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Archives for 2012

Over the River

: An art installation draws controversy

Colorado is well known for it’s fifty-four 14,000-foot peaks, its wild, rushing rivers, its endless natural beauty, and the highest per-capita beer production in the United States. Maybe not the last one, but it is certainly known for the outdoors. Colorado also has Denver, a teeming city with business prospects, major sports teams, and a burgeoning arts scene that is becoming well known in its own right.

A combination of those factors led environmental artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude to develop a controversial plan, dubbed “Over the River,” that would temporarily suspend nearly six miles of silvery, luminous fabric panels high above the Arkansas River along a 42-mile stretch of the river between Salida and Cañon City in south-central Colorado. After years of research (begun in 1985), the duo decided upon the section of the Arkansas due to its high banks, which would allow recreational rafters to enjoy the art as they passed through the stretch and rode through the bubbling waters. The art installation itself is only slated to last for two weeks in August of 2015, and there has been an enormous amount of pressure on both sides to allow, and disallow, the Arkansas River project.

The proponents are from many sectors, including Governor Hickenlooper, and have argued that there will be tourist-generated revenue (344,000 expected to view), a focus on Colorado as an artistic hub, and the project will create hundreds of temporary jobs. Opponents argue that the project will visually reduce the landscape, cause major delays on highways, and damage the river eco-system.

Christo is determined to finish the project that was his late wife’s dream, and is contributing 100% of the associated costs of the project, funding coming primarily through the sale of his original works of art. According to the website, there is no public subsidy or taxpayer fees involved because he himself has never asked for money to view his projects.

The issue brings to mind a fascinating TEDTalk on moving sculpture, from American artist Jent Echelman, entitled: “Taking Imagination Seriously.”

Photo credit: Wolfgang Volz, photograph of a 1992 drawing from Christo Over the River, Project for the Arkansas River, Colorado

What are your thoughts and comments on the art installation? Is it good for Colorado?


 

 

3 risks you’ll take attending TEDxMileHigh 2012

A sense of adventure. Confidence. Stubborn commitment. Passion. A ticket to TEDxMileHigh 2012.

You may not need all of these to take a risk—but they sure help.

This June, we’ll be engaging in some risky business at TEDxMileHigh 2012 under the theme of “Risk & Reward” (#TEDxMH12). For the second time, the event will bring together innovative Coloradans who will give the “talk of their lives” on the power of technology, design, education, social enterprise, and more.

What’s that you say? You don’t think listening to the power of ideas is risky behavior?

Well, you won’t exactly be jumping from a plane or running a brothel out of your suburban Chicago home while your parents are out of town, but you will taking a few risks when you purchase a ticket to TEDxMileHigh.

Risk #1 Disrupting the Status Quo
We all want to see change in the world and we know that means going against the grain and making tough, unpopular decisions. At TEDxMileHigh you’ll hear all the thinkers, doers, entrepreneurs, athletes, artists, humanitarians, and other speakers talk about taking that risk, whether it worked and ideas on how to take your next risk.

Risk #2 Inspiration
The risk in becoming inspired is embracing all ideas because actively seeking inspiration can be a challenge. You have to allow yourself to hear new ideas and introduce thoughts that challenge the concepts you hold true. So, by risking that what you hold to be true could be wrong, you are risking becoming inspired.

Risk #3 Change Your Life (or Someone Else’s)
Besides hearing engaging speakers talk about innovative ideas, networking is what TEDx is all about. If like attracts like, you can be sure that your fellow TEDites are passionately committed to enacting creative solutions to the world’s problems. At TEDxMileHigh 2012, you run the risk of meeting someone who will change your life with their idea—or maybe your idea will help change someone else’s life.

These risks may seem small to you (especially if you regularly find yourself jumping out of planes or have Rebecca De Mornay circa 1983 in your house), but even the smallest rock creates ripples and changes the water.

So, are you ready to get risky? Then purchase your tickets today an a and join us on June 2nd at TEDxMileHigh 2012.

What risks have you have taken to cause positive change? What was the result?

