How do you know whether to sit or stand when presenting or speaking at a meeting? This video will answer that question.
by Karen Friedman on Leave a Comment
by Karen Friedman on Leave a Comment
Like me, I’m sure your socks go missing. Two go into the dryer, but only one comes out. Where do they go? Currently I have nine single unmatched socks in my sock drawer. Some have been there for years. I save them, hoping that one day their mates will return. I could blame it on the dog, but we don’t have a dog anymore. Trying to find these missing socks is like trying to find Waldo in the Finding Waldo children’s books. Where in the world are my socks?
According to a study commissioned by Samsung when they launched a new washing machine several years ago, Brits lose an average of 1.3 socks each month which equals more than 15 lost socks every year. With the average Brit reportedly living to 81, scientists determined Brits lose 1264 socks over their lifetime, costing them 2528 pounds which equals approximately $3100 dollars. They concluded that means about 84 million socks go missing in the UK each month.
Wanting to further understand this laundry mystery, I turned to the internet for help. I learned that during a wash cycle, socks can creep into the yawning abysses of the laundry drum. I looked. There are no socks in any abysses. I also discovered the heat and rotations can separate clothes causing socks and small items to disappear into the wastewater hose. I can’t see into my wastewater hose, but I did look behind the hose. No socks. They are not under the bed, rolled up with other socks, in the wrong drawer, mixed up with the cleaning rags or stuck in a shoe.
So, I asked my son who is a creative thinker. He blamed it on the sock gnomes, smaller mythical creatures who can move through solid earth and steal socks to make your life inconvenient. Probably a long shot, but I have no better explanation.
Apparently, my curiosity with missing socks is shared with renowned theoretical physicist Stephen Hawkins. In a book called The Nature of Space and Time, Hawkins concluded that spontaneous black holes are responsible for their disappearance. Hmm. Perhaps my son’s theory isn’t too far off.
Maybe, just maybe, the unexplained missing sock mystery is somehow related to the Bermuda Triangle. For decades, just like my socks, ships, planes, and people have been sucked into this black hole never to be seen again. There are dozens of theories about the disappearances but like socks, no confirmed conclusions.
As I continue to research this daunting dilemma, I’ve discovered that colored socks make up the majority of missing socks. This actually makes sense to me. I don’t wear white socks, but my husband does. His socks never go missing or since they’re all the same he doesn’t notice. Perhaps I should start wearing whites.
Samsung’s work led them to develop a sock loss formula to help work out the probability of losing a sock in a single week by using statistical modelling software that involves a bunch of mathematical complications. I was never great in math, so my eyes glazed over when I looked at it.
Besides, this still doesn’t explain where my missing socks went.
Articles on the subject recommend attaching pairs of socks together with safety pins or sock clips to prevent them from disappearing. That sounds like too much trouble to me, though I guess it depends how attached you are to certain socks. Other articles offer ways to repurpose single socks such as using them for icepacks, dust rags or covering golf club heads so they don’t get bumped or scratched when you are not playing.
I don’t want to repurpose my socks. I want to reunite them with their partners.
I will never know where these socks go, but I think I’ve figured out a plausible way to find them. If I get rid of my single socks, their associates will return. It’s like losing a shoe or an earring. After waiting a while for the missing item to resurface, when it doesn’t, you assume it’s forever lost and discard it. Then like magic, it’s match shows up.
If I do that however, I’m right back where I started as an owner of a bunch of sad lone socks. Only, this time, their matches will be gone forever.
by Karen Friedman on Leave a Comment
by Karen Friedman on Leave a Comment
I watched the much-anticipated debate between Democratic Lt. Gov. John Fetterman and Republican Mehmet Oz. Both men are running for the Pennsylvania senate, a key race that may define who controls Congress.
The pundits and journalists were highly focused on Fetterman’s stroke symptoms. The Lt. Governor has been off the campaign trail for months following his May stroke, which required surgery to implant a pacemaker with a defibrillator and revealed that he had a serious heart condition. While Fetterman spoke haltingly at times and had to have questions and answers transcribed in real time to help with his auditory processing issues, I think those who have been reviewing the debate missed the boat.
As a communications coach, I do not think Fetterman’s stroke recovery symptoms defined his performance. Messaging and perhaps poor coaching, did. Right at the start, he was asked what qualifies him to be in the Senate. Instead of touting his credentials as a former mayor who worked to build a once-booming steel town back from collapse or his ongoing fight for criminal justice, setting up GED programs or mentoring successes with Big Brothers/Big Sisters, he answered by attacking his opponent. This was a huge, missed opportunity that should not be overlooked.
While attacking your opponent and focusing on their shortcomings is part of any debate, setting the tone and communicating your message impactfully as soon as you open your mouth is critical. If you don’t grab your listeners attention by communicating value, much of what you say may be wasted because people will stop listening. Additionally, studies show people tend to remember what they hear first and what they hear last.
If you search for articles on how to successfully debate, you’ll see most focus on preparation, delivery, body language, keeping calm, anticipating follow up questions, knowing the subject matter and techniques to make an argument. All are important, but I want to talk about overlooked soft skills that can help you become more successful in any arena.
Whether debating or speaking in a variety of arenas, every speaking engagement is an opportunity to communicate your message and create awareness. You don’t have to be a professional speaker to shine. You do have to connect with your audience in the first few seconds if you want them to keep listening.
Karen Friedman Enterprises
PO Box 224
Blue Bell PA 19422
Karen Friedman Enterprises helps professionals combine style and expertise to better engage, command attention, minimize mistakes, convey vision and project leadership presence when communicating with key listeners and decision makers.