The Frog Lake First Nation Water System Upgrade is about more than infrastructure, it’s about community safety and long-term resilience. 15,000 local hours, 2,000 m³ of concrete, and collaboration at every step.
Watch the full story.
#IndigenousConstruction#Collaboration
@masekid52@HyundaiCanada I finally got through on the phone this week by using the call back feature. I’m still waiting on their customer service department to finish something before I can get my app working, though :(
@HyundaiCanada is there an email we can use to get Bluelink support?? Can’t log in to the app, can’t reset password and can’t email because I’m not logged in. Telephone waits are long and I’ve tried multiple times to no avail. Very frustrating! Please help!
On this day in 1975, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank beneath the waves of Lake Superior during a massive storm.
The sinking took the lives of all 29 men on the ship, and became immortalized in Gordon Lightfoot's song.
Let's learn more about this tragedy.
🧵1/20
A recent discovery could transform our understanding of how cancers develop.
The classical theory that attempts to explain why normal cells become cancer cells, posits that DNA mutations are the primary cause of cancers. 1/
Some rapid grid decarbonization in Europe last year! Even stripping out the impact of declining electricity demand (in part a function of historically high energy costs due to Putin's war), renewables growth alone drove down EU power sector emissions by 12% in a single year. 💪
The coolest thing in climate tech is hot bricks:
https://t.co/HAzHYliaFE
Great @heatmap_news overview of the potential for high-temp thermal storage & electrified heating, the killer combo for industrial decarbonization. And a great TED Talk by @rondoenergy CEO below.
Last January, I noticed something peculiar in my 2yo’s bedroom that - after a year of obsessive reporting - led me to a profound cosmic revelation about what’s even possible in our universe. A 🧵.
I just released my free Annual Planning Guide!
The printable PDF includes:
• Simple goal-setting framework
• Four system-building mental models
• Strategy for tracking and adjusting
(bookmark and share this)
This annual planning process has been an immensely helpful exercise to which I would credit many of my greatest achievements.
I hope that the free guide will spark you to conduct your own annual planning process for 2024, as I'm highly confident you will get incredible value from the exercise.
You can download the beautiful printable PDF here: https://t.co/1FS8Q06RuP
The job sites can seem daunting, particularly for women. But how about empowering them to succeed on site?
Nora Spencer, founder of Hope Renovations, is empowering women and non-binary people through construction training and internship programs.
https://t.co/rNy9ntZh5f
If you could write your own eulogy, what would it say?
Last week, as my wife and I drove home for her aunt's funeral, I learned that a high school classmate had been taken by cancer just four months after his first child was born.
I believe that there are 3 levels of sadness:
(1) Abstract Sadness: Sparked by events that you register as being sad, but that occur too far away from your life to impact you.
(2) "That Was Close" Sadness: Sparked by events that feel like a glancing blow, zipping by you just close enough for you to feel the impact, but not a direct hit.
(3) Painful Sadness: Sparked by events that create a direct impact on your daily life. The loss of a dear family member or close friend, for example.
In my mind, the "That Was Close" Sadness often has the most profound impact on how we live—it's close enough to force us to pause and think, but not so direct that we are knocked out of the game.
Life is so short. As Ferris Bueller famously cautioned, "If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."
Sometimes we need to pause and force a real reset, to consider the bigger picture and to make changes in how we are living today.
Resume Virtues vs. Eulogy Virtues
David Brooks once wrote about the distinction between what he called Résumé Virtues and Eulogy Virtues:
• Résumé Virtues are the things you put on your resume. Your professional accolades, education credentials, titles, status, net worth, and more.
• Eulogy Virtues are the things people talk about at your funeral. Whether you had a clear purpose and worked with meaning, whether you were curious and interested, whether you were kind, loving, and trustworthy, whether you were a loyal friend, partner, and parent, and more.
His basic contention was that most of us waste away focusing on Résumé Virtues, but that Eulogy Virtues are (a) more important, (b) more fulfilling, and (c) all that really matters in the end.
When I've wrestled with this idea in the past, I've always arrived at the same fundamental roadblock:
Eulogy Virtues may be more important, but Résumé Virtues are not unimportant.
I want people to remember me for being a loving human and protecting and supporting my family and friends, but I also want to push myself to fulfill my potential on the "Résumé Scorecard" along the way.
What I've resolved: We can build both, but only by focusing on the correct directionality.
A purposeful focus on Eulogy Virtues will build Résumé Virtues, but a focus on Résumé Virtues will not build Eulogy Virtues.
My takeaway: Stop chasing Résumé Virtues at the expense of everything else in life. If we focus on working with purpose and meaning, following our curiosity and interest, and acting as a kind, loving, and loyal friend, partner, parent, family member, and colleague, the Résumé Virtues will take care of themselves.
How Will You Choose to Live?
Last Friday, I spent some time with a friend battling a brain tumor.
We spoke about how he has learned to appreciate the simple joys of life and let go of the silly material worries that used to occupy his mind.
More than anything else, he loves to speak about CHOICE. The idea that he gets to CHOOSE what to focus on each morning.
He can choose to focus on things outside his control and drive himself crazy, or he can choose to focus on things within his control and let the rest fall into place.
To me, that's what this whole piece is really about: Choice.
If there's one thing I learned last week, it's that life is so very fragile.
But no matter how fragile it is, each day, we have a choice of how to live it.
Each day is a fresh start, a fresh choice to make.
So, how will you choose to live?
Solar power in Texas: "This summer, the ERCOT system is operating with more than 17,700 megawatts of solar capacity, more than double the amount installed at this time last year." It's generating like "clockwork" during heat waves.
https://t.co/RTRS2gQ7IQ via @WSJ
This visualization uses the visual metaphor of a submerged porthole window to observe how far our oceans rose between 1993 and 2022.
[NASA, read more: https://t.co/1ERdtKPB9z]