Seven Deadly Sins of the 21st Century – Part 1: Lust

Lust = Use of Dating Apps The growth of online dating is well documented. However, what seems less understood by academics and big journalists are the nuanced social changes that have occurred as this form of dating moved from websites to phones and apps. I believe what started out as a harmless tool, has become a dangerous habit with devastating consequences if it continues its trend of becoming the dominant means of grouping men and women for dating.

COVID and Career Change Ep. 3

I just completed reading Herminia Ibarra's book Working Identity and a lot of the themes and theories she described resonated. Many of the stories as well. One individual couldn't quite eliminate the option of going back to similar work during his transition, but was motivated by wanting something different. This individual divides ideas into conformist and nonconformist roles, reaching out to company's he admires about the possibility for freelance work. I have taken a similar approach as I evaluate my options.

London’s V-Shaped Recovery: Intangible Data vs Tangible Experience

I ventured into Central London on a Saturday at the end of July. The weather was a tad rainy that day so I didn't want to chalk the vacancy of the streets up entirely to the economic draught we are actually in. I decided to visit the Churchill Museum the following week, on its opening day. At the same time I decided to take a walk around the streets between Piccadilly and St. James Park. The weather out that day couldn't have been more perfect. That combination of heat and cool that leaves you comfortable even if you are walking for hours. The kind of weather that makes London sparkle in the summer. So you could be assured that this is as busy as the area was going to get for shopping, sightseeing, eating and whatever other pleasures you can take in the heart of London on a glorious summer's day.

COVID and Career Change Ep. 2

The hardest thing to do is keep those voices of doubt outside your mind. Who am I kidding - changing careers at my age? How will I convince anyone to pay me? Will I be able to earn enough money? Why don't I just go back to what I know - it might take some time, but at least I can step in and earn decent money. These thoughts are escalated by the uncertainty provided by the COVID-19 response, or if you are me, having a young family. For clarity, my preferred path is what is being called today a "portfolio career". Not just a single 9 to 5 job with benefits. The name of the game is flexibility, quasi-entrepreneurship and doing things I like. Sounds great but when you start to dig into it, it is really scary. 

Three Men and a Decade: Final

It has been said that politics is downstream from culture. Looking back, the 2010s would make a strong case for this. Politics was still appealing to people's concerns of yesteryear. Social movements were gaining traction underground. The 2016 Brexit vote exposed just how out of touch politicians had become. But even by the time they tried to recover from those concerns, society had moved on to become even more divided. The decade ended with politicians grappling with how to appeal to these polar extremes and their respective movements. Our leaders started the decade feeling confident with central banks injecting the economy to calm the storm. They failed to dissect the original crime scene and assumed people would move on. They were wrong. Then they adjusted by either doubling down on status quo prevailing, or pretending to be the one to make necessary reforms.