I'm Inspired by Drew Jones

It’s a month after graduation and people are beginning to ask me, “Now that you’ve finished your MBA program and you’ve had time for it to sink in, would you do it over again if you were given the choice?” I have to say I would. Now that I’ve had a little time to decompress, I’ve come to realize a lot (some of which I’ll reflect upon in an upcoming blog post), but when I think about the entire experience, I have to say that the time spent in school in the woods was a good one. I’m most grateful for two things. First, I learned a great deal about myself over the past two years and how I can put my talents and strengths to work. Secondly, I was fortunate to meet some truly amazing people.

Drew Jones is one such individual. From the first time we met during an exercise designed to teach about power and privilege to the last days of serving as co-chairs for the Diversity and Social Justice Committee for BGI, he has continued to amaze me. He’s partly responsible for some of the most fascinating books I’ve read lately, including Sophie’s World among others. When I asked him what/who inspires him, he spoke of his wife Mindy—and I must say—I definitely agree with him. Check out what he had to say about Mindy and learn more about who he is as a person below.

 


Who Inspires You?

I’m inspired by people who take risks and do the things they love to do.

What is the most interesting question you’ve ever been asked and how did you respond?

It’s a little clichéd now, but Peter Graf from SAP was the first to ask me “What’s on my B side?” as in what’s the stuff that doesn’t get on the front side of a business card, or what’s the stuff usually left out of a professional bio. I told him that if the economy were different, I’d be in culinary school, not business school.

What’s something most people don’t know about you?

I minored in classical studies and can translate Latin.

If you removed all constraints how would you spend your time?

I’d read all the books, learn how to play all the instruments, assemble an orchestra, and learn how to compose music.

How did you get to where you are today?

I got here with a lot of help from friends and family. I also had some great mentors and role models in my life, who helped shape the person I am today.

What are you doing to be the person you want to be?

I try to live within my personal code of ethics: 1. Listen more than you talk. 2. Give more than you take. 3. Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.

What can you do today to improve someone else’s life?

I think a lot of people crave connection – we live in a very lonely world. The easiest and most impactful way to make a difference quickly is to make eye contact and smile at someone. The second most impactful way is to say hello. The third is to listen.

What is the toughest decision you ever had to make, and what did you learn from it?

I had to make a very tough decision in my early 20s that was irreversible and would have lasting impacts on my health, relationships, and options I would have down the road, both career-wise and personal-wise. I learned that I’m a lot stronger than I thought I was, and a lot happier when I follow my own path.

What do you think is the most fascinating subject/concept in the world?

There are too many to count! I’ve always been drawn to mythology, and studying comparative mythology, comparative religion, and trying to find the great monolith that unifies us as a species. Joseph Campbell did most of my work for me before I was ever born, but the more I learn about other people, the more I find that even as disparate as we might seem, there are elements that appear over and over again, these patterns that repeat themselves through time and space and geography. Story structures, musical styles, art motifs, dance, architecture, rituals … so many other things are similar all over the world. I think this is fascinating stuff, because I think it gets to the root of what makes us human.

What makes you smile?

I am an absolute sucker for puppies, kittens, and babies.

What projects are you currently working on?

I’ve recently begun storyboarding a web comic that I’ve had rattling around in my head for years and hope to start publishing panels within a month or so. It’s called “Small Bear” and you’ll be able to find it at www.smallbeardesign.com once it’s up. I’m also developing a set list of folk songs from the European medieval period on guitar, and once I find a place to practice that won’t annoy my neighbors, will be resuming fiddle lessons.

What question did I not ask you that you wish I had and how would you answer?

This was a tough one! I’ll give you my standard interview question: You have a stone that you can turn over three times. With each turn of the stone, you can invite a person, living or dead, to your fabulous dinner party, so long as they bring a cheesecake. You turn the stone over three times. Who do you invite? My answer is: Hilary Clinton (she brings a New York cheesecake,) Ursula K. LeGuin (she brings an Oregon blueberry cheesecake,) and Marie Curie (she ignored the cheesecake rule and brought a bottle of wine.)

How can we support you?

Check out Small Bear as soon as it goes live and tell all your friends about it!

How can we contact you?

Email: drewjones@gmail.com or drew.jones@bgi.edu Phone: 1.360.223.4857 Twitter: @Drew_Says


Links from the post: 

A Night With Aisha Tyler

Tonight a photography assignment took me to Town Hall Seattle. I shoot a lot of events, but every now and then, one truly stands out. Tonight’s event was one such. It wasn’t particularly glamorous, fancy, or showy. Rather it had a more intimate feel. Aisha Tyler performed a reading from her new book, Self-Inflicted Wounds, answered questions from the audience, and then finished with a book signing. I appreciated her openness, thoughtfulness, and honesty in presenting information. Her résumé is far too extensive to list here, but I encourage you to check out her website to learn more about what she is up to. It was truly a pleasure to see her in person. Here is the video she started the night with along with some of my favorite photos from the night.

