New School Prayer

Filed Under (Faith, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 10-09-2009

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Now I sit me down in school

Where praying is against the rule

For this great nation under God

Finds mention of Him very odd.

If Scripture now the class recites,

It violates the Bill of Rights.

And anytime my head I bow

Becomes a Federal matter now.

Our hair can be purple, orange or green,

That’s no offense; it’s a freedom scene.

The law is specific, the law is precise.

Prayers spoken aloud are a serious vice.

For praying in a public hall

Might offend someone with no faith at all

In silence alone we must meditate,

God’s name is prohibited by the state.

We’re allowed to cuss and dress like freaks,

And pierce our noses, tongues and cheeks..

They’ve outlawed guns, but FIRST the Bible.

To quote the Good Book makes me liable.

We can elect a pregnant Senior Queen,

And the ‘unwed daddy,’ our Senior King.

It’s ‘inappropriate’ to teach right from wrong,

We’re taught that such ‘judgments’ do not belong.

We can get our condoms and birth controls,

Study witchcraft, vampires and totem poles.

But the Ten Commandments are not allowed,

No word of God must reach this crowd..

It’s scary here I must confess,

When chaos reigns the school’s a mess.

So, Lord, this silent plea I make:

Should I be shot; My soul please take!

Amen

Obama Healthcare

Filed Under (Humor, Personal, Politics) by Jason Monastra on 02-09-2009

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What could possibly go wrong:

The phone rings and the lady of the house answers, “Hello?”

“Mrs. Sanders, please.”

“Speaking.”

“Mrs. Sanders, this is Dr. Jones at St. Agnes Laboratory. When your husband’s doctor sent his biopsy to the lab last week, a biopsy from another Mr. Sanders arrived as well. We are now uncertain which one belongs to your husband. Frankly, either way the results are not too good.”

“What do you mean?” Mrs. Sanders asks nervously.

“Well, one of the specimens tested positive for Alzheimer’s and the other one tested positive for HIV. We can’t tell which is which.”

“That’s dreadful! Can you do the test again?” questioned Mrs. Sanders.

“Normally we can, but the new health care system will only pay for these expensive tests just one time.”

“Well, what am I supposed to do now?”

“The folks at Obama health care recommend that you drop your husband off somewhere in the middle of town. If he finds his way home, don’t sleep with him.”

Is being a turtle so bad?

Filed Under (Business, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 09-06-2009

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National Geographic has to be one of those mags that simply amazes the young and old.  Pictures of creation, landscape, animals, and all life that inspire one to truly look at themselves and wonder who they are and what they are doing.  Being a passionate person, certain things bring about a distinct emotion within me making for a great writing.

 

Turtles…not something I was overly fond of when growing up.  Actually I think my mom scared me off from them circling back to bacteria and such.  In any case, as days pass and maturity keeps gaining momentum - I look at things like turtles and wonder.  Pretty amazing.  When you think about it, something that most of us should consider when working.  More of us should be turtles.

 

A turtle has a very solid slate of great working characteristics.  Take a look:

 

  1. Hard outer shell.  Protects the animal from the outside world and shields it from things that would otherwise harm it (predators and the like).
  2. Neck.  One of the more interesting parts of the creature…a neck that can expand and retract as an element of confidence or fear.
  3. 4 legs, a formidable moving system allowing for the creature to move effectively - not too fast, not too slow - but just in time.

 

So lets think about this, is being a turtle so bad?  I do not think so.  Use it for us and take a look at the benefits.

 

  1. Hard outer shell.  Well most of us need this to survive in the business world.   Unfortunately few people actually have it, although more people will claim it than should.  The ability to seperate the business from personal, offer a formidable barrier between your heart and the business at hand.  If more of us had this, business would be cleaner and less fads like change management and other people factors would need to be addressed.
  2. Neck.  I love this one.  A neck is a great asset and suppose we used it like the turtle.  First, take a look and understand what you are suppossed to be doing.  Extend it out and get a better view if you need to.  However when things start flying around, and you need to get down to business and avoid the business climate - retract it and stay in your own world.  Keep it out there too long, you might get it cut off.
  3. Legs.  Movement.  Time and speed is what we hear about all the time.   But speed is becoming less hype, and people are more focused on results and the steadiness of getting things done correctly the first time.  Maybe slowing down like the turtle might not be so bad if you are suffering for your speed approach.

 

I think the turtle has it right.  He goes at his own pace, remains available and knowledge to the outside world, and keeps a hard exterior to protect against his enemies.  Come to think of it, don’t think that the turtle ever cries either.  Hmmmm…maybe there is more to the turtle than we thought.

Little Break

Filed Under (Business, Misc, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 09-06-2009

Ahhhh, the break time.  Well I have been on hiatus or whatever they call simply doing everything but writing.  Barely been reading any of the normal blogs I do, simply working and expanding of the footprint of the business.  Which I might add is doing very very well.  Consulting has been screaming along and our intention is to leverage that for the establishment of a more formal business development effort with centralized location penetration requirements of our employees.

