“I help figure out what customers want. To make a change,
employees work together in new ways to get what they themselves want.” -Alex Linsker


« Narrative experience
Situations and exciting strengths »


Wonderful day

Saturday was a wonderful day.  J– and I biked to Coney Island for the Siren Music Festival.  We locked up the bikes and walked on the beach.  The sand was extra-white and burning hot.  I thought J– had superhuman feet until I saw she was wearing sandals.

The water was super-clear and beautiful.  I waded in with my jeans rolled up.  The water was really cold.  So there was only one thing to do.  I took off my pants and shirt and, holding my boxers together, jumped in the water and swam out.

There was so much salt in the water that it was really easy to float.  I laid back and looked at the sky.  It was so easy to float that I sat up and stayed floating.  It was so easy to float, if you picture how you are right now, and if you’re not sinking, wherever you are, it’s probably because of the salty water at Coney Island.

We met D– at the music festival.  Anthony Perkins’ kid was playing in a band.  Elvis Perkins in Dearland had a drummer who switched from playing a heavy beat on a big drumset to jumping around on stage scraping a tiny rasp, and then waddling around pounding a big drum.  It was awesome.  They even did a cover song.  Written by a guy in 1863.

Then I leapt on the subway to go play Capture the Flag.  The last time I’d played Capture the Flag was in fifth grade on a soccer field.  Both teams have flags , and you try to capture the other team’s flag.  You can hide it and run with it, pass it to other players, but if you’re tagged, the other team can take you to jail for ten minutes.

When I showed up on the soccer field, I thought that’s where we’d play.  But soon I learned this was a Big Game.  Our goals were maybe 20 blocks apart.  Bikes were allowed.  I was defense in the first game, and when a guy was charging straight at me on his bike, I opened my arms and gave him a big bear hug.  He got mad (and tagged out), and later accused me of devious tackling maneuvers.  But it was great.

In the second game, five of us rode a bus to the other team’s flag.  In the third game, Z– convinced some random guy to give us a ride for a surprise attack to grab the flag.  We won 2 to 1.

It was interesting, because the playing area was so big, we used cellphones to radio in reports and to announce when the game was over.  When the game was over, only a few people knew for sure who’d won until we all regrouped in the center of the soccer field.  I thought of All Quiet on the Western Front where the soldiers don’t know when the war is won until after.  I’m not used to playing games where the winning is so definite yet so distant.

We’ll probably play again soon and I can’t wait.

All in all, a perfect outdoors day.

Similar Posts:
  • Team-building
  • “Make Your Own” game rules summarized
  • Influencing dolphins
  • Wide-eyed laughter and independence
  • New experiences can be scary

This entry was posted on Sunday, July 22nd, 2007 at 5:31 pm and is filed under Portfolio Life. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

« Narrative experience
Situations and exciting strengths »


  • What I do, packaged with a ribbon on top:
    Retail-Makeover.com

    I also teach classes.

    Recently I've gotten some press.

    Call me sometime.

  • Most Popular Reading

    • Work-along: high-performing teams and a case study
    • Voting's just one ingredient in democracy
    • Gifting and Re-Seeing
    • Which one are you drawn to?
    • Late for love
    • Working with people in groups
    • Mutual trust and reciprocity come from reputation and empathy
    • How to search and find...
    • Alex Linsker's resume
  • Get new posts by email:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

     Subscribe in a reader

    Bookmark and Share
  • Archives

    • June 2008
    • May 2008
    • April 2008
    • March 2008
    • February 2008
    • January 2008
    • December 2007
    • November 2007
    • October 2007
    • September 2007
    • August 2007
    • July 2007
    • June 2007
    • April 2007
    • March 2007
    • February 2007
    • January 2007
    • December 2006
    • November 2006
  • Categories

    • Coaching (47)
    • Interviews (30)
    • Observation (28)
    • Personal favorites (45)
    • Photos (8)
    • Portfolio Life (37)
    • Quotes (40)
    • Teams (59)
  • Meta

    • Register
    • Login
    • Valid XHTML
    • XFN
    • WordPress

Return to the top of this page