Photographs are so important to us, and most of us consider our photographs to be our greatest treasure. It can be pretty intimidating to face the task of caring for your greatest physical treasure.
It is such a big deal, in fact, that we may have unspoken visions of how we see ourselves handling this task. Whether we’re aware of it or not, most of us would hope to pull off something of Martha Stewart’s caliber when it comes to how OUR photographs would be arranged and displayed. (We should note that we’re referring to Martha’s artistic creativity, not her creative expression in finance).
Perhaps we have lofty visions of beautifully designed scrapbook albums, or handsome stacks of leather photo boxes neatly lining the shelves of our mahogany bookcase. (Who cares if we don’t even own a mahogany bookcase - it goes better with our vision, so we throw it in there.)
Some of us are so afraid of not living up to these unspoken expectations, that we’d rather not even attempt it. (Maybe we hear our mother’s voice echoing in our heads, “If you can’t do it the right way, then don’t do it at all!”) So we continue along telling ourselves that we will do it someday and when we do, it will be perfect.
Perfectionism is basically a fear of doing it incorrectly. To overcome this, recognize it and then get over it! A major oversimplification, right?
Well, look at it this way. Don’t you have lots of areas in your life where you consciously decided to lighten up your standards? Perhaps you don’t make your bed as carefully (or at all!) or your house isn’t impeccably maintained the way that your mother did it.
But so what? You have a real life and you need to get on with it, right? It’s the same with your pictures. Make the decision to get on with it! Don’t worry about making a mistake and doing it the “wrong way.” There is no wrong way — unless of course you use unsafe materials or keep your photographs in unsafe environments.
And you’ve got a much greater risk of doing that when you don’t do anything at all! Take action and don’t be afraid to make course corrections along the way. Anything you do to capture your memories and preserve photographs will be a gift - to your loved ones and to yourself!
Excerpted from Save Your Photos and Your Sanity: How to Organize and Safeguard Your Entire Photograph Collection…in as little as 10 days, without losing your mind!”
Christine Sutton and her business partner, Tracey DuBois have helped countless people organize, protect, and enjoy their precious photographs. As authors of Save Your Photos and Your Sanity! How to Organize and Safeguard Your Entire Photograph Collection in as Little as 10 Days!, http://www.organizedphotos.com/photoorganizing.html
and producers of “Treasure Your Memories”, http://www.organizedphotos.com/createphotoalbum.html they take a unique and FUN approach to organizing photographs. They offer a FREE Photo Organizing Idea Kit with completely sane solutions at http://www.organizedphotos.com
A.A. Milne, C.S. Lewis, Kenneth Grahame, Robert Louis Stevenson and other Christian Children’s Books
Children are gifts from God, and we love being parents more than anything else in the world. Nothing means more to us than watching our child’s face as they are learning about the world around them. What wonder and joy we as adults experience at watching our child discovering their toys, the sky and the birds, flowers and other people’s faces not familiar to them. We discover heaven here on earth, because our child is from heaven. We never knew love to be so perfect, enduring, wonderful and beautiful, and we know that our child loves us in the very same way. We live to love our child and to care for and protect them in the best way that we can. We than must leave the rest to God, trusting him to protect them at all times, and on throughout their life. I have put Christian children’s books and children’s Christian poetry on my site as a way to honor and teach our children. Children’s’ books and poetry evoke wonderful feelings of peace, serenity and happiness. I hope that you will find wonder and joy in reading to your child, and may you and your children always treasure your Children’s Books. Read Children’s christian stories, childrens poetry and children’s christian books
Beatrix Potter
Potter was born in 1866 in South Kensington London, educated by a governess, and had little contact with other people. She began drawing her favourite characters, her animal friends, as a hobby, which later became beautiful little books, loved by children and adults around the world.
Kenneth Grahame is the creator of the Cherished “The Wind in the Willows.” A.A. Milne is the famous creator of Winnie the Pooh and the House at Pooh Corner. C.S. Lewis is the creator of the Narnia Chronicles and Poetry for Children
Ken and Deidre Bissonette are successful authors and publishers of Christian Book information. Please see http://www.poetry-by-deidre.com Children’s Ministry Magazine
Business Process Revisited:
We have previously defined a business process as a sequential series of interrelated tasks triggered by an event, and undertaken to provide valued outcomes to customers.
