Thursday, June 21, 2012

A VC: The art of important work, of making a ruckus and of inventing the future

Entrepreneurs teach VCs, not the other way around. And I was lucky early in my career to back Seth Godin, who taught me a lot. When I met Seth, he was writing books and building a web company. I backed that web company, Yoyodyne, which exited to Yahoo! a few years later. But books were always Seth's passion and he's written a bunch of them. He's also deconstructed the book publishing business and pushed it to do things that were considered unacceptable. I recall when he put out a free pdf of one of his books six months before the book came out. And increased the book's sales numbers in the process. He did that in the 90s.

There are special entrepreneurs who teach you so much. Seth and Perry are two of them. I've been blessed to work with dozens in my career. Like Seth and his big advance, it is not the money that is the big payoff in the work that I do. It is the people and the ideas that enter your life and change your world. It is the art of important work, of making a ruckus and of inventing the future.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Bible's message is misinterpreted by clergy opposed to same-sex marriage: Messages of Faith | cleveland.com

Maybe President Barack Obama's motivation for "coming out" and affirming his support for same-sex marriage was politically calculated. Perhaps the president's statement, as hard as it may be to imagine, had nothing to do with politics. Maybe the president's statement supporting an opportunity for a lesbian or gay couple to enter into a legally recognized, binding, civil, marriage covenant and contract was an expression of his true conviction.

But whatever his motivation, Obama's statement of support for same-sex marriage is far more genuine than the unholy response of opposition his statement has received from too many clergy. Ordained pastors thundering their opposition based on their view that God, through the Bible, teaches that marriage is between one man and one woman are just wrong.

Such a view is at best shoddy, biblical scholarship. At worst, it is a very cruel lie.

The Christian Bible contains remembered stories, teachings, written memories of historical events and settings which -- in some places in the text -- had their origin in traditions that were over 4,000 years old by the time of Jesus' birth. In all that time, the rules of engagement as well as the definition and practice of marriage changed a number of times.

So, to assert that the Bible reveals an unchanging and unchanged definition and practice of marriage is a monstrous fabrication. Then, to go on and claim in the very same breath that the Bible advocates the civil practices of marriage as understood and defined by Western culture in the 21st century is just plain holy smoke.

For the most part, marriage in the ancient world of Palestine and in the days of Jesus' physical presence on earth was all about ownership of property, lines of inheritance and the recognized status of the landed, ruling class of a carefully defined economic and religious class of men. It had nothing to do -- unless by happy, unintended consequences -- with a relationship of mutual love and emotional support.

In terms of legal status, spiritual value and sexual behavior, women were not valued or protected in the same way as men. It is why Jesus challenged this spiritual and civil discrepancy by, among other things, intervening in the stoning of the woman "caught" in the act of adultery, (government in the bedroom again) challenging the way in which divorce was practiced and by embracing children not as property but as being the best living example of the nature of the kingdom of God.

The Bible does not teach marriage as being between one man and one woman in a covenant of exclusive, spiritual and legal mutuality as well as an expectation of sexual fidelity. This is why Jesus was so clear in challenging the excessive and repressive practices of civil marriage that abused women and which were sanctioned by the all-male priesthood.

What is of greater importance to various writers of the 39 books of the Hebrew Bible and the 27 books of the Christian New Testament than a definition of marriage is the value and integrity of committed relationships. In regard to this critically important teaching, we still struggle in getting it right. And if anything, perhaps too many of us clergy, as well as many others, are not practicing what the Bible actually teaches.

One more time and for the record: Clergy preaching that the Bible, in the name of God, defines marriage as between one man and one woman are wrong. Further, the hostility, self-righteous bigotry and condemnation of gay and lesbian couples that their "priestly" comments enflame are examples of the very same religious bigotry that Jesus challenged 2,000 years ago.

What the Bible really teaches is the importance of a loving, committed relationship that liberates the heart and soul from the power of hate, loneliness and despair.

Are we not all entitled to have such a relationship recognized and protected by law? I believe such a relationship is already blessed under heaven.

The Rev. Kenneth W. Chalker is the senior pastor of University Circle United Methodist Church in Cleveland.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

What It's Like To Be The CEO: Revelations and Reflections

You have to be willing to sleep in your car and laugh about it. You have to be able to laugh at many things because when you think of the worse things in the World that could happen to your company, they will happen. Imagine working for something for two years and then have to throw it out completely because you see in one day that it's wrong. You realize that if your team is having fun and can always laugh that you won't die, and in fact, the opposite will happen: you will learn to love the journey and look forward to what you do everyday even at the lowest times. You'll learn not to get too low when things are bad and not to get too high when things are good and you'll even give that advice. But you'll never take it because being in the middle all the time isn't exciting and an even keel is never worth missing out on something worth celebrating. You'll become addicted to finding the hardest challenges because there's a direct relationship between how difficult something is and the euphoria of a feeling when you do the impossible.

You realize that it's much more fun when you didn't have money and that money might be the worse thing you could have as a personal goal. If you're lucky enough to genuinely feel this way, it is a surreal feeling that is the closest thing to peace because you realize it's the challenges and the work that you love. Your currencies are freedom, autonomy, responsibility and recognition. Those happen to be the same currencies of the people you want around you.

Based on my 30+ years of entrepreneurism I couldn't have written this any better.