Triskelion Tattoo

IMG_4408This was a piece from a couple of years ago that was published in the Globe.

 

I finally reached that age when it was time to get a tattoo. There is a fine balance between the years you can appreciate your tattoo and the years that you finally regret it. Turning 60, my years of tattoo appreciation seemed likely to exceed the years of tattoo regret. Only 10% of my age bracket, the baby boomers have a tattoo. Moving from the middle of the pig in the python, I was on the verge of being an outlier.

My spouse got her own tattoo as a 50th birthday present. A nice Celtic knot on the side of calf. I have admired her determination to show who she was and an insight into her heritage. The only thing that people could tell about my heritage was that I came from nice hair.

Getting a tattoo would reveal my inner rebel. Getting a tattoo, and a motorbike, would go hand-in-hand. My spouse did point out the error of that logic, and a tattoo was a stand-alone rebel stance and would not require a motorbike. My rebel was appropriately schooled.

What tattoo could do this, without the motorbike? Latin phrases such as carpe diem have been done to death. The best approach would be a symbol. I was looking for something that spoke to me and represented what being human was all about. No easy task since people search all their lives for personal meaning, and I was looking for something like that that could fit on my slightly increasing, soon to be decreasing body size.

In the time that it would have taken to gestate five consecutive baby elephants, I finally set upon a design. A triskelion. A three part symbol that even predates the Celts. The interesting aspect is that you can apply any meaning you want to a trinity. Past present future, mind body spirit, grande decaf latte. The last is a bit of stretch, but the symbol is multipurpose. I wanted to include my wife’s initials in between the spokes of the triskelion. My spouse smiled. My adult children mildly rolled their eyes. PDAs, parental displays of affection, are to be avoided.

The placement of a tattoo also makes a statement. Men prefer arms while woman prefer upper back and legs. Each placement makes a different statement. A facial location would make the statement that I was not happy with my present employment. A deltoid shoulder placement was more in keeping. Not too shy, not obvious at work, and would integrate well with the yoga crowd when I wore my lululemon tank top.

This was the way to show my free spirit. I copied out varioustattoo sizes and taped them to various body locations. Apparently my free spirit likes to be guided like a slow moving trolley on tracks.

After contacting my local tattoo parlor, and checking out needle safety, I had my consultation. I veered away somewhat from the artists that would otherwise have been comfortable providing prison tattoos, while in prison. I settled for a more artistic looking artist.

The fateful day arrived and I was feeling flushed and decided to walk to the tattoo parlor instead of driving. I loaded up on ibuprofen. Upon arriving, I signed the necessary forms. There was no legal jargon to pour through. A good sign. I sat down in the dental looking chair, not a good sign, and my artist explained the process. He applied the stencil and I checked the mirror. This was the one last chance to bail, but I smiled and said ‘hey, it’s exactly what I was thinking of’. This may have been true at some point, but my mind was blank. I leaned back and closed my eyes. I can just about fall asleep when getting my teeth cleaned. I decided that I should try to stay awake and become more ‘fully engaged’ in the moment. But I was more concerned about my tattoo artist. If he nodded off and didn’t move from a certain spot after a minute, I wondered if I would be left with a large black splotch. And if so, what would this very unhappy looking death balloon symbolize?

The entire process took less than 90 minutes. I had been warned that getting a tattoo was like getting scratched by a cat. My previous scratching experience was rescuing a friend’s cat from a tree. The cat was terrified, but I coaxed it to leap into my arms. Yes, mistake, scratch wise. Fortunately getting the tattoo was way less painful.

When my artist was finished I paid the balance of my account. I gave him a nice tip. Even though the experience is almost the same, countless small punctures, I don’t usually tip my lawyer or my accountant.

Afterwards, I did feel different. After thinking about the meaning of the design, I understood how people can feel that their totem, crystals and the like are channeling another power. We all like to be attached to something greater. The triskelion reminds me to work on all aspects of myself continuously, a permanent conscious guide.

I like how they worked my spouse’s Celtic initials into the design which shows how our past, present and futures are intertwined.  I have committed to things that are important and to leave aside things that are not. There is no time like the present. Why wait?

IMG_4408

Dragon vs Nazgul mount

bokeh-daylight-dragon-208326 (2)I thought, erroroneously, that a dragon and a nazgul mount were about the same. However, we can clearly see that Smaug from the Hobbit’s tale, could speak, covet gold, fly and breathe fire.

Tolkien once wrote that “he did not intend the steed of the Witch-king to be what is now called a pterodactyl, while acknowledging that it was ‘obviously… pterodactylic and owes much  to the new mythology of the Prehistoric’ “. Peter Jackson changed the  beak from the book into teeth for the movie.

The Nazgul mount apparently does not even have a proper name. It could fly and apparently it stank. Not the type of beast you would invite to dinner. Unlike Smaug who apparently could make great dinner converstation if he could be trusted not to take away the gold plated servers.

https://onedailyprompt.wordpress.com/2019/03/31/your-daily-word-prompt-dragon-march-31-2019/

1000 books to read before you die

blur-books-close-up-159866I bought this book recently. I had hoped that this book would have made the list so I would only have to go through another 999. No such luck.

