Monday, June 14, 2010

The Correct Miscalculation





Like millions of American women, I belong to a book club. Along with the monthly opportunity to share good food, good company and good conversation with a group of extraordinary women, I appreciate my club because it forces me to read literature -- fiction and non fiction -- that has nothing to do with the work I do during the rest of the month. Our selections reflect the wide range of interests and experience of our members, and expand my own understanding of our basic humanity.

This month's book is
"The Housekeeper and the Professor" by Yoko Ogawa. The book was originally published in Japanese in 2003. We read the 2009 translation by Stephen Snyder.

"The Housekeeper and the Professor" tells the story of a brilliant mathematics professor who suffered a life-altering brain injury in a car accident. His short term memory is reduced to a precise 80 minute cycle. A young housekeeper is hired to care for the professor, her work made more challenging by the fact that to some degree, her relationship with the Professor must begin anew each day, since he has no ability to remember the previous day's encounters. Even the multiple hand-written reminders that the Professor pins to his suit cannot adequately compensate for his loss.

Despite this deficit, there are certain constants in the Professor's life. Chief among them is his complete love and immersion in the beauty of numbers. Not only can he see patterns and relationships in the formulas and theorems of mathematics, but he has a unique ability to share his understanding with his much less educated housekeeper and her ten-year old son, whom he has dubbed "Root" (because the top of the boy's head reminds him of the square root symbol).

A simple, elegant relationship develops between the Housekeeper and the Professor, perhaps because it is stripped away of the expectations placed by memory or past mistakes. In fact, the housekeeper learns a different perspective about "mistakes:"

"He had a very feeling for what he called the 'correct miscalculation,' for he believed that mistakes were often as revealing as the right answers. This gave us confidence even when our best efforts came to nothing."

And although the Professor's life revolved around the precision of mathematics and numbers, he is completely comfortable with the unknown; perhaps a metaphor for the limitations of his own capacity for learning:

"Among the many things that made the Professor an excellent teacher was the fact that he wasn't afraid to say 'we don't know.' For the Professor, there was no shame in admitting you didn't have the answer, it was a necessary step toward the truth. It was as important to teach us about the unknown or the unknowable as it was to teach us what had already been safely proven."

"The Housekeeper and the Professor" is less than 200 pages. The beauty and efficiency of its prose make it a worthwhile investment.


Thursday, June 3, 2010

Purpose Motive trumps Profit Motive

Daniel Pink thinks, writes and lectures about the way we do business, in this country and abroad. He thinks about capitalism and the assumptions made about how people work and what makes them work better -- more effectively, more creatively and more productively.

A few days ago, I had the privilege of hearing Pink speak to a conference of more than 200 coaches in Washington, D.C. He was fascinating, captivating and engaging. Fingers were flying as people took notes and sent Twitter messages about key phrases in his presentation.

Pink deconstructed the whole idea of capitalism and the profit motive. He used recent studies and recent history to show that work based solely on the need to make money and more money does not serve society particularly well. But work based on something larger -- a purpose -- could be more valuable than gold.

I cannot do justice to Pink's presentation in this blog. Fortunately, someone has recorded his words. And better still, the clever people at the 250+ year old RSA (Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce) in London created this amazing piece of animation to illustrate his thoughts. Literally, Words Into Action.

It's not the same as seeing Pink in person. It's something completely different: