Archive for May, 2009

Clients in the news 5.29.09

Cook Medical
Cook Medical kicks up its heels
Indianapolis Star
Video looks at new technology to break up kidney stones, designed by Cook Group

Material from pig intestine helps doctor fix bladder leaks in women
Kalamazoo Gazette
Innovations from Cook Medical

Hetrick
Legal eagles spread their wings
Indianapolis Star
IRT’s celebrity radio show written by Bruce Hetrick and John Thomas debuts Saturday

NIPSCO
VU energy project honored for innovation
Inside INdiana Business
Environmentally friendly relationship between Valparaiso University and NIPSCO

Duke Realty
Developer banks on location for new project success
KARE - Minneapolis, MN
New development defies down economy

BSA LifeStructures
Indiana architects honored for designs
Inside INdiana Business
BSALS receives high honors for recent projects

Social security

duncan alhney 150x150 Social security As the leader of a company, and a self-confessed extrovert, I’m constantly communicating: phone calls, e-mails, IMs, Facebook and Twitter messages, blog posts and comments, presentations and panels. It’s a pretty exhausting list, and each has its own unique set of protocols and time commitment.

I’ve noticed that while new avenues for interaction increase communication opportunities, my ability to effectively use these various tools is diminished a little each time I add a new one. Not to mention that adding too many social media tools decreases my ability to spend time hanging out in real life, where, let’s face it, the majority of business and real conversation happens.

Social media conversations have their place—to create and maintain connections based on shared values. They allow us to connect in a deeper, ongoing sense with people without a lot of effort, and that’s a plus.

And yet, there is a growing sense of anxiety that we can’t keep up with it all. While I’m committed to a few online communities and platforms, I will not sacrifice my face-to-face connections. Nor do I want to transition all my online connections into the face-to-face environment. At the same time, I will never shut myself off from connecting with more people. Social media conversation for sure, but face-to-face conversations as well! Consistently and with passion!

But that’s sometimes easier said than done. Are you feeling this same anxiety? And how are you handling it?

Share your thoughts with Duncan here or on his Twitter page.

Birth, death and living in between

Last week, the phone rang in the wee hours. When a call comes that early, it’s rarely good news. This one bore the worst kind of all.

The day before, a dear friend’s husband, Ralph, had been doing some mowing at their rural property in northern Indiana. His wife (my friend Cheryl) was at work in Fort Wayne.

Feeling ill, Ralph still had the wherewithal to call 911. A rescue team arrived. He was treated locally, then airlifted to Fort Wayne’s Parkview Hospital. The trauma physicians did what they could, but the heart attack had done too much damage. Ralph was 61.

A few days later, as I parked at the funeral home for Ralph’s calling, my iPhone vibrated. There was an e-mail message from my son Austin, a college student in Wisconsin. He’d finally sent me one of his short stories—the one his classmates and creative writing professor had liked so much earlier in the semester. Austin’s cover message said, “Sorry it isn’t cheerier. I’ll try for comedy later.”

Sitting in my car in the funeral home parking lot, the sun setting in front of me, I opened the attachment and started to read.

I read about Nathan and Sarah. I read about Nathan’s dream that Sarah wanted him to kill her. I read about Sarah’s worsening Alzheimer’s disease. How she sometimes wandered off. How she occasionally cursed Nathan. How she often didn’t recognize him.

I read how she embarrassed people in church. How they avoided confrontations and conversations with her and Nathan. How she stared at her own grandsons, uncertain and uncomprehending.

I read flashbacks about the blossoming love between Sarah and Nathan. How she’d caught him cheating once. How her diagnosis had come.

I read how Sarah had done her homework about her disease. How she’d asked Nathan to help her end her life when the time came. How he’d promised he would.

And I read how, despite her recurrent pleas, he’d reneged on that commitment time and again—out of love, or selfishness, or uncertainty that “the time” would ever be right.

When I finished Austin’s story, I shut off the iPhone, closed the car door and walked into the funeral home.

Inside, I stood in a long line with other callers. Along the way, there were pictures of Ralph and Cheryl, pictures of Ralph on the job, pictures of Ralph with friends and family.

As we waited to share our condolences, people talked about how sad it was that Ralph’s death was so sudden and so unexpected.

And surely, that is true.

But I couldn’t help thinking about Austin’s short story. And the agonies of Alzheimer’s he’d imagined.

And I couldn’t help thinking about the Alzheimer’s series I’d watched on HBO the week before, and the real-life stories of death prolonged.

And I couldn’t help thinking about the years of cancer that took the life of Austin’s stepmom, and how he, his brother and I have struggled with her sudden collapse, and middle-of-the-night death and the absence of some final farewell.

When I looked up, Cheryl was standing in front of me. I hugged her. I told her how sorry I was. And what a good guy Ralph was. And having been through this myself, I promised that I’d be there for her if and when all the other people went back to their daily lives.

Then I stepped aside for the next person in line.

A week to the day after that call about Ralph, my wife and I received some more early-morning news. This time, it was all positive: Our friend Janine had delivered her baby.

Janine had gone into the hospital the day before, with hopes of successfully inducing her overdue-child’s birth. But her daughter was apparently reluctant to begin the next phase of her life, so a C-section was required.

When she finally arrived in the world, Daphne Raye weighed in at nine pounds, four ounces and was 22 inches long.

Inevitably, the refrain of an old Blood, Sweat and Tears tune popped into my head:

And when I die,
And when I’m dead, dead and gone,
There’ll be one child born
And a world to carry on,
To carry on.

That same song contains a healthy perspective on life and death: “All I ask of living is to have no chains on me, and all I ask of dying is to go naturally.”

The problem is, we don’t get to choose our exits—the natural ones, at least—and we don’t get to choose the timing. So whether we go slowly and painfully for everyone affected, or quickly but painfully for those left behind, there’s no easy and graceful way out, no guaranteed good-bye.

Lacking that, we’ve only one recourse: to live and love each day as though it were our first and last.