Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

Let’s not hit each other, let’s not hit ourselves

02.23.2009 by David Murray // 2 Comments

Last week I had a beery reunion with some longtime colleagues, all of whom are looking for work. Beside a roaring fire in an old Chicago tavern, we went around the table.

Each talked about how she structures her day. This one gets up at 8:00 to stay in the habit, this one doesn't get up until 10:00. She limits her job search to three hours and then shuts off the computer. She networks and Facebooks all day.

They talked about the hassles and humiliations of the weekly automated status-update calls from the unemployment office: "Why don't they just say, 'If nothing has changed, press one'?" 

They went through their contingency plans: "After March I'll have to move in with my little brother."

They were amazingly willing to talk about their feelings, which I suppose they've had plenty of time to become intimately in touch with.

Their fear I understood; their humor I enjoyed; their ebbing confidence broke my heart.

In one of his last interviews, the late Studs Terkel remembered how people processed the Great Depression. Not that this is that; I recognize the many drawbacks of this historical comparison. But still:

My mother ran a hotel, the Wells-Grand Hotel, for men, just outside Chicago’s skid row. Skilled workers. Mechanics. Guys with jobs here and there. Some retired. It was fine. The lobby in the hotel was empty in the daytime. It was just a little room, and at night they’d come play hearts and pinochle. Then came 1929.  

Suddenly they’re not working. Or those guys who retired, suddenly their pensions are gone. Now they’re in the lobby in the daytime. They don’t know what the hell to do. So they drank more. And played the horses more. And there were fights. What were the fights over? Their own self-respect. I mean, they had nothing to do. They were furious. Who do you blame? Who do you hit? You hit each other. That was sort of a metaphor for what happened to the country. They blamed themselves. Yet I met these people who weathered it one way or the other, some just by lending a hand.

The lessons of the Great Depression? Don’t blame yourself. Turn to others. Take part in the community. The big boys are not that bright.

Hope dies last—“La esperanza muere última.” Without hope, you can’t make it. And so long as we have that hope, we’ll be okay. Once you become active helping others, you feel alive. You don’t feel, “It’s my fault.” You become a different person. And others are changed, too.

In other words—in the words of Terkel pal Kurt Vonnegut's son Mark—the meaning of life is: "We're here to get each other through this thing, whatever it is."

That's just what we'll do, old friends. How about it?

Categories // Uncategorized

Friends with my enemies

02.20.2009 by David Murray // 7 Comments

So recently a colleague suggested I should "friend" Clark Judge on Facebook. Clark is a former George H.W. Bush speechwriter who runs the White House Writers Group. Clark and I have corresponded over the years and he's spoken at several conferences I've put on. He's a smart conservative (a real niche in Washington these days).

So I "friend" Clark, and he friends me back.

Here's where it gets interesting:

Clark is a big wheel, so I go searching his friends, looking for famous people I can friend.

I friend David Frum, speechwriter-turned-pundit who notoriously penned the line "axis of evil" for President Bush.

Frum friends me back and I go searching for luminaries among his friends, which include Tucker Carlson. I friend Tucker, telling him in a note, that I'm friends with Frum. (Well, I am, aren't I?) I also suggest that Tucker should subscribe to my weekly e-zine, the Executive Communication Report, which might provide him an occasional insight and some grist for the 24-hour cable TV mouth-flapping mill.

Tucker friends me back, thanks me for the link and declares his intention to subscribe to the e-zine, which is cool. Not content, I of course search his friends, and friend several of them.

Scared about who I might friend next, I call it a night and go to bed. In the morning, I find this in my e-mail:

—— Forwarded Message
From: Facebook <confirm+ogpll6r1@facebookmail.com>
Reply-To: noreply <noreply@facebookmail.com>
Date: Thu, 19 Feb 2009 08:02:17 -0800
To: David Murray <dmurrayil@earthlink.net>
Subject: G Gordon Liddy confirmed you as a friend on Facebook…

G Gordon confirmed you as a friend on Facebook.

To view G Gordon's profile or write on his Wall, follow this link:
http://www.facebook.com/n/?profile.php&id=1151858208&aref=23362854

Everybody's Facebooking and Linking-In these days. What are your adventures in online grab-ass?

Categories // Uncategorized

The sound of authenticity

02.20.2009 by David Murray // 1 Comment

Speechwriters and others talk about "authenticity" all the time, but for examples we're usually forced to find our examples from outside the absurdly artificial context of the corporate world.

Say what you will about this testimony from the Iraqi  journalist who chucked his shoes at President Bush in December; the dude is telling his truth:

While he was talking I was looking at all his achievements in my mind.
More than a million killed, the destruction and humiliation of mosques,
violations against Iraqi women, attacking Iraqis every day and every
hour …

A whole people are saddened because of his policy, and he was talking
with a smile on his face …and he was joking with the prime minister and
saying he was going to have dinner with him after the press conference.

Believe me, I didn't see anything around me except Bush … I was blind to anything else. I felt the blood of the
innocent people bleeding from beneath his feet and he was smiling in
that way. And then he was going to have a dinner, after he destroyed
one million martyrs, after he destroyed the country.

So I reacted to this feeling by throwing my shoes. I couldn't stop the reaction inside me…. It was spontaneous.

And, for better or worse, it was authentic, too.

Categories // Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 1398
  • 1399
  • 1400
  • 1401
  • 1402
  • …
  • 1467
  • Next Page »

Now Available for Pre-Order

Pre-Order Now

SIGN UP TO RECEIVE BLOG UPDATES

About

David Murray writes on communication issues.
Read More

 

Categories

  • Baby Boots
  • Communication Philosophy
  • Efforts to Understand
  • Happy Men, and Other Eccentrics
  • Human Politicians
  • Mister Boring
  • Murray Cycle Diaries
  • Old Boots
  • Rambling, At Home and Abroad
  • Sales Mode
  • Sports Stories
  • The Quotable Murr
  • Typewriter Truths
  • Uncategorized
  • Weird Scenes Inside the Archives

Archives

Copyright © 2026 · Log in

  • Sign Up for Blog Updates
  • About David Murray
  • About Soccer Dad
  • Pre-order Soccer Dad