Jonathan Freirich Jonathan Freirich

Abuse of Power is a Waste of Resources

Another glorious run in shorts today!

Went for a 6.29 miles today - my regular workout distance at a decent pace.

Listened to two podcasts about Governor Cuomo:

The Daily: The Ruthless Rise and Lonely Decline of Andrew Cuomo

The Ezra Klein Show: Andrew Cuomo and the Performance of Power

A big take-away was the waste of time spent, among other things, on currying favor in offices or between powerful people, or creating workplace cultures of any sort that focus most of their energies on things that are not the work-task.

How much better could society get if we were to focus on qualifications for doing the job and then on getting the work done?

Mind-boggling.

Meanwhile, here are the geekier running details:

I use iSmoothRun for tracking on an iPhone and linked to an Apple Watch. iSmoothrun allows me to customize a workout better than most apps I have used.

Fuller stats found at Smashrun here.

Also here I am at Strava here.

I follow and connect via both platforms, but more on Strava.

Some details for the run:

Running Time: 56:46
Total Distance: 6.29 miles
Avg. page: 9:02/mile

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Jonathan Freirich Jonathan Freirich

Do less harm

Shabbat Shalom.

Before meditating today I read this:

[From The Lao Tzu (Tao-Te Ching) as found in Wing-Tsit Chan (translator and compiler), A Source Book in Chinese Philosophy, (1963), page 149, slightly adapted by Jonathan Freirich]

19.
Abandon sageness and discard wisdom;
Then the people will benefit a hundredfold.
Abandon humanity and discard righteousness;
Then the people will return to filial piety and deep love.
Abandon skill and discard profit;
Then there will be no thieves or robbers.
However, these three things are ornament and not adequate.
Therefore let people hold on to these:
Manifest plainness,
Embrace simplicity,
Reduce selfishness,
Have few desires.


My thoughts:

Adam Grant’s latest book, Think Again, has a lot of good things to say about not getting too attached to one way of doing things. This passage may be saying something similar. Grant offers us the idea that we should be confidently humble - having faith in our abilities to make a path forward and humble about knowing what that path might be.

Intellect and knowledge, integrity and humanity, skills and abilities, we often think these might be enough. And yet, without the plainness, simplicity, and less self-centered approaches, they may not serve us all that well.

In an interview with Ezra Klein, George Saunders noted that kindness started with “doing less harm”.

Wishing everyone a good weekend and Shabbat Shalom.

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