When our tasks are filled with satisfaction and harmony with our minds we are at peace.
When there is no struggle in the production of what we must do or make, there is a unity between ourselves and our labor.
Sometimes we do sit under the tree of discipline to learn a new skill or see through learning a new technique or even enduring a life-lesson. But the outcome will be a wiser, better and stronger us.
Usually this happens when we have in mind a very clear focus for our work.
I am doing this work because it will please someone. I am doing this because it will get me closer to my degree. I am working on this because it will make my family happier and more secure.
If this is where we are in the work we have chosen to do it is no longer a job, it is a profession. This is an ELEVATION.
Personal standards rise, expectations are higher and others see the difference in the way we present ourselves. Our work certifies us, experience and competence stand higher and quality comes along.
Many people today are struggling with how to reconstruct their resumes. Just how does an outplaced (fired) person of great experience (older than 50) put into words just how valuable their wisdom really is? How can it be marketed and how do they compete with the younger generation?
Remember a simple fact: it IS a jungle and the rule is eat or be eaten. Prepare mentally, emotionally and physically. Assume nothing. Forget scratching and clawing: attack and gnaw.
Our generation knows grammar, manners and we know how to fight and win.
Perhaps a whole life cannot be summed up into a single page resume, but you must have a knockout one page CV.
Be prepared for a phone call and answer crisply and succinctly.
When interviewed, look good and be prepared.
When hired, thank God for the chance to work and work hard for your employer.
Years ago, I was hired to hand-letter this piece for a company. This is a version set in Quark. It really is a great attitude adjuster:
© Tim www.timjohnsonphoto.com
Thursday, July 9, 2009
The Joy Of Work
Labels:
calligraphy,
coaching,
CV,
CV 4,
joy of working,
life expereince,
profession,
resume,
work
Seeing Great Photography and A Chance To Prove It
In the next few weeks, a triumvirate of judges (Dave Horne, Rick Meyers & myself) will converge on West Regional Library (Apex, Cary off 55) to award prizes to exceptional images in a Teen Photo Contest. The library is accepting teen entries through July 31. Call the Library for entry details – 919-463-8500.
I’ve been a part of this contest for some time and each year the judging gets more and more difficult. My eyes are not failing and the prints are not that different, but there is another dynamic at play:
The young people are learning to see more deeply into their world and they are getting what they see onto their prints.
Each year the library has held a workshop on photography or photo manipulation prior to the contest. We generally tell the young people what we are looking for in the images. At the awards gathering we also meet with interested entrants and share pointers on how to improve their images.
Then, they have several weeks to go and get the pictures they think will win.
Some contestants have entered the contest for 3 or 4 years.
Good photographs are not made from better equipment. Good tech does not hurt, but it is not the main thing.
Two years ago, we three old photographic heads really struggled over presenting the Best In Show or Best In Group prize to a young lady who had made a 28 k image by using her cell phone camera. Yes, it really was that good.
Two of our regular contestants are the offspring of professional photographers. Some have really elaborate equipment. None of that matters when the photographs are laid out side-by-side and comparisons and judgments are made.
The Golden Mean and Rule Of Thirds, as in all art, applies to photography. Primarily, our eyes and hearts must be drawn to the piece. Is it balanced? Do we LIKE it? Does it have a VOICE? Does the photographer deliberately eliminate as much as possible from the image so that the viewer can immediately seize on the SUBJECT?
The library is working hard to serve the community and this donated time is our way of helping encourage young people to engage in creative work. I would suggest they carry with them advice for a sage photographer who continues to inspire me.
Try for a record of emotion rather than a piece of topography. Wait till the building makes you feel intensely in some part of it or other; then try and analyze what gives you that feeling, see if it is due to the isolation of some particular aspect or effect and see what your camera can do towards reproducing that effect, that subject. Try and try again until you find that your print shall give not only yourself, but also others who have not your intimate knowledge of the original, some measure of the feeling originally inspired in you – greater or less, according to the success you have attained. This will be “cathedral picture taking” something beyond mere photography, the result to the critic shall be, not merely “what a clever bit of photography” but “what a noble, beautiful, fascinating building that must be and how priceless is that sort of photography that can so record one’s emotional union to it.” Frederick Evans, March 12, 1904
Mr. Evans was known for his platinum prints of the great cathedrals of England and France
© Tim www.timjohnsonphoto.com
I’ve been a part of this contest for some time and each year the judging gets more and more difficult. My eyes are not failing and the prints are not that different, but there is another dynamic at play:
The young people are learning to see more deeply into their world and they are getting what they see onto their prints.
Each year the library has held a workshop on photography or photo manipulation prior to the contest. We generally tell the young people what we are looking for in the images. At the awards gathering we also meet with interested entrants and share pointers on how to improve their images.
Then, they have several weeks to go and get the pictures they think will win.
Some contestants have entered the contest for 3 or 4 years.
Good photographs are not made from better equipment. Good tech does not hurt, but it is not the main thing.
Two years ago, we three old photographic heads really struggled over presenting the Best In Show or Best In Group prize to a young lady who had made a 28 k image by using her cell phone camera. Yes, it really was that good.
Two of our regular contestants are the offspring of professional photographers. Some have really elaborate equipment. None of that matters when the photographs are laid out side-by-side and comparisons and judgments are made.
The Golden Mean and Rule Of Thirds, as in all art, applies to photography. Primarily, our eyes and hearts must be drawn to the piece. Is it balanced? Do we LIKE it? Does it have a VOICE? Does the photographer deliberately eliminate as much as possible from the image so that the viewer can immediately seize on the SUBJECT?
The library is working hard to serve the community and this donated time is our way of helping encourage young people to engage in creative work. I would suggest they carry with them advice for a sage photographer who continues to inspire me.
Try for a record of emotion rather than a piece of topography. Wait till the building makes you feel intensely in some part of it or other; then try and analyze what gives you that feeling, see if it is due to the isolation of some particular aspect or effect and see what your camera can do towards reproducing that effect, that subject. Try and try again until you find that your print shall give not only yourself, but also others who have not your intimate knowledge of the original, some measure of the feeling originally inspired in you – greater or less, according to the success you have attained. This will be “cathedral picture taking” something beyond mere photography, the result to the critic shall be, not merely “what a clever bit of photography” but “what a noble, beautiful, fascinating building that must be and how priceless is that sort of photography that can so record one’s emotional union to it.” Frederick Evans, March 12, 1904
Mr. Evans was known for his platinum prints of the great cathedrals of England and France
© Tim www.timjohnsonphoto.com
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