Thursday, April 27, 2006

What's your fuel?

After LTM in NYC last semester, we were issued a challenge that I felt completely achievable. 20 exchanges each LC by December 31. My method would be simple: draw upon events in the world that, at their core, suffer from the problems and issues AIESEC actively goes after. As I looked at onto my LC, I talked about Iran's comments about Israel, about race riots in Australia, etc. I emphasized that the world is on fire, and that AIESEC, in my mind, is the solution. Have you ever sat on a hill, looked into the horizon, and thought, "the world is at my fingertips." As AIESECers, I challenge that view, and argue that the world is in our hands, and we are able to arrange and mold it until we reach Peace and the Fulfillment of Humankind's Potential.

In going after that goal, I focued on a pessimistic view of the world believing that discomfort would lead people to act. As DC moves into the Working for Good video conferences next week, my view and assumptions have been drastically challenged. Read this quote from Michael Strong, a W4G facilitator and very successful entrepreneur:

"Go ahead and listen to bad news, but remember to discipline yourself to keep a longer term perspective in mind, both with respect to the extraordinary progress that has taken place in the past as well as the extraordinary progress that can take place in the future, if we take initiative and work together."

The Maoist rebellions and riots in Nepal, the bombings in Egypt - we can't help but be sad, angry, and in the general damn-the-world-sucks mood. But can we? Through the W4G program, I've been introduced to the idea of thinking optimistically. Yeah, it doesn't sound novel or innovative, but for me it is. In the news today we see a lot of crazy stuff...death, wars, poverty, genocide, tc. But in reality wars with more than 1000 battle deaths are down by 80% in the last 2 decades, and global poverty is on the decline. We, humanity, are actually progressing, and progressing A LOT.

If you are training for a marathon year from now, and in 8 months from now you are not at the level you wanted to be at, are you going to keep going? Are you going to wait until the next year? What if you are at 8 months and you are at the level you wanted or above? Aren't you going to be inspired, motivated, and ready to do double what you thought you could? What if we applied that in all of our endeavors? If humanity realized how much progress we've made, wouldn't that feel liberating? Liberating enough to do more than we ever thought possible? Because it is possible?

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

List of coolness

(1) Paid Vacations

(2) Microfinance organizations

(3) New York City

(4) Beer

(5) Cliff Diving

(6) Entrepreneurship

(7) SRI

Monday, April 24, 2006

Formals

Haven't been to a formal since prom senior year. Well I guess you could consider the formals at AIESEC conferences.

Friday night was the Alpha Phi sorority formal at Aria Trattoria. Besides pledging TKE for a week, I've had little interaction with the GWU greek community. We pregamed at the sorority house...fruity vodka, sake, orange juice, etc. All beverages that were fairly despicable. Vodka watermelon and Coke turned out alright.

We made it to the formal site at around 930. At this point I was leading 6 sorority girls that had long forgotten how to speak English and were strictly communicating in broken Spanish. Some actually didn't remember the rest of the night. The event was over by 11 PM because the Greek people were so wasted that they either got sick or just left because their dates were sick. Besides being somewhat of a disaster, it was an insanely fun evening, there was great food and I got to meet some cool people.

Next night was the International Affairs Society. My recommendation: take a riverboat cruise. Although it was the Potomac, it was an unforgettable experience. What followed was not so much. Bud Ice Keg. End of story.

I finished off the weekend with a traditional Eastern Orthodox meal. This thing lasted 6 hours! I had so much food and wine that I fell asleep at 945 PM last night. Ridiculous.

Working for Good is coming up. I've been going over the curriculum and the writing is amazing. Although AIESEC DC is participating in the video conference, all AIESECers are welcome to read the materials and watch the video conference. Make sure to check out www.workingforgood.com.

Friday, April 21, 2006

One hell of a Thursday night

Step 1: Have friend win a 2 hour, $10 open bar from 6 - 8 on a Thursday.
Step 2: See what happens.

I got the great news early Thursday morning as I was looking for something to quench my thirst and to show Petr from AI and Jill from National a good time here in DC. 2 hours of open bar? 10 bucks? Bingo.

The bar was a good time, I called Zeked along and having owed him for many nights, he certainly didn't oppose to me paying for his open bar. Between the 12 - 15 of us there, we probably guzzled down a thousand dollars worth of drinks.

