Future Legacy: A Perspective on Your Present Self #2 #cong24 #legacy

Synopsis:

You can not control your legacy because your legacy does not come into being until you are no longer in the society.

Total Words

831

Reading Time in Minutes

3

Key Takeaways:

  1. Your legacy comes to life as you go out of it.
  2. Great acts lead to longer living legacies.
  3. You have no say in your legacy.
  4. Time heals all wounds and erases all legacies.

About Claude Warren

Claude Warren is a Senior Software Engineer with over 30 years experience. He is currently lives in Ireland . He spends his time working on open source projects and with open source foundations. When not slinging code, he spends his time composing and playing guitar. He has presented talks on cross cultural teams, supporting open source, and innovation. He tries to mentor new developers.

He is a founding member of the Denver Mad Scientists Club and winner of the original Critter Crunch competition.

This biography outlines the bits he hopes will be his legacy.

Contacting Claude Warren:

You can contact Claude by email.

By Claude Warren

Legacy is how we view the past. All history is legacy. What you know about your favourite author, footballer, musician, or poet is their current legacy. But legacy changes over time.

For example, Thomas Midgley Jr. was thought to be an inventive genius. He developed a method to make high compression internal combustion engines stop knocking, making the modern automobile possible. He then went on to invent a way to replace the noxious, flammable gasses used in refrigeration, making the systems much safer. The Society of Chemical Industry awarded Midgley the Perkin Medal in 1937. In 1941, the American Chemical Society gave Midgley its highest award, the Priestley Medal. This was followed by the Willard Gibbs Award in 1942. He also held two honorary degrees and was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences. In 1944, he was elected president and chairman of the American Chemical Society. When he died, later that year, he was considered one of the greatest inventors of all time.

Fast forward to today and it is now said of him that “Midgley had a more adverse impact on the atmosphere than any other single organism in Earth’s history”, and that he possessed “an instinct for the regrettable that was almost uncanny”. Midgley was also seen as a “one-man environmental disaster”. How did he fall so far so fast? Midgley was the man who invented leaded gasoline and freon.

Midgley’s legacy, though not as he had hoped, is probably now secure, or at least as secure as it can be. At some point people will forget that Midgley ever existed. Leaded gasoline has never been seen by today’s younger drivers, and freon has been banned for several decades.

It is impossible to secure a legacy. At some point all great works are lost to the sands of time and all names as well. Legacies fade. Midgley is not as well known as he was in the 1940s or 1970s; eventually he will fade away. I am fairly certain that the guy who designed the great pyramids was well known in his day and celebrated in death, and probably spoken about for many years thereafter. He had a legacy, but today we know nothing about him.

As a software engineer, legacy is the old stuff. Legacy software is the old code that keeps the world spinning; without it, your bank probably wouldn’t work. Software developers tend to want to work on the new shiny stuff, but as soon as they finish the code and it goes out into the world it is legacy. It is, for better or worse, their legacy. They have no control over how the legacy is viewed. Nobody has control over their legacy, because legacy is what people in the present think of you in the past.

Everything is legacy. The new shiny stuff is just future legacy. I find it interesting that it becomes legacy at a specific instant in time. I think that this is true for all legacies. I believe that upon death, or withdrawal from society, a person’s legacy comes into being.

In Buddhism there is the concept of three types of lives:

  • * life with no beginning and no end – eternal life
  • * life with a beginning and an end – mortal life.
  • * Life with a beginning and no end – the life of a teacher.

Your legacy survives as long as someone remembers you or your teachings. Your core values will outlast your name and may outlast your genetics as an identifiable person. Your actions, teachings, and values will be twisted and molded to fit the particular circumstances of those that remember you.

Your legacy is not your creation, it is the creation of those that come after. Your legacy cannot be corrupted, it simply is or is not. And eventually it will fade into the background noise of history.

