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Linda A | all galleries >> Galleries >> it's my life - 2005 diary > 18th May 2005 - watching paint?
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18-MAY-2005

18th May 2005 - watching paint?

I’ve spent my day in a dark room of an hotel about twenty miles from home. It’s been a revelation in as much as it’s been with a bunch of techies (technical people) who understand such things as SPSS, SAS, multi-variate regression analysis, partial least squares (which sounds vaguely familiar from my A Level Stats course), chi squared tests and all sorts of other fabulously unexciting but very necessary things in the lives of market researchers.

There was a famous person (exactly who escapes my memory) who said ‘there’s lies, damned lies and statistics’. I sometimes think that the old adage of many a true word is spoken in jest is absolutely true about that particular saying…..

Actually that’s just me being flippant after a whole day of listening to whether partial least squares or regression gives the best derived importance or whether a seven point scale or a five point scale is statistically stronger or more commercially viable. I do totally believe in these things and their value in explaining the world of business but I also wish they would be more straightforward to a simple soul like me. I think I fell off the trolley several times during the day.

My usual redress when I’m losing the plot is to go to the Ladies for a ‘breather’ in the (sometimes forlorn) hope that by the time I return the issue will be sorted and we can get back onto something I know a bit more about.

Likening the experience to watching paint dry is a bit glib really and we’ve actually covered a huge amount of ground but boy, for someone like me with the attention span of a flea, it’s all a bit tortuous…..so much so that in a toss-up between tomorrow’s Board Meeting and this I have a tough time deciding which would feel preferable. (Though I am already committed to this so it’s academic really.)

Now I sit in the bar of said hotel with two colleagues while the American folks are in their rooms freshening up after an overnight flight followed by a day-long meeting before taking them out to dinner. We’ve been privileged to receive some excellent hospitality from them while away so now it’s our turn to repay the compliment.

I was proven wrong about the hotel restaurant and we’re off to an Italian place in nearby Horsley. Hopefully it will be veggie-friendly. I’m sure we will have a good time anyway…….

Yep – a wonderful restaurant and fab food – cool.

You may ask ‘what’s all this to do with a photo of a bird of paradise plant?’ And you’d be right to – the analogy isn’t obvious by any means. In fact, this is very like my story – I bought the plant ten years ago with the promise that it would flower in three years. In the end, it took ten years to produce this, its first flower, just before I put the plant on the compost bin. So, it’s a perfect analogy – both my story of today and this picture have been the metaphorical ‘watching paint dry’ scenario – in both cases, I’ve waited forever for something beautiful to happen. I must now conclude that it is possible in my work example too!

Last year I was concerned with being a name not a number and two years ago I was in car heaven!


other sizes: small medium original auto
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Michael Todd Thorpe20-May-2005 04:59
You're a "heart" person, Linda. So much of how you deal with your life and the outside world comes that way. I wouldn't be surprised if you know on an intuitive level the many things that they talk about with the marketing tech talk...
Cheryl Hawkins19-May-2005 19:17
After going to a Chico City Council meeting on Tuesday, I'm convincd that all the doublespeak is just to confuse listeners so they can't figure out that the speaker really has no idea of what they are speaking about.
Bill Miller19-May-2005 18:14
Lovely picture but as for the text, I lost you after "necessary things in the lives of market researchers". Never heard the words necessary and market researchers in the same sentence before ;-)
Guest 19-May-2005 17:26
Weheeeyyyy!!!!!! I thought you'd bought it on a market! LOVELY!

PS - You didn't mention that we used to live in Horsley, or had you forgotten that brief moment in our lives?
Beth 19-May-2005 10:03
Congratulations on getting a tropical plant to flower in the UK! It is beautiful.
Lee Rudd19-May-2005 07:58
Disraeli - allegedly. Wonderful plant, I'm waiting for it to fly !
Guest 18-May-2005 23:33
Those are the COOLEST plants!!!
Robin Reid18-May-2005 23:23
Excellent analogy... and I love BOP shots... you did great. (I can say that with a confidence level of .95 ;-)
Guest 18-May-2005 23:15
WOW! Nice colors!
northstar3718-May-2005 23:15
The complexity! I was sent chocolate lily seeds from Alaska, they take four years to flower, so I'll see if they do next year. (A threatening with the compost heap might work for me too!)
Ian Morehouse18-May-2005 23:12
Nice photo, reminds me of my trip to Hawaii where I took a number of pohotos of them. There must be a couple of varities because some I have seen don't have the blue bit.

SAS a very good airline to travel with, chi isn't that something about personal feelings?