Dependent Activities - Critical Chain:
When we combine the ideas of sequence and interrelatedness, we reach the conclusion that the process steps are dependent on one another. Subsequent steps cannot be carried out until prior steps have been done.
Statistical (i.e. unpredictable) Fluctuations:
Almost every business process contains statistical fluctuations. While average figures can be given for the time it takes a call centre representative to resolve a customer issue, or the hourly production of a manufacturing line, or the time it takes a restaurant to serve a dinner, in each of these cases, the actual value can vary widely around the stated average. To appreciate the nature of fluctuations, consider a die thrown a large number of times. While individual throws will vary from 1 to 6, the average outcome will be 3.5. Stating the average throw as 3.5 masks the wide variation in actual outcomes.
Constraints:
The dependent nature of process steps creates enormous leverage when considering improvements. Like a chain that is only as strong as its weakest link, the process throughput is wholly determined by the capacity constrained resource. The speed of a marching file of soldiers depends on the speed on the slowest man. There are two main types of constraints. These include physical (space, time, capability, market) and policy constraints.
The combination of dependent processes and statistical fluctuations leads to escalating work in process inventory (where an internal process is the constraint) or finished goods inventory (where the market demand is the constraint), and eventually lower throughput.
1. Locating Performance Constraints:
The foregoing discussion makes it obvious that the only way to improve the performance of a system is to improve the performance of the constrained resource. The first step in improving the process is to identify the constraint. For each value chain, there can only be a single constraint at any time (weakest link in the chain).
To identify a constraint, simply ask, “What is it that limits the system throughput? What limits the amount of money we make? What stops us from satisfying the entire demand? Where do we find inventory piling up?” Assume you were to attempt to gradually increase throughput from zero by increasing the inputs into the process. The resource in front of which you begin to have a significant and sustained build up of inventory is your constraint.
2. Exploiting Performance Constraints:
Having located the constraint, the next step is to exploit the constraint. This means optimising the performance of the system based on a proper understanding of what is going on. According to Goldratt, inventor of the Theory of Constraints, most constraints that at first glance seem to be physical, on closer examination turn out to be the result of invalid assumptions and harmful policies. For example a change in product mix (arising from a change in policy) could significantly increase throughput (revenue less costs) obtained from a given production facility, even with the same constraints intact.
The constrained resource must operate at or close to full capacity at all times. Non-constraints must then operate at a level of capacity utilisation necessary to only supply the requirements of the constrained resource. Anything more creates unnecessary work in process inventory and reduces throughput.
3. Subordinating Everything Else to the Above Decision:
All policies and decisions must align with a proper exploitation of the constraints. For example having decided on the product mix which maximises throughput, the reward system for the sales force must not encourage sales persons to push a different mix.
4. Elevating the Constraint:
At the last step, we have obtained as much improvement as we can without any added investments. The next step is to turn the constraint into a non-constraint by increasing its capacity. For physical constraint, expense or investments may be required to elevate the constraint. To elevate a policy constraint will require a different sort of investment - that of political capital.
5. Return to Step 1 while Avoiding Inertia:
Once a constraint is broken, by definition a new one is created. Thus we must return to the first step of identifying the constraint.
It is important to avoid inertia at this point. According to Goldratt, a number of rules and policies are in place in the system that is consistent with the existing set of constraints. Once any of these are broken, then the underlying assumptions for these policies should be examined to determine their continuing relevance. Otherwise, these policies through mental inertia, become constraints in themselves. To continue our previous example, the breaking of a constraint may dictate a new product mix to exploit the new constraint, and a new reward system to align sales force behaviour with the new requirements.
Samuel Okoro is the CEO of Leapfrog Alliance Ltd, a management training and consulting firm that helps organisations to reduce costs and improve quality through better business processes. His personal passion is to help move Third World business to world-class levels. For further details please visit http://leapfrogalliance.com/resources.html.