 

In any case, glad to be back and sorry been away so long.  Look forward to reading and writing a good deal more about this business we work in.

Passion and the Job (Part I)

Filed Under (Business, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 22-04-2009

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The job search and better yet the career path that one takes has a genuine undertone that I think inevitably shapes the thoughts and minds of the seeker.  That is the person’s passion.  Passion is under-used criteria in the search process as most people think that passion is lost when they need to “grow up” and move out into the world.    I researched passion and this is what I found “Passion can be expressed as a feeling of unusual excitement, enthusiasm or compelling emotion towards a subject, idea, person, or object. A person is said to have a passion for something when they have a strong positive affinity for it. A love for something and a passion for something are very similar feelings.”  Does this sound like something we need more or less in the work place?

 

To me I would say more.  I have recruited, placed and built departments in the IT world for 10 yrs plus now (I am getting older….LOL).  The thing that makes a person or a place great is the passion the team or professional brings to the job and the environment.  So many of us do not have passion for our daily duties.  A real love of what we do, how we do it, how we can make it better.  I read once that a person with a job has too much time, and a person with a career never has enough.  I believe that this makes a strong alignment to the passion one feels and the career that spurns from that love.  Jobs are boring, careers tend to be better, but what about a passion that happens to be what you do for work?  That has power, creativity, efficiency, and hard work written all over it.  It is the key to making your job what no one else haves….a part of your daily life that you love doing and happen to get paid for.

 

How do we capture this in our search for a new role, or even create it in a role we currently have and enjoy?  I think that bringing passion to the search is far easier than creating it from scratch.  So we will begin there.  I know that people have heard in all sorts of forums the need for a professional job seeker to look for what they love and apply that to the search.  But that does not really address the idea of passion.  People love to do a great deal of things, most of which cannot sustain a living.  So what about a passion?  Well…pick it and I think we can come to a handful of positions in which that passion can be leveraged to create a career.  Passion is the key in what needs to be defined.

 

So lets do it….what is your passion?

 

Ask yourself:

  • What do you wake up thinking about?
  • What brings you more fulfillment than anything else?
  • What spurs a restlessness in your heart when you discuss it?
  • What can someone say, or bring up, that immediately floods you with passion to talk about, act on, or defend?

 

These are all defining comments on passion.  If these are answered truthfully, passion is easy to define.  Once defined, you need to incorporate that into a what positions use or leverage that passion to succeed in their business or objective.  Those are the positions and companies you need to align yourself with knowing that you are progressing the cause in which you have a great deal of passion.

Overworking to look good

Filed Under (Business, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 20-04-2009

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Over time it has become apparent in reading and listening to people within organizations that a sense or lack of manager care is constant in the work place.  Management, both executive and supervisory, are pressed with the bottom line offering little consciousness of the impact.  Expecting more and demanding more, employees become less and less engaged.  They work endless hours to serve “the man” just in the hopes that they will keep their job in the sliding economy.  The downward pressure continues to build until the release factor - quitting or getting fired - becomes a reality. 

I know in a great amount of the time this is true.  Economics on a worldwide stage are brutal, offering little to make one feel comfortable about the future prospects.  But is management to blame?  Better put, are managers the only ones to blame?  Until recently, I would have easily laid the pressure on their shoulders without thinking twice.  Mocking them as much as others would be a natural and easy step until most recently.  I read the story of a certain professional whose story becomes not so uncommon.  And in this, we can all see that management is not alone.

Derrick is an employee currently working in a customer focused environment.  He works for a large services company operating in their 2nd level support function bringing customer solutions to people that have purchased products from his employer.  Recently, it has been rumored to increase the bottom line and continue growth - the US based call centers will be closing and transferring responsibilities to off-shore call centers in India and Brazil.  This has worried a great deal of people including Derrick.

Derrick’s company has been very good about communicating the strategy and not all positions will be moving overseas.  The lower level roles will be moving, but all critical care, management, and project management roles will be staying here in the US.  Those positions will be filled with professionals in the company already and external people if the talent pool is not present.  Derrick, a 5 yr employee, is quite interested in remaining employed and inquires from his manager how he can be involved with one of the company’s remaining positions.  His manager offers him a clean strategy of to collect professional reviews, references, and annual evaluations to show that he can handle the new positions increased responsibility.  He also was told to break down his current role, inquire from business intelligence on how he stands statistically and bring all of that to the table.

Despite the advice and direction offered by his manager - Derrick decides to “show” his manager what type of person he is.  He continues doing the work he is doing, but working extended hours and filling roles where other people are falling short or have quit.  He feels that in this manner management will see his efforts and place him into one of the newly created roles.  Logically, as Derrick sees it, the actions he is taking make him appear like “management material” and the company will see with sweat and tears that he is a needed part of the team.

Fast forward to the end, Derrick lost his job - not to India but to another professional that came in from outside the company.  When he questioned the decision citing his more than 5 yrs of service, management told him that the information available for decisions and moving people into this role did not offer them a clear view that he had done, nor would be capable of the increased responsibility.  Therefore they went in a different direction. 