$5 Prints Sale (Clearance)

$5 Prints Sale (Clearance)

Clearance on 4"X 6" Prints

I have a surplus of photograph prints I prepared for a recent art exhibition. While I'm proud of them, I don't need this many sitting around the apartment, so I'm clearing out the inventory. I'm selling the 4" X 6" prints (which I've placed in 5" X 7" mats) for $5.

 "Going Back Home" printed on metal 16" X 23"

I also have a limited edition (1 of 1) 16" x 23" signed metal print of "Going Back Home" available for $300.

If you're interested, head over to the shop and choose the images you want. The discount is applied when you select the size. If you're in Seattle, we can meet up to avoid shipping costs.

BGI Commencement Speeches

Below are the speeches from the BGI Commencement. After two years of intense work, I finally crossed the stage this past Sunday. Thank all of you for all the support. I couldn't have done it without you.

Warmly, 

Michael B. Maine



Below is the speech as it was written. I didn't read the speech on the stage, but the time and effort I put into writing it helped me know what I wanted to convey. Feel free to read below if you want to catch the few pieces I left out of the oral version.

As this is business school, I thought it only fitting to prepare this speech in an Excel spreadsheet. If you asked me 2 ½ years ago if I’d be studying business in the woods, I would have said absolutely not. Had it not been for one man named Mitsu Yamasaki who asked me one special question, I’m not sure it would have happened. Mitsu asked me what I thought about business as institution. My response to him was that I see business as one of the most pervasive institutions on the earth. Throughout history, the buying, selling, and trading of services have impacted every aspect of our lives. As such, it has the ability to effect change or not effect change in any way we decide to use it. As a tool, it has the potential to do small things, large things, considered things, and unconsidered things.

I came to BGI because my hope and dream was, and remains today, to be immersed within a group of people who think about business a little differently. People who think of business as a means rather than an ends. In this community, I’ve found so much more. In this community I’ve found a group of people who ask what’s possible. From you I’ve learned creativity, trust, and rule number 6. I am grateful for the time shared with such an inspired group of people. Through knowing, observing, and working with each of you, my life has been tremendously enriched. If life is truly about the experiences between life and death, this has been one of the most rewarding pages in my book of life.

I am forever indebted to each of you for how you have touched my life. I just hope that I’ve been able to enrich yours as well. I firmly believe that one of the best ways to learn about and gain an appreciation for any subject matter is to study something seemingly completely unrelated. Perhaps that’s how I came into BGI as a business consultant to leave as a photographer. After being intimate with Excel for two years, I draw a key set of learnings from Aristotle, Plato, and a fallen tree. Aristotle believed that in all things there are four causes (or reasons for why they exist). The first three explained the physical makeup of something and how that changes. The fourth asks the question, what is the larger purpose? What is the fourth cause of business? I can’t say that I know the answer, but I know we’re not afraid to ask the question.

During orientation, at Channel Rock, I was walking along a trail when I came across a fallen tree. On it, I noticed six small trees growing from it. This was the first time this city boy from Dallas had ever seen that. I thought it was beautiful that in its decay, the tree provided the nutrients and foundation for new trees to grow.

So I ask myself, what can I learn by applying this scene of the fallen tree to business? For me, it serves as a metaphor. And I think that’s what makes BGI and all of the people who make it work so special. In a rapidly changing world, in which we must address new challenges, ask new questions, dispel myths, and connect to ancient wisdom, I find it extremely important that we are able to respectfully and gently put those old ideas to rest. For while those ideas and practices may or may not lose validity over time, they are the foundations for which we are able to grow and cultivate new ideas, new thoughts, new myths. And we too will mature, grow old, and die. How are we preparing ourselves and our institutions now to provide the most nutrient rich materials on which the next generation can grow?

Plato thought that there exists, in a spiritual world, an ideal form of everything, a mold that all living things aspire to become. He believed that our unconscious memory of this form allowed us to identify different types, shapes, colors, sizes of horses, people, trees, etc. as a horse, a person, a tree, etc. I think he was partially correct. I think that perfect form exists in each of us already, right here right now. Class of 2013, you are a prime example of how each of you has emerged from a shared experience completely changed, yet completely the same. Congratulations, in each of you perfection already exists.