One of you is the Messiah, now go change the world

Change begins with us. That’s a core theme that resonated from two PhDs, a modern-day Renaissance man, an Unreasonable Fellow, a nationally ranked slam poet, and two nonprofit entrepreneurs who shared their stories of risk and reward at the inaugural TEDxMileHighSalon. Practical inspirations are not relegated to those who took to the TEDxMileHigh stage, they reside in each and every one of us.

So exactly how can we begin to manifest real change? It depends on whom you ask.

Should you consult Cesar Gonzalez, he’ll tell you that to achieve excellence and affect change, you should surround yourself with people who treat you like a Messiah. People who show you love and respect, expect the best from you and focus on your strengths. After all, what others think does matter. He believes that our performance is directly shaped by the high expectations of those around us. The great byproduct of this concept is that we amass a collection of unique, talented individuals, that when combined, can create impact in the world.

Leveraging the power of voice is what Shannon Galpin says can incite positive change. She has spent years in Afghanistan, providing a voice to women and children who are oppressed. Consider the sheer volume of stories about atrocities and brutalities that occur in conflict zones. It has caused many of us to become desensitized and apathetic. But Shannon has found that using an individual’s story to highlight a greater problem gets people to listen and to understand. “Voice” changes lives, communities and countries from within. Her advice, “Look outside yourself and into your community and look to where you can perhaps speak for children, abused women, refugees, the homeless, because you see them—us—as catalysts for a better world.”

Michael Huemer uses a political context to address change—or rather what holds us back from seeking change. He uses the concept of political irrationality versus political rationality to demonstrate his point. The assertion is that political rationality is costly since you don’t get to believe whatever you want to believe. If commit to rationality, then you put your belief system at risk. Because most of us are willing to accept risk only if the expected reward exceeds it, we will not become rational about political issues. According to Michael, “the worst social problem that we face is the problem of human irrationality because this is the problem that prevents us from solving the other problems.” After all, if you are going to solve a problem, you have to have accurate beliefs about it. This entails a continual pursuit for knowledge and a resolve to remain open-minded even when our belief system is being challenged.

Rather than using politics, Todd Siler uses art and science to paint a vivid image of how we can save the world. As expressed by science fiction writer Isaac Asimov, Todd points out that, “there is an art in science and a science in art and the two are not enemies, rather they are different aspects of the whole.” The takeaway is that we need the whole. We need to open our minds, challenge our curiosity and transform our ideas in order to transcend our compartmentalized way of viewing the world. He challenges each of us to identify an urgent problem in the world and how we would solve it. Then communicate your idea through art to make an impact.

“Skipping stones” is the key to creating a ripple effect, according to Libby Birky, who believes that change begins with you and me—with us. It simply takes one person to take one action to create ripples that affect hundreds or even thousands of people. She uses the example of a woman who encouraged her officemates to volunteer at Libby’s nonprofit, SAME Café. This woman sent one email inviting people to donate their time at the restaurant. That one email resulted in 150 hours of volunteerism and 300 organic meals served. So take that next step, skip your stone and watch the ripple effect.

Last but not least, Allen Lim delivered his own words of wisdom: “Just try.” After decades of coaching the best cyclists in the world, Allen took a risk, making a radical shift from the known to the unknown. He walked away from his sports psychologist job to launch a sports drink company. This wasn’t the path he intended to travel, and along the way he questioned everything—including his identity. “If you strip away all the crap about who you are supposed to be… who you want people to think you are, if you stop betting on false currency, the identity, the status and the appearance that you think fits the bill, then you really have nothing to lose… because no one can ever take away from you who you have always been and who you will always be—and that is perfect.” Go ahead, trust yourself and take the first step into the unknown.

All of the changemakers mentioned above share one common ideal: Change does not happen by playing it safe. Change is about community, raising our expectations of ourselves and of those around us, and making connections. Some ideas have to be experienced and some experiences are magical. With that in mind, we’ll end with a bit of magic—check out Theo Wilson’s performance, Woman: An Ode to the Feminine.

What role does risk play in your life? What encourages or prevents you from taking risks and why?