WOW.  Derrick was floored but to whose fault. He leaves there thinking little of the company and that he never stood a chance in getting the role.  But did he do what he could to get the new position.  Was he truly listening to the powers at be to place himself in the best seat to take advantage of the changes.  In this scenario, he had all of the information he needed to make the jump.  He simply did not execute.  However, when the picture is less clear, are we helping ourselves or doing more of the same in hopes people see us different?

Anti Addiction Drug

Filed Under (Business, Education, Humor, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 16-04-2009

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Now this is funny.  Take a look at this article on the anti addiction drug that has been all over the media recently.  Anti Addiction drugs seem to be developing into a new national trend in the hope of propping up another industry that has been experiencing difficulty - BIG Pharma.  Can someone send a bulk case to AIG and some of the other financial people on the street…..I think they might need this.

Job Motivation

Filed Under (Business, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 14-04-2009

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I have been investigating the job motivation area since I see a trend that has evolved since our last major recession in the 2000-2001 time frame.  People are looking for jobs, applying for new roles, even leaving positions for uncertain futures during a time when positions are not as plentiful.  Why is that?  Why is their turnover when people are being laid off by the thousands?  Why are the open chairs when unemployment is so high?  Motivation and the keys to why people work are becoming of large interest to me, to my clients, and to my company.

 

Motivation in the job market has really become a strong subject where experts are popping up like grass on the subject, citing numerous areas of speciality and telling companies what drives people.  The truth of the matter is as I evaluate my own employees, my family, and the people I speak to that are leaving positions during this recession for something “better” - I find a consistent theme.  Recognition.  Man what a driver this recognition is.  Professionals want to know they are doing a good job, and when they are they want to told so, identified in front of a group of peers, and made to know they count. 

 

Funny enough, recognition is one of the most widely unused management tools used around the globe.  We are quick to point out, finger, or even yell to the mountain tops when we identify a gap or see someone doing something wrong.  Why do we do that?  Does that build our fellow worker?  Does it increase productivity?  Does it inspire innovation or change?  Actually it does none.  What it does it make people sit back in their desks, complain about work, surf the net for new jobs, and lose countless hours and precious dollars on things that have nothing to do with their job.  So why is recognition not used.  Simply put, managers do not get it.

 

Management believes that dollars and cents are all that count.  People are motivated by money.  As I read and learn more from one-one personal conversations, professionals are motivated less by money than you would think.  In the midst of all the benefits of a job, pay is 3rd or 4th continually on all lists.  The two leading criteria are personal learning and recognition.  Those lead the lists above money every single time.  WOW.  When I read that I was confused…you know why - I am a manager.  Learning not a very good manager.  Simple recognition of a job well done, an innovative idea, cost cutting measure introduced, etc. brings to life an inner spectrum untouched by money and one of far more value.  People seize the opportunity and elate when their deeds are made known to others.  Why?  Well there are countless reasons why, but the fact remains that recognition is the key. 

 

I have been implementing and designing ways to foster this not only in my business life, but my personal as well with extraordinary results.  Small things, simple touches that let people know how well they are doing are met with joy, smiles, and most of all - HARDER work.  People begin trusting, develop respect, and have a deeper devotion to the job and the company.  All things we want and at a far less dollar cost than giving a raise.  If you are not using them, or even considering it - hesitate no longer, look no farther, and start down the road of recognition.  I think you will find the results are far more than you can imagine.

Perspective of Life

Filed Under (Faith, Misc, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 08-04-2009

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One day, the father of a very wealthy family took his son on a trip to the country with the express purpose of showing him how poor people live.

They spent a couple of days and nights on the farm of what would be considered a very poor family.

On their return from their trip, the father asked his son, “How was the trip?”

“It was great, Dad.”

“Did you see how poor people live?” the father asked.

“Oh yeah,” said the son.

“So, tell me, what did you learn from the trip?” asked the father.

The son answered:
“I saw that we have one dog and they had four.

We have a pool that reaches to the middle of our garden and they have a creek that has no end.

We have imported lanterns in our garden and they have the stars at night.

Our patio reaches to the front yard and they have the whole horizon.

We have a small piece of land to live on and they have fields that go beyond our sight..

We have servants who serve us, but they serve others.

We buy our food, but they grow theirs.

We have walls around our property to protect us, they have friends to protect them.”

The boy’s father was speechless.

Then his son added, “Thanks Dad for showing me how poor we are.”

Isn’t perspective a wonderful thing? Makes you wonder what would happen if we all gave thanks for everything we have, instead of worrying about what we don’t have.

Appreciate every single thing you have, especially your friends!

Cleaning the inside of the computer screen

Filed Under (Education, Humor, Personal) by Jason Monastra on 01-04-2009

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Anyone ever learned how to do this.  Took some time for me to learn, but finally mastered it with a friend of mine.  Take a look