T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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27.1 | The Seasons of a Man's Life | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Fri Feb 05 1993 13:19 | 18 |
| Daniel J. Levinson with Charlotte N. Darrow, Edward B. Klein, Maria H.
Levinson and Braxton McKee, Ballentine Books, NY, 1978.
ISBN 0-345-33901-0 paperback $10.95
Levinson led a ten-year study of the lives of men, and identified a common
pattern of periods of stable growth and periods of transition. The most
famous of these is now the "mid-life crisis" which he calls "mid-life
transition." But this is just the most important of the transitions he
identified. There are also the early adult and the age thirty transitions.
And the stable periods between them.
I found this book fascinating. It gave me a new way to look at my life
and helped me to understand a lot what I have gone through. It also helped
me understand what my father's life might have been like.
And I am writing now from a few years into Middle Adulthood.
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27.2 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Fri Feb 05 1993 13:40 | 6 |
| RE: .1
I got that book from my father's estate....I haven't read it yet, but,
sounds like I should. Thanks for the info.
Marc H.
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27.3 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri Feb 05 1993 15:44 | 13 |
|
I enjoyed "Fire in the Belly" by Sam Kean quite a bit. Particularly the
first half. That's where I read the thing about "it takes a strong man
to know how to grieve".
I'm currently getting *alot* out of the book "The Road Less Traveled" by
Scott Peck, who's a very insightful psychiatrist. He writes much valuable
things about what love is and what love isn't.
/Eric
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27.4 | Gems | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Feb 08 1993 10:54 | 9 |
| "Road Less Travelled" Is one of the best "life guides" written. Really
explains a lot about the finer aspects of the "human experience".
"Iron John" Is an eye-opener. Reading Bly creates linkage to the deeper
aspects of the "male experience".
"the Family" by Bradshaw creates an awareness of our family history and
how behaviour can be acquired and modified to enhance our involvement
in "family systems".
The three for-mentioned works have added enormously to my life and I
feel can enhance anyones visions.
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27.5 | John Bradshaw | 2CRAZY::FLATHERS | Rooting for the underdog. | Mon Feb 08 1993 11:54 | 5 |
|
I second Bradshaw "On The Family". !!! Very insightful.
Jack
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27.6 | Great men tend to be great readers | MORO::BEELER_JE | God save us from Slick Willie | Mon Feb 08 1993 12:16 | 24 |
| I'd like to make some commentary on the title of this note.
Real men most assuredly read books. Real men read a lot of books.
Once someone asked me about the differences and similarities between
some of our more recognizable military leaders of the past:
MacArthur, Patton, Eisenhower, Bradley. Their personal styles were
individually, D R A M A T I C A L L Y different! (That is the
understatement of the year!). One common thread among these men was
that they were all very well read.
Result? Even with dramatically different styles of leadership they
possessed an outstanding ability to COMMUNICATE with others. I believe
that *this* is the essence of leadership - communication - and that
those who are incessant readers tend to be the best communicators.
MacArthur at one time possessed a library which was 2nd only to that of
West Point. When he left the Philippines the library stayed at the
Manila Hotel. The Japanese knew that the destruction of his library
would be a fate worse than death to MacArthur so .. when Mac returned
to Manila they waited until he was within sight of the Manila hotel
before they torched his library.
Bubba
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27.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Feb 08 1993 13:17 | 8 |
| I think I'd agree with Bubba, here. It would seem that Wally would only
count "books about men" (though there are many who would argue that almost
all books are "about men".)
There aren't really that many sociology books about maleness, so it shouldn't
be a surprise that many men aren't talking about reading them.
Steve
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27.8 | um, make that 'verbal communication' in line 3 ;-) | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Mtn View CA | Mon Feb 08 1993 15:17 | 45 |
| I finished Dr Deb Tannen's book "You Just Don't Understand" over
the weekend. Tannen has written several other books on her research
into oral communication. She discusses the interactions in dialogues
between boys, girls, men, and women, in a variety of settings, and to
illustrate a number of principles. It is very hard to describe her
specific cases; they frequently depend upon notions she has developed
in earlier chapters. I did agree with many of her conclusions about
what happens in some conversations.
Among the interesting ideas she brought up is that boys and girls have
very different goals in their interactions; tend to see the causes or
the drivers of their interactions through very different lenses; and
that these differences show up very early; in conversations among 3-yr
olds, for example. The differences persisted in later life; strikingly,
she said that the conversations among 3-year olds and 25-year olds showed
that 3-yr old girls have more in common (in their conversational styles)
with 25-yr old women, than they do with 3-yr old boys.
One particular difference she identified as basics among girls' and womens'
conversational modes was in what she identified as rapport-talk; speech
intended to establish connections, build networks, develop a sense of the
group or a sense of a community; personal, intimate, emotional. With boys
and with men, she identified instead a pattern of dominant-subordinate modes,
wherein conversations tended to be framed with one person one-up and another
one-down; status-oriented; hierarchical. As a way of contrasting this style
of interaction with what she called rapport-talk, she called it report-talk;
to identify the impersonal nature of talk about objective subjects, upon which
one person may be presumed to have more expertise (be one-up) than another.
She saw these differences in the 3-year olds, and in every other age.
Tannen also described studies of other aspects of communications, like
interruptions. In none of her analyses did she make a judgement call that
a particular style was better or worse, overall; she did frequently identify
situations where a particular style worked extremely well, or failed to work
at all; or, particularly interestingly, where two different styles interacted
in a pathological or dysfunctional way. Her point was not to judge styles,
but to illuminate them. Her studies showed that the most overwhelming single
determinant of style was a person's gender; hence, she dubbed these different
conversational styles 'genderlects'. Her intention seemed to be, that armed
with the knowledge of different genderlects, people would be able to understand
and overcome the difficulties that arise in communication thereby.