Ideas for Sale #31 #cong18

Synopsis:

Some of us don’t know when to stop, when tempted to give life to yet another enticing idea.  We ignore the fact that above our heads are enough spinning plates on sticks already.  So, we end up with more than we can cope with.  We watch in deperation as some of the plates begin to wobble.

Passing on each plate (like a baton to a relay-runner who stretches out an upturned hand) is what we dream of.

Is there a way to “sell ideas”, to hand them over, to ensure a legacy we can proudly leave behind?

4 Key Takeaways:

  1. It ain’t easy to restrict our creativity, to focus.
  2. There may be no such thing as a “successful handover” of one of our ideas to someone else
  3. Waiting to be rescued (from a surfeit of good ideas) is not to be recommended
  4. ‘Licensing’ may be the only viable means of ensuring our tried and tested innovations have an impact – out there in the world as well as in our bank accounts

About Alec Taylor:

Alec has emigrated five times from his native Ireland.  He currently splits his time between a house in the north of Portugal and a flat in Vienna.

He has worked in Radio, TV, Corporate Video, Now he concentrates on Coaching/Training/Consultancy in Communication Skills and Creativity, mainly in Europe.  He works in the private and public sectors, with NGOs and politicians.

He believes we are all multi-talented and can benefit hugely by igniting our hidden talents. He also believes we need – all of us, now more than ever – to become politicians in our own way, to hold communities together rather than let them be divided, to close the wealth gap (not allow it to be widened further), to actively promote and spread the practice of open, inclusive democracy.

Contacting Alec Taylor:

You can contact Alec by email or view his work on AlecTaylor.

By Alec Taylor.

Welcome to my greenhouse.  All the potted plants you see around me represent ideas that have grown from a seed. The plants are healthy.  I keep them watered.  They’re already through R&D.  The trouble is that they will soon outgrow the pots they’re in, or they will shrivel and die.

That’s the challenge for those of us who – in our sixties and seventies – were flooded with ideas that beguiled us, sat outside the door and wailed at us until we let them in, seduced us in their boudoir of delights until we embraced them.  It was heady stuff.

Now, we’re stuck with them which is less heady, but deeply satisfying nonetheless.  The challenge is to engage a younger generation, to entice them into the greenhouse.  To leave behind a legacy.

On a personal note, for some of us, these ideas represented candles in the darkness.  We kept lighting them to balance the sadness and the isolation.  It turns out that trauma can be a potent fertilizer of ideas which, in turn, provide a powerful therapy.

Every idea starts as a vision of what could be.  Sometimes, I call it ‘the prize’.  It’s visible, a scene in a movie.  There’s nothing more thrilling.  It’s not quite an hallucination. Unreal and real at the same time.  Graspable.

In my greenhouse there are nine potted plants right now.  Ten if you count the networking event called “K18” (bringing together people from as many different sectors as possible and running innovation workshops in between the chat, amidst the food and the drink, in a basement in Vienna’s 18thdistrict).

Three earn money, good money, already:

  • a training, coaching and consultancy company called “Alec Taylor Learning” (offering Communication Skills and Creativity),
  • a video-production company called “Memoirs On Camera” (personal and corporate video-memoirs as well as knowledge- transfer memoirs),
  • a property-marketing website called “Hidden Sunshine” (‘online dating’ for property-owners and prospective buyers).

Two years ago, another project called “Field-grey and Khaki” almost shot through the roof of the greenhouse when a leading person in the Film and TV industry in London asked me: “Have you got the next seven years of your life to devote to this?  We want to see a movie made about this German man who served in the Kaiser’s army in WW1 and the British army in WW2.”  The leading person’s subsequent ill health sadly left this plant in its pot, waiting to be discovered all over again.  That’s showbiz.

What would I do if I won the lottery? I know what I’d do.  I’d take the potted plants out of the greenhouse, find a building and call it THE IGNITION INSTITUTE.  I’d fill it with multi-talented people and give them each a potted plant to tend, to grow.  I’d turn up from time time and sit around….until someone came over and asked for advice about getting the best out of the plant in their particular pot. I’d be glad to help them.