My colleague Alan Gross and I have this ongoing banter about spoiler alerts. We co-teach a mediation course at New York University's Center…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 31, 2011 at 4:51pm — No Comments
Yesterday I blogged about sugary cereals. Here's more on the confectionary theme, and an explanation of the provenance of my own unmanageable sweet tooth.
My grandfather, Luther, was a Pennsylvania Dutch farmer, married to my…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 30, 2011 at 10:43am — No Comments
I have a thing for sugary cereals. (I came about this honestly, as evidenced by my father's vast collection of 20 years' worth of cereal box prizes). Lucky Charms is currently in regular rotation chez nous.
This is (somewhat) embarrassing: When I was really poor and had too much time on my hands, I got in the…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 29, 2011 at 12:45pm — No Comments
As I'm writing this, we're awaiting isolated tornadoes within Hurricane Irene...and we just had an earthquake. Let's hope the first two ingredients of this meteorological turducken are mild as the third one was.
Whatever…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 27, 2011 at 11:08pm — 1 Comment
I've blogged before about the diversity of professions and personalities amongst New York Peace Institute mediators. I don't think I mentioned that our mediator pool is predominantly female. My mediation center comrades at home and abroad report that same is true with them.
Explanations for this phenomenon have…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 26, 2011 at 12:07pm — No Comments
So I emerged from the subway on Tuesday to see the streets jam-packed with people standing still, infused by a vibe I couldn't quite put my finger on...an admixture of low-level panic, consternation, solidarity, and an odd hint of celebration. It was evocative of a Japanese monster movie streetscene, with choreographed crowds gawking in awe and horror at an enormous…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 25, 2011 at 10:58am — No Comments
Folks, please go see The Interrupters, an amazing documentary about violence interrupters in Chicago...formerly gang-involved peacebuilders who literally take mediation to the streets. Here's the film's homepage:…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 24, 2011 at 4:21am — No Comments
Five years ago, I saved up enough scratch to get Lasik surgery and said adieu to my coke-bottle lenses forevermore. On the whole, I'm delighted with the results, mainly because I can see better.
But there are two drawbacks: 1) I kind of missing wearing my nerdy-chic glasses and 2) I used to enjoy taking my…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 23, 2011 at 8:14am — 1 Comment
When choosing a logo for the New York Peace Institute, we insisted on avoiding the commonly-used images of our field...so, ixnay on the doves, peace signs, roundtables, and handshakes. (We did toy with the idea of a peace pigeon...a scrappy urban bird gobbling an olive branch). We wanted to carve out our own identity --and…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 22, 2011 at 10:10am — No Comments
Ever wonder why lobsters and scorpions look so much alike?
It's all about parallel evolution -- when different species evolve similarly. So, though lobsters and scorpions shared a common exoskeletal ancestor, they separated eons ago -- one chose to chill on the ocean floor, the other opted to kick it…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 21, 2011 at 12:13pm — No Comments
You may remember the Seinfeld episode in which George, for ulterior motives, attempts to convert to the Latvian Orthodox religion. The priest, attired in somber black vestments and a trapezoidal headpiece, asks George why. I like the hats? was the best he could come up with.
New York is chock-a-block with different faiths and cultures, but we often don't know much more about…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 19, 2011 at 2:14pm — No Comments
I had just moved into a ramshackle shoebox in New York's East Village, a neighborhood slouching toward gentrification while nostalgically clinging to its gritty bohemian 1980's past. People were starting to pay top dollar to move into the very tenements their immigrant great-grandparents couldn't wait to get out of.
In New York, the word "super" can be an oxymoron. Short for…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 19, 2011 at 8:11am — No Comments
One thing I love about New York City is that we throw lots of Yiddish words into everyday conversation. I moved here around 18 years ago, and I regret spending a childhood devoid of words like schvitz, schande, kvetch, kvell, nudnik, schmooze, macher and mishegas. How on earth did I manage communicate? (I did know some analagous Pennsylvania Dutch words -- yooks, gretz, rootsch, schlumpet…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 18, 2011 at 12:40pm — 1 Comment
One of the hardest things to deal with in mediation, or in every day conversation for that matter, is silence. Venting, cursing, rambling, rattling on, this we can handle -- we can reflect, reframe, summarize, repeat, validate -- you name it. But pregnant pauses, awkward silences, teenage sullenness, hangdog moping --…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 17, 2011 at 8:42am — No Comments
I'm a visual learner with a limited attention span, and I like to draw. So, when I teach and train, I use cartoons, visual metaphors, and pop culture references as (hopefully) entertaining mnemonic devices. Above is a picture of me spieling about Community Cooperative Advocacy (more on that in an…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 16, 2011 at 8:26am — No Comments
Lost in Translation, Sofia Coppola's 2003 meditation on isolation, loneliness, and the need to connect, features Bill Murray as a sadsack actor who's in Japan to film a lucrative whiskey commercial. There's a great scene in which Murray receives long, elaborate, instructions from an impassioned Japanese director which are translated into absurdly short, enigmatic phrases. Have a…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 15, 2011 at 9:58am — No Comments
Peter Falk left this mortal coil on June 23. Mostly known as the schlumpy, deceptively dim Detective Columbo in the eponymous 1970's TV series, he also had an admirable film career. He was superb in John Cassavettes' Husbands and A Woman Under the Influence...movies that out-indie today's…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 14, 2011 at 11:26am — No Comments
I moved to New York City's East Village 18 years ago, long after its gritty punky heyday. While I missed out on the Ramones and the Talking Heads gigging at CBGB's, the hood was still a cauldron of art, music, fashion and activism, with just a soupcon of edgy danger. It's now widely regarded as a cliché of New York City gentrification. Today, CBGB's is an unaffordable (for…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 13, 2011 at 9:30am — No Comments
There is a crack in everything. That’s how the light gets in. –Leonard Cohen
I was delighted to see this quote in The Crossroads of Conflict: A Journey Into the Heart of Dispute Resolution by Ken Cloke, the brain and soul behind Mediators Beyond Borders, inter alia.
Canadian song-poet Cohen is one of those…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 11, 2011 at 8:39pm — No Comments
Growing up, I was such a Beatles nerd. I turned 13 the year John Lennon was assassinated. I was grateful for being diagnosed as nearsighted that year, because I got my parents to buy me Lennonesque glasses (which I later exchanged for Elvis Costello specs).
If you think of any cluster of people in pop culture — like a band or a sitcom cast — you can…
ContinueAdded by Brad Heckman on August 11, 2011 at 8:32pm — No Comments
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