about this a few times before, here's the most recent post, but I'm writing about it again because it ties in with yesterday's blog post.

Dennis Beckman, whom I mentioned yesterday, hosts a monthly Cashflow game. He uses the game to explain the concepts he teaches, so it's not quite the typical Cashflow game. If you want to learn about the infinite banking concept that Dennis teaches in a fun environment, join his game on the 4th Saturday of every month in San Ramon, CA. Here's the link and description:

  • Meet other local fans of the financial board game of CashFlow 101/202 by Kiyosaki. We'll be exploring some interesting concepts to enhance the practical application of the game. You won't look at the world of finance & investing the same way again! If you have a copy of the game please bring it along. We usually get more then one going at a time. Danville CashFlow Game Meetup - EastBayPlus Cash Flow club is an official RichDad Cash Flow club. Unfortunately, we cannot accommodate children at this location. If we find a different venue that is more "kid-friendly" then that, of course, can change. Let's have some FUN!
And if you want to learn more about what I do, I'll be glad to talk to you before or after the game. This is where I was introduced to the business I'm in now.

If you have an IRA or 401k and you're anywhere near the age of 59 1/2, then you need to talk to Dennis now! I'll be talking to him in the next month or so. Dennis offers free consultations and he sells a book that further explains the concepts he teaches. If anybody joins my business with me during the months of September or October, I'll buy the book for them. It's a $25 value!

Interesting days

September - Piano Month and Chicken Month Tasty!

Today - Emma M Nutt Day, Building and Code Staff Appreciation Day and Calendar Adjustment Day Where would we be without Emma M. Nutt, building and code staff, and an adjusted calendar?

Tomorrow - V-J Day The surrender of the Japanese after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Next Tuesday - Pardon DayIguana Awareness DayAnother Look Unlimited Day,  Literacy Day and World Physical Therapy Day This is something that Dennis can also help you with...he teaches physical fitness as well as fiscal fitness

October - Fair Trade MonthBreast Cancer Awareness Month and Pizza Month This is something I can really sink my teeth into

October 1 - Older Peoples Day and CD Player Day Us older people remember when those dadburn newfangled CD doohickeys first came out! It's also World Vegetarian DayPoetry Day and Lace Day