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    Special Features

    The Simplifier #67 – Master of Organization

    Welcome to The Simplifier, brought to you by…



    In This Issue:

    1. A Note From Shawn
    Breathing the sweet, smoky air of home
    2. Our Featured Quote
    by  A. A. Milne
    3. Interview: Chuck Coovert, Master of Organization
    by PS Head Simplifier Shawn Tuttle
    4. Your Simplification Tip
    Creating Home Away From Home
    5. In the News
    Embracing simplicity; You Need to Get to Work!; and Meet the Small Business “Antipreneurs”
    6. Featured at ProjectSimplify.com
    New New Logo
    7. Keep Smiling
    Amazing Carpenter


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    Visit Project Simplify’s website at www.projectsimplify.com.


    1. A Note From Shawn

    What do you think of the new logo?? (See below in “Featured at…”, or above in the newsletter banner.) I’ve already received a suggestion to get a tattoo of that bad boy somewhere on my body. I love the enthusiasm! Reading that message made me that much happier on my two week road trip through Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, and Oregon. Speaking of long hours of driving, Exit 174 in In Idaho on Hwy 84 west has an exit for Tuttle—which got me all excited. (This video, my first “production” is on the site.)

    Normally, I love coming back to our beautiful home in the hills. This time I returned with a little trepidation after hearing stories of thick smoke making the air almost unbreathable due to hundreds of fires across the state. However, there was no question about not coming back because our first Saturday Morning Farmers Market was the day after our return. After all the hours of work that’s gone into making it fly, you bet I was going to revel in the experience of a fantastic event! (If you are in the area, come check it out! (Saturdays, 8am-12pm, in downtown Nevada City)

    Let’s get rolling down the newsletter road! May your air be clean to breathe, your vegetables organic to eat, and your office inspired by our interview with Chuck Coovert.

    Enjoy,

    Shawn Tuttle
    Head Simplifier, Project Simplify
    Co-editor, The Simplifier

    P.S. As happened when I was on vacation in December, the issue number for the newsletter mysteriously went awry (this one is the real #67). Actually, not mysterious at all. I think Lance gets whipped up in a frenzy scheming his grand illusions to take over the Project Simplify empire and his mental wiring goes all a-whack. Apologies for any confusion this may have caused.

     

     

     

     

     

    2. Our Featured Quote

    “Organizing is what you do before you do something, so that when you do it, it is not all mixed up.”

    -A. A. Milne (creator of the Winnie the Pooh series)

     

     

     


    3. Interview: Chuck Coovert, Master of Organization

    By Shawn Tuttle

    I met Chuck Coovert through Toastmasters; he was in his 5th year when I began three years ago. I was impressed by his preparedness and his willingness to help–he always had an extra joke ready in case we were short for the day and he constantly received kudos from members he had mentored. Since then I’ve been inspired by his ability to be substantially involved in numerous organizations while always maintaining an even-keel, good-natured attitude. After reading his reflections on several of my newsletters, a site visit to his office and wood shop clinched my impression of Chuck: he is a Master of Organization. His workspaces are well thought out; everything is in its place. His systems and actions are intentional and thoroughly self-customized. 

    He applies the skills and experiences he’s gained from some 40 years in various electronic and high-tech firms to the multitude of organizations he works with now. He serves on the Boards of Directors of CORR (Community Recovery Resources), the Child Abuse Prevention Council, and the Coalition for a Drug-free Nevada County. He’s also a Court Appointed Special Advocate for children (CASA), a long-time member of Toastmasters, a wine connoisseur, an amazing wood worker, electronic wizard, a knowledgeable rose caretaker, and a much loved grand-dad. 

    ————————–
    ST: You have given really wonderful and thought provoking feedback on a lot of the newsletters, through which I’ve understood a little more about your approach towards organizing and the role it has played in your life–which is one of the reasons I wanted you to be one of my interview subjects. 

    Being organized means different things to different people. What does is mean to you? 

    Coovert: I organize because it’s the only way I can stuff all the things I want to do into the time I’ve got. I found that if I’m not highly organized I don’t get anything done. I have so many different interests, so many things I want to do. I also like to walk into a neat office and see a clean desk, and I like being able to find things, because I’ve got so many things going on, I like to be able to easily put my hands on things. That’s why I organize by folders, and by slots, and by bins, and all that kind of stuff. It’s a means to an end for me.