Words of wisdom: TEDxMileHighSalon

The TEDxMileHigh community came together again to celebrate Colorado at TEDxMileHighSalon at the RedLine Gallery in Denver. Allen Lim, Libby Birky and Theo Wilson returned to the stage for an update on their lives and movements since the inaugural TEDxMileHigh event in April 2011. They were joined by Shannon Galpin from Mountain2Mountain, Cesar Gonzalez from Uncharted (formerly Unreasonable Institute), Dr. Michael Huemer from CU Boulder, and Todd Siler from the ArtScience Program.

One thing I love about TEDx events is the unbelievable community of people. We are smart, we are interested and we expand ourselves and thoughts by sharing insights and experiences. I leave every event inspired and challenged to look at life differently.

Earlier this year I became curious about what makes a person quotable. How important is the context? The content? Timing and cadence? Or, do good quotes stand on their own? When wondering aloud at a friend’s birthday dinner, I promised to start a daily quote log to capture the clever, insightful or funny things I hear over the year.

This project has fine-tuned my listening to hear the brilliance in what people say. Everyone in my life is smarter and funnier than ever before! Some of my favorite quotes range from the profound, “Food: it’s meant to be eaten,” to sage advice like, “Passionately follow what you are in love with.”  And finally, the endless inquiry available in the question, “What if gummy worms could wiggle?”

Not surprisingly, TEDxMileHighSalon provided several days worth of material. When asked about the thinking he uses when faced with a difficult situation, Allen Lim said, “Take out the word ‘should’. Whenever you’re ‘shoulding’ yourself, figure out another way to say the same thing without it.” Theo Wilson, when asked what one thing is we can do to take action after the Salon said, “Maybe it isn’t what you do, but what you stop doing.” And, as professed by Dr. Huemer, “Rationality is expensive. It forces us to believe something we don’t want to believe,” as exemplified by the fact that over 70 times more people died from the ‘war on terror’ than actual terrorism.

From my experience over the last six months and as eloquently suggested by Cesar Gonzalez, maybe by “listening for the messiah in others” everyone can be quotable.

What inspiring, unique or thought-provoking quotes did you hear at TEDxMileHighSalon? If you could inspire a movement with one sentence, what would it be? 

 

It’s ambitious: Let’s end homelessness by 2015

As I strolled down 16th street mall recently on a Saturday evening, I stopped at a park bench to participate in one of my favorite solo activities: people watching. From my vantage point at an old piano meant to liven up the mall with colorful sounds, I saw people walking by, talking, laughing, yelling, and soaking in a warm Colorado night as the sun sank slowly behind the mountains. I spent twenty or thirty minutes watching, listening, and taking in the surroundings as I sipped on a vanilla latte from a nearby Starbucks.

I didn’t have much of a plan that evening—but I found myself struck by the number of homeless strolling by, playing cards, chatting on the sidewalks. I went home to do some research on the homeless population found that there are 6,000+ homeless in Denver, of which 60% are families with children, 42% are women, and found this TED talk from 2009, where journalist Becky Blanton speaks about her experience being homeless.

The talk focuses on three main points: (1) society’s placement of value on having shelter, (2) the negative perceptions of others’ realities and the implications it has on an individual, and (3) homelessness is an attitude, not a lifestyle. Reading the comments below the talk, I found that there were many people impacted positively and negatively from the talk itself. The important piece, however, is the need to think about homelessness as we go about our daily lives–its causes, its truths, and its myths. The talk itself serves to be a springboard for conversation, not a piece that ends homelessness altogether.

In 2003, then-mayor John Hickenlooper created a 10-year plan to end homelessness in Denver, called Denver’s Road Home. An ambitious project, it was created to end homelessness in Denver by 2015. The current statistics on the project show the numbers of homeless have fallen by 11%, and the project has reduced chronic homelessness to a large degree, and has built over 1,000 new housing units to individuals and families in need. There are many myths and false perceptions of the homeless, but the truth is that many of the homeless have jobs, are seeking better lives, and aren’t panhandling for money. The vast majority of panhandlers in Denver, costing citizens over $4 million per year, aren’t homeless and most of the homeless don’t panhandle. We are on the right path in Denver, but we need to focus our efforts on truly solving the problem, which is not always by blindly giving to a man on a corner with a cardboard sign.

What are you doing to make a difference? How can our community rise up and continue fighting for decency for people, for understanding, and for better lives?

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