The middle of the street outside our flat has been sinking for several years. (The western half of San Francisco was sand dunes up until the 1920s; underneath it's still just sand.) SF public works shows up periodically, dumps another load of asphalt over it, which also proceeeds to sink. This week, we must have finally made the construction schedule. There's a crew and a flotilla of large equipment, performing construction archeology on layers of asphalt, concrete, brick, then sand.
Lunch time comes and they hit the Safeway across the street, so there's the all-Hispanic work crew down there sitting at the edge of the hole in the street. Lunch consists of cokes, spicy chicken wings, and sushi, while conversing in Spanish. They casually throw the chicken bones in the hole - it's going to be covered with concrete in an hour anyway. The Chinese ancestry mailman walks up the street, asks "what you guys do to street?" They answer back, he walks on. Immigrants from former Soviet states walk down the street to the Muni stop.
Is this a great country or what?
Friday, May 11, 2012
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Which Path? Saul of Tarsus and William of Iowa
Around the year 35, Saul of Tarsus travelled from Jerusalem to Damascus. While on the road to Damascus he had a conversion experience. The change was so radical that thereafter in the Bible he is not Saul, the Hebrew, but Paul, the Apostle to the Gentiles.
Paul's conversion epitomizes a strand of Christian tradition. Another example is the Apostles, seven weeks after the crucifixion of Jesus. During the Jewish festival of Pentecost they suddenly have a religious experience that makes them come out to the streets and begin preaching. The Christian Pentecostal movement takes its name from this event. Much of modern Protestant Christianity has a focus on a single, point-in-time, life-changing conversion.
In 1947, W. Edwards Deming made a different journey. During the American Occupation, he travelled to Japan to assist with their 1951 census. While there, he also lectured and trained Japanese engineers in quality control techniques. He taught the value of continuous incremental improvements in industrial processes - not a search for great breakthroughs, just a steady focus on practices. Deming's teachings were foundational to Japan's post-war industrial success in firms such as Toyota and Sony: continuous improvement in quality, productivity, and empowerment of each worker.
I was reminded of Deming's legacy by an article in The Economist about Honeywell Corporation, until recently considered "one of America's most messed-up firms." But over the last few years Honeywell performed a remarkable turnaround. They did not do it by finding a magic silver bullet. Instead, their new CEO had spent time at Toyota factories in the U.S. and decided to implement a process of continuous improvement at Honeywell. Each morning, every worker takes part in a small group meeting, held standing up and no more than fifteen minutes long. Each employee is expected to contribute two new ideas for improvement, however small, per month.
In Japan, Deming's teaching found fertile ground. But until the 1980s, Deming was a prophet without honor in his homeland.
Did Deming's teaching find a better initial reception in Japan than in the U.S. because of a difference in religious roots? Did it seem more natural to a Buddhist tradition than a Pauline tradition? Much of Western culture emphasizes the radical conversion experience, as in Paul or Pentecost. But Buddhist heritage emphasizes steady practice. In sitting meditation you are attentive, notice, let go, and just focus on your breathing. Some days it goes well, others not so well, but stay with the practice and you will get better at it. Do you achieve enlightenment? Who knows. Do you become more attentive? Probably. Can you continue in improving your practice? Yes.
Relate this to current Unitarian Universalism: radical transformation is a buzzword in some UU circles. But is this a piece of Christian baggage that we would be well rid of? Radical change sometimes happens. But like winning the lottery, it is of note exactly because it is so rare.
Buddhist teaching and the success of Deming's students argue that we are better served by attentive practice and incremental change. It's not as sexy as winning the transformation lottery, but many small enlightenments may take us where we want to go. And if they don't - at least we'll be enlightened.
Paul's conversion epitomizes a strand of Christian tradition. Another example is the Apostles, seven weeks after the crucifixion of Jesus. During the Jewish festival of Pentecost they suddenly have a religious experience that makes them come out to the streets and begin preaching. The Christian Pentecostal movement takes its name from this event. Much of modern Protestant Christianity has a focus on a single, point-in-time, life-changing conversion.
In 1947, W. Edwards Deming made a different journey. During the American Occupation, he travelled to Japan to assist with their 1951 census. While there, he also lectured and trained Japanese engineers in quality control techniques. He taught the value of continuous incremental improvements in industrial processes - not a search for great breakthroughs, just a steady focus on practices. Deming's teachings were foundational to Japan's post-war industrial success in firms such as Toyota and Sony: continuous improvement in quality, productivity, and empowerment of each worker.
I was reminded of Deming's legacy by an article in The Economist about Honeywell Corporation, until recently considered "one of America's most messed-up firms." But over the last few years Honeywell performed a remarkable turnaround. They did not do it by finding a magic silver bullet. Instead, their new CEO had spent time at Toyota factories in the U.S. and decided to implement a process of continuous improvement at Honeywell. Each morning, every worker takes part in a small group meeting, held standing up and no more than fifteen minutes long. Each employee is expected to contribute two new ideas for improvement, however small, per month.
In Japan, Deming's teaching found fertile ground. But until the 1980s, Deming was a prophet without honor in his homeland.
Did Deming's teaching find a better initial reception in Japan than in the U.S. because of a difference in religious roots? Did it seem more natural to a Buddhist tradition than a Pauline tradition? Much of Western culture emphasizes the radical conversion experience, as in Paul or Pentecost. But Buddhist heritage emphasizes steady practice. In sitting meditation you are attentive, notice, let go, and just focus on your breathing. Some days it goes well, others not so well, but stay with the practice and you will get better at it. Do you achieve enlightenment? Who knows. Do you become more attentive? Probably. Can you continue in improving your practice? Yes.
Relate this to current Unitarian Universalism: radical transformation is a buzzword in some UU circles. But is this a piece of Christian baggage that we would be well rid of? Radical change sometimes happens. But like winning the lottery, it is of note exactly because it is so rare.
Buddhist teaching and the success of Deming's students argue that we are better served by attentive practice and incremental change. It's not as sexy as winning the transformation lottery, but many small enlightenments may take us where we want to go. And if they don't - at least we'll be enlightened.
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