We came back to the house and started with some Pilsener and Bud Light. The rest of the night (8 PM - 3 AM) was a mix of hookah, jokes, and craziness. The night ended with a small dance party and me spilling my inner thoughts to Kelsey over a caipirinha. Turns out not talking to your brother for 4 months is strange to most. I guess I'll give him a call soon.

Alpha Phi formal to come. My first sorority event. My first Greek event ever.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Cherry Blossom 2006


Great picture from Cherry Blossom 2006 in D.C. Don't miss it next year!

HOT!!!

When did our national staff become SO DAMN HOT??? DAMN!!!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/62531003@N00/131368685/

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Months long stretch

'Tis been a good day. Sucks that the days of skipping classes and putting things off are coming to an end. Papers are stacking up and the amount of things to be completed before I leave for Turkey are infinite.

Had a great conversation with Carly today. Started off talking about Learning Networks and how the U.S. can and will go about engaging in them. My personal interests lie in entrepreneurship, HIV/AIDS, and energy. Any advice on how to find out more about the energy industry? Reading material maybe?

We talked in depth about AIESEC's indentity globally and our identity here in the U.S. Truth is, I believe, AIESEC in the United States and AIESEC globally are a nat's eyeleash away from being the exact same thing and offering the same experiences to stakeholders. However, we operate with different semantics and with different mission statements. Wierd, right? I'm really looking forward to the conversation around our identity and how we will adapt.

AIESEC is a boot camp for global leadership. That should be our mission statement. Haha. Guess my hawkish military days never went away.

Finally we touched on my future in AIESEC and the potential for me to join the team when I graduate in December. Seems like my actions have led a few people to believe my life focus is not AIESEC anymore. I see where they're coming from, and those actions are by choice...however it was all for a reason. Think it's time to go full throttle back into the national planning, design, subgroup, mission guru that I always strived to be.

No matter how much I give to AIESEC, I will never give the amount it deserves.

Sunday, April 16, 2006

Working for Good!


Working for Good (www.workingforgood.com) - an amazing opportunity for AIESECers and AIESEC. Established via a few leads gathered in Austin, Samara and I partnered with quite a few companies and NGOs to participate in this three day long program exploring the role of business and business-related skills in creating a better world.

The time for this discussion is perfect. With the failure of governments around the world to bring peace, stability and prosperity to their countries and the world forces leaders around the world to search for better alternatives to achieve our vision. CSR? Are there any limits?

Anyone's able to view the video conferences and get access to the material. Check it out yourself or send me an email.

Your worst night ever

I started the weekend off in a very curious mood. I decided to ask as many people as possible about their worst nights of drinking, the one they woke up the next morning with their shoes on, in a strange place, with a killer bar tab and a monstrous hangover. The saga lasted 24 hours, and culminated in the adventures of Brian Ackerman. This guy rivals Tucker Max in his drinking stories...tales so ridiculous I was sure he was kidding. Cheers to Brian, a gifted AIESECer, and one hell of a story teller.

Not having classes on Monday has taken its toll on me. Now the weekend is that much longer, and delaying this whole "study" thing until Monday is so much easier. 4 papers due before I set sail for Turkey, on top of fixing the house and making sure we're charged as little as possible.

As many know, I love questions. I could sit for hours and ask one, two, however many people, questions that challenge our daily routines.

"What are the top three things on your mind? At any point in the day, what is at the back of your thoughts? "

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

All aboard


I got matched to Turkey 3 weeks ago. Fuck yeah. I'm going to be doing IT outsourcing consulting for Basak Emeklilik, a small private pension firm in Istanbul. Caro, the Colombian trainee who already works there, said the traineeship is flexible and there's not too much pressure, which will be good because I'm interested in learning more about sales and marketing with the company and hopefully getting experience.

More importantly, I choose Turkey because there are hundreds of opportunities for US SNs to get matched to Turkey, and I want to help lead the way for many more to come to Turkey. Yes, Turkey doesn't have the best history of quality reception and traineeships, but we must not stop doing our best to fix the situation. These hundreds of potential exchange opportunities cannot go unmatched! I'm going to be working with the Turkish Students Association here at GWU to help inspire more AIESECers to go on an exchange to Turkey...then while in Turkey mobilize the LCs to work on quality reception and help in matching! Aaron Winters recently organized a sales vision team and I'm determined to give my all to achieve 2,000 exchanges in 2006, a milestone that will forever change AIESEC.

Interested in a traineeship in Turkey? Damn right! LET'S GO!!!