    ST: You listed a lot of benefits and then talked about what that specifically means as far as using bins and folders, I think a lot of people have the desire to be organized for all the reasons you just listed, but what does that mean? Is it how you structure your time? Is it just that you can find things? Is it the way you think about your work for prioritizing…

    Coovert: Yes, yes, to all of those. I have a set of folders on my desk. I also keep a list of activities and priorities, things I should be doing, and it sits right there, close by. Then I run down the list, and say I want to do this marketing plan or this review or whatever, I go right to the folder and it’s got a name on it, and I pull it up. Every time I get something for that project, or find something on the internet, I print it out and drop it in the folder. When I’m ready to work on something, it’s all right there in one place, I don’t have to go digging for it. In piles of paper, things get lost. If I set things on top of something, it gets lost. 

    ST: I like your story about when you were managing employees and how you’d refuse to approve anyone’s request for a new filing cabinet, instead telling them to make room in their current cabinets.

    Coovert: If you look at those filing cabinets, what’s really going on is that they are just too lazy to clean them out. And in every case that I’ve said “no”, they all of a sudden find all this space and find all kinds of stuff they don’t need to keep. I never bought a filing cabinet the whole time, except when I started a whole new department. But other than that, I don’t think it’s necessary. Most people keep too much stuff and the reason they don’t get rid of it is because they are lazy.

    ST: Or, maybe overwhelmed. I’ve been thinking about this lately in terms of being hijacked by this drill sergeant head who just won’t let you stop to take care of those “important but not urgent” tasks (referring to Stephen Covey’s Urgent-Important quadrants diagram).

    Coovert: Well, you point out to people that cleaning out the file cabinet is an important task, so i wasn’t really trying to be mean and nasty, I was trying to tell them that there are other parts of their job that are important, like getting rid of the debris. 

    ST: One of the things I’ve admired about you is that you always seem calm. You have a nice, fluid, sustainable pace. I don’t see you charge up and then have to back down and then charge up and back down. Would you say that you are calm because you have stuff under control? Or is it the other way around–You have stuff under control because you’ve got a calm pace going?

    Coovert: Hmm, interesting question. I don’t think it’s either, or it’s both. I think it’s a combination. I’m not necessarily calm, I just look like it. Kind of like the duck who’s placidly going along on top and the feet are going like crazy. I wake up in the middle of the night thinking about stuff and jot stuff down. So, my calmness is a pretty good act.

    But I do think that being organized allows me to have enough time to look at things I need to do without getting all frazzled at the last minute. I really intensely dislike it when people drop something on you that you need to do in the next 15 minutes. What’s the saying? Lack of planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on mine. I believe in getting things done. I’ll start working on something several days before it has to be done. Now, I may stop — I find when I do that I can think about it and maybe do a better job of it. Then I’ll come back to it. 

    ST: What other methods do you use to get more stuff done?

    Coovert: This is a philosophy I use a lot: There is nothing you cannot achieve, if you don’t care who gets the credit. And I’m a firm believer in that. I try never to take the credit for accomplishments. I’ll take my share of the blame. But I find that’s very effective in motivating people. Even volunteers. If someone else had anything to do with the process, the project, success or whatever it is, I always try to give them as much credit as I can get them to take. Some of them won’t take much–most of my life is motivating people, once I come to think about it.

    I used to have another philosophy about managing people: If you can get them all marching in the same direction, on the same path, there is no other path, there is no other way. They don’t even see it. They’re just going down the path. And you get all the people marching in the same direction, you could control the world, if that’s what you wanted to do. And if you think about it, that’s what the dictators tried to do. 

    If you have a real vision and you properly enunciate your vision, you’ll get people to go your way.

    ST: It seems like when it’s pure enough, in the sense that it’s coming from the heart, which is going to be a larger vision for the world rather than solely serving your ends, especially in a volunteer capacity, it’s going to be a lot easier to motivate people in that direction.

    Coovert: And I’m going to say that you have to be organized to be able to do that. You have to be able to pull together your thoughts, and your directions, and be able to think about where you’re going, and make sure you know where the holes in the road are, and try to drive around them, or at least tell them to watch out for the holes coming up ahead. I think you have to be very organized to do that properly. 

    ST: You are a natural leader.

    CC: I never looked at myself as a natural leader. Usually I’m the guy who kind of knows where he wants to go.

    Shawn Tuttle is founder of Project Simplify.


    4. Your Simplification Tip

    by Shawn Tuttle

    Creating home away from home

    Zen question of the day: How do you stay close to home when you are far away from home?

    They say home is where the heart is… and I agree. Having just returned from a two-week road trip, I clearly remember moments of freedom, of exhilaration, of grand adventure, and… of minor identity crises wondering what in the world I was doing free floating out there. While I relish getting out of town and out of regular patterns to shake things up a bit, I also realize that the tools that help us stay grounded and centered are essential travel companions.