I found it a striking book, and I recommend it highly.
DougO
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27.9 | Sure great men do read books but then ... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Mon Feb 08 1993 15:40 | 19 |
| re .6
"Real men most assuredly read books."
Agreed. No question, but I think there's also a lot of guys who read books
that I wouldn't classify as real men and some real men I know who don't read
a lot of books.
Bubba, don't take this as an attack but I don't know how you connect into ...
"I believe that *this* is the essence of leadership - communication -
and that those who are incessant readers tend to be the best
communicators."
Communication isn't THE essence of leadership, but certainly one of the
characteristics a good leader needs to have and incessant readers also aren't
necessarily the best communicators. I know some guys who read a lot but can't
communicate for toffee.
- Paul.
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27.10 | Agreed | MORO::BEELER_JE | God save us from Slick Willie | Mon Feb 08 1993 15:56 | 6 |
| Agreed ... I didn't think through before I posted it ..
I agree 100% with you ... perhaps we should say that "communications"
is an absolute essential element of leadership... OK?
Bubba
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27.11 | | HEFTY::CHARBONND | I was 86'ed from 10-Forward! | Mon Feb 08 1993 16:01 | 3 |
| "How I Found Freedom In An Unfree World" by Harry Browne.
self-explanatory title
|
27.12 | | CRONIC::SCHULER | Greg - Hudson, MA | Mon Feb 08 1993 16:01 | 6 |
| Excellent assessment of Tannen's book, Doug. I read it last
winter for a Communications class I was taking and found it
fascinating. I notice the speech patterns she describes
nearly every day.
/Greg
|
27.13 | But do real men read books about men? | LIMPID::BINNS | | Wed Feb 10 1993 11:14 | 11 |
| re: .6
> a library which was 2nd only to that of
> West Point
I always assumed the Library of Congress or the British Museum had the
library that was second only to that of West Point!
Kit
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27.14 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Wed Feb 10 1993 12:04 | 14 |
| A library second only to that of West Point can mean only one thing: A
library whose primary content is books about the military. The Library
of Congress was established as a repository for American books only
and, so far as I know, contains for all practical purposes no books
that were not published in the USA. (There's a Gutenberg Bible and
some other specific historic works.) It also contains very few books
that were published prior to the War of 1812, when the British burned
Washington. Hence, it is easy to imagine a military library far
superior to the LoC. (I can't speak for the BM library; I don't know
what its purpose is.)
How'd I do, Bubba?
-dick
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27.15 | | LIMPID::BINNS | | Wed Feb 10 1993 12:59 | 7 |
| Yeah, that's sort of what I figured he was getting at, too, but I
thought I'd just pull his leg.
Even so, I'd be surprised if West Point, let alone Douglas MacArthur,
had the best collection of military history, even of just the USA.
Kit
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27.16 | Really?? | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Feb 11 1993 00:02 | 13 |
| RE: .15
> Even so, I'd be surprised if West Point, let alone Douglas MacArthur,
> had the best collection of military history, even of just the USA.
Really? Why is that? I mean, this is one of the foremost educational
institutions around, and is obviously dedicated to military training.
I'd be surprised if West Point DIDN'T have the best collection of
military history. Well, outside the Air Force Academy!! (I'm such a
homer)
What do you military guys think?
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27.17 | Bubba Binder done good | MORO::BEELER_JE | God save us from Slick Willie | Thu Feb 11 1993 00:27 | 11 |
| .14> How'd I do, Bubba?
Ya' done good.
.16> Well, outside the Air Force Academy!!
During the MacArthur years the Air Force Academy wasn't even a gleam
in someone's eye .. as a matter of fact, the Air Force itself didn't
even exist.
Bubba
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27.18 | | COMET::BRONCO::TANGUY | Armchair Rocket Scientist | Thu Feb 11 1993 00:33 | 10 |
| .17> During the MacArthur years the Air Force Academy wasn't even a gleam
.17> in someone's eye .. as a matter of fact, the Air Force itself didn't
.17> even exist.
Hey, neither did I!!! ;^)
Just a little Colorado-chauvinism, there. Remember in the old Star
Trek when Chekhov always claimed that important stuff was "inwented" in
Russia. . . same thing!
|
27.19 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu Feb 11 1993 07:47 | 12 |
| > Really? Why is that? I mean, this is one of the foremost educational
> institutions around, and is obviously dedicated to military training.
> I'd be surprised if West Point DIDN'T have the best collection of
> military history.
West Point is far from the only military training institution in
the world. It's probably not even the oldest. So I would not be
surprised if there existed a better military library. I'd be more
surprised if there is a better one in the US but the world is a big
place.
Alfred
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27.20 | | LIMPID::BINNS | | Thu Feb 11 1993 08:53 | 10 |
| Great specialty libraries are usually the result of a combination of
good luck, lots of money, and a plan. These may well have come
together fortuitously at West Point to create a great military history
library. But it does not follow automatically that because West Point
is our foremost military academy that it has the foremost military
history library, either world-wide or nationally.
Anyone out there got the facts (or range of expert opinion) on this?
Kit
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27.21 | | SMURF::BINDER | Qui scire uelit ipse debet discere | Thu Feb 11 1993 09:20 | 11 |
| Re .17
-< Bubba Binder done good >-
*BUBBA* Binder??? You, a Texan, hanging that moniker on a Yankee? Not
that I remain untouched by the signal honor you do me, understand, but
Bubba my boy, you are obviously working too hard.
:-)
-dick
|