    The tip this issue is about doing a little pre-planning when going to a new area to find resources that help you stay dialed in your heart-home. For example, one of the activities that I relish is yoga. Before arriving in Boulder, I found out where a yoga studio was and got their schedule and location online. I made it to three classes that week (my kind of vacation!!)

    Some of the other benefits to creating home away from home:

    • if you are a workaholic type, planning to fill your time with other activities helps keep you from sliding into work mode
    • if you are an introvert at heart, your activities provide an easy retreat into “me time”, even if you’re traveling with others
    • you may meet new people with similar interests in the new area
    • it provides an acceptable reason to take a break from visiting family
    • and most importantly, it feeds your spirit!

    While this is easier in areas that speak your native language, be adventuresome and try this in other cultures, too! Some of the other interests I’ve researched before leaving on a trip include: cafes with wifi (though almost all have it these days), natural food stores, and theaters. Whatever helps you stay grounded, you can probably find some connection to it — whether you’re going to Albany or Zimbabwe, or any place in between!


     


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    5. In the News

    Compiled by Lance Brown

    Embracing simplicity (The Columbian – Clark County, WA)
    URL: http://tinyurl.com/65j7hc        
    The stand-out feature of this article on the voluntary simplicity movement is a cool checklist of questions to ask yourself before you buy something new. There are a lot of questions…I think it’s designed to ensure that someone else buys the thing while you’re busy reviewing the checklist. But hey, whatever works, right?

    You Need to Get to Work!  (Newsweek)
    URL: http://tinyurl.com/6683ml      
    “There’s a cottage industry trying to make you more productive. But are you actually getting more accomplished, or just making more lists?”

    Meet the “Antipreneurs” (BusinessWeek)
    URL: http://tinyurl.com/58bptk          
    Like most people, I carry around a secret list of people I don’t know, who have said or done something stupid, and whom I would like to eviscerate if I ever met them in person. (OK, maybe most people don’t actually carry the list around, but that’s the only way I get things done.) Well, picture me secretively scrawling “Rob Walker” on a crumpled piece of paper. He’s the New York Times columnist who is credited with coining the term “antipreneur”, a word so idiotic it actually makes me shiver. But, Rob Walker’s claim to fame aside, this article (not written by him) takes a look at some very interesting entrepreneurs, who are working hard to do capitalism differently–and more simply. There’s a video version of the story too.

    If you know of something in the news that should be featured here, let us know!


     

     

     

    6. Featured at ProjectSimplify.com

    by Lance Brown

    New New Logo

    Here’s what Shawn had to say about why we’ve adopted our new logo:

    “The flower, for me, represents joy for the sake of joy. It represents beauty for no reason other than the fact that it can delight the eye of the beholder again and again. It is a reminder that through our clutter-filled lives, there exists a reason to wade through to simplicity: the ability to be present with the exquisite beauty of a flower, and experience the joy that brings. I’ve hoped to capture this in the logo—a  flower, simple and delightful.”

    And here it is:

    That’s the core logo image; you can see a “banner” version at the top of this newsletter (and the top of the website). And there’s a tiny icon version of it that can be seen in your web browser (in your Favorites, or up by the site address, or on the tab if your browser uses tabs). More mutations are likely to follow — probably a black & white version, and a small banner for people to use on their own sites, and a version with evil hypnotic powers…well, you get the idea. I may have said too much.

     

     

     

     

     

    7. Keep Smiling

    Introduced by Lance Brown

    Amazing Carpenter

    Is it blasphemy to say that the guy in this video is a better carpenter than Jesus was? Maybe it is, though frankly, it would probably end up kind of low on my personal blasphemies list. Let’s just say I’ve got some whoppers in the can already. Plus, it’s not like I’m saying this German hämmer-mäster is better at feeding the poor, or being the son of God, or whatever. I’ll still give it up to J.C. for those things…but it would be a miracle if he could do what this dude does with a hammer. (Or maybe he could do it, and he just didn’t, for fear they wouldn’t let him out of the carpenter’s union. Oops…was that blasphemy again?)

    You can click on the image to watch the video. (It’s under a minute long, and work-friendly, if your work can handle some excited German banter.)

    Here’s the URL: http://youtube.com/watch?v=g7YYLo4p06E 

     

     

     

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    Thanks for reading!

    Publication Information
    ————————————————————————–
    The Simplifier is published by:
    Project Simplify
    P.O. Box 597
    Nevada City, CA 95959
    phone: 530.205.5775
    web: www.projectsimplify.com
    e-mail: newsletter@projectsimplify.com


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    a: PO Box 597 Nevada City CA 95959 t: 530.205.5775 e: Shawn@ProjectSimplify.com