I always enjoy creating a list and discovering that a few item were previously completed so now I have less to do and I have that sense of moral accomplishment.

I just ordered 100 Years of Solitude. I thought I had to read this since Netflix was coming out with a series beforehand. Not sure if its better to read then watch, or watch then read. This assumes you intend to do both. Alway a conundrum.

Bitcoin Harbinger of Death

Bitcoin is “probably rat poison squared,” he said, according to CNBC’s Becky Quick. Buffett is presiding at Berkshire Hathaway’s 2018 annual shareholder meeting on Saturday. This sounded like the harbinger of death for this cryptocurrency

Buffet also suggested that “Never invest in a business you cannot understand.”

Peter Lynch once said, “Never invest in an idea you can’t illustrate with a crayon.”

 

https://onedailyprompt.wordpress.com/2019/03/29/your-daily-word-prompt-harbinger-march-29-2019/

Labyrinthine Tattoo

78019-img_2612

My first, and perhaps only tattoo, used a triskillion labryrinthine type of design. I liked the notion of the three legged concept as a methaphor for life. Three basics being mind, body, spirit. Sort of a secular trinty type of approach.

I have some Irish celtic background, so this nicely captured my entire approach to life.

https://onedailyprompt.wordpress.com/2019/03/30/your-daily-word-prompt-labyrinthine-march-30-2019/

Legal Operations 101

 

billing-bureaucracy-cop-33596

I fought the law and the law won.

I fought the law and the law won.

Buddy Holly

 

Legal operations emphasizes the effective and efficient delivery of legal services in-house. This relatively new discipline addresses a number of organizational issues. Counsel should no longer fight against the organizational assimilation, but they should instead work at becoming part of it.

 

Admittedly, Legal Operations even sounds cool. Someone going to the Legal Department sounds a bit like going to the old style department stores to look at furniture with your parents.

 

The best part of being in-house involves being part of an organization. The most difficult part of being in-house appears to be being part of an organization. LO helps with the effectiveness of being part of that organization.

 

We need to identify some of the issues that LO can alleviate. Dealing with organizational activities comes with the territory, AKA Willey Lowman. Some of this can be great when you are off to a retreat to do some strategic planning. Even if this involves going even further north during the winter since its off-season and there can be some great buys.

 

Another issue recognizes that in-house counsel require updates as to what is happening outside of their own department or function. The watercooler used to help with that, but now we have the ethereal coffee shop that we use for Microsoft Teams. This seems to lack the same level of integration and networking, but the coffee at home tastes better.

 

With limited resources, the next issue involves trying to educate your clients ahead of time. This really means being involved with the planning process.

 

Counsel need to demonstrate the value of the legal department or function. One must resort sometime to counting all of the icebergs or landmines the organization missed because of your risk management activities.

 

Sometimes the organization asks you to do tasks or projects outside of your area. This recognizes your abilities outside of your law degree, shows additional value and facilitates your engagement in other areas of the organization. Leading the business planning process can be a great way to demonstrate value and learn about other areas of the organization. Some refer to this as scope creep. I actually refer to this as ‘chipping in’.

 

The final and potentially greatest issue involves the need to reduce overall legal costs. Moving from a cost center to a profit centre can be a great achievement, so long as in creating profits you still have time to avoid that iceberg. The collision is what people generally remember, not that great business plan you put together.

 

LO competencies solve or alleviate some of the above issues. For example, learning the budgeting system goes far to learning the business and keeping on the CFO’s good side.

 

A major competency includes document management. Bringing in or learning how the DM operates can go far in alleviating time and costs. You waste a great deal of every day searching for a document, or searching for a document that never existed. DM search mechanisms can quickly bring you up to speed when it comes up with the ‘document not found.’ If you have every tried to prove a nullity, you can appreciate how an electronic search can substantially reduce the amount of grief.

 

Document management includes increased knowledge management. KM seems to be another term that comes and goes in favor. You can have all of the facts and information, but you need context for these two things in order to reach the knowledge plateau. Ultimately, you want the wisdom plateau when you accumulate all of the necessary institutional knowledge. Hopefully this occurs before retirement.

 

Another part of DM includes standardized contracts. Most organizations already have this. So if you do, then add it to your ‘to do list’ so that you can check it off. There is no greater feeling when it comes to setting out to accomplish something you have already accomplished.

 

Paperless policies form an integral part of document management. Previously people would scan a document but still keep the paper copy in another file. You simply have to face the situation and shred the original. Unless it is a negotiable instrument. You should keep those for a few days to make sure the scan to the bank works. I have scanned in personal cheques and shredded them immediately. This practice will catch up with me some day, but right now, I am just living on the edge.

 

Another competency involves project management. When taking my MBA, I went for a two-day seminar on PM. I spent a week cramming on using Microsoft Project software thinking that this would be the emphasis. However, we spent the two days learning to talk to one another and to listen to what the other person was saying. I did not learn anything significant about software, but it improved my relationship with my significant other. Good win there.

 

During the PM seminar, we all met up in the banquet hall. The large crowd waited at their tables, mostly patiently, for dinner. The seminar leader announced that if anyone could tell a project management joke, their table would be first in line for the buffet. I immediately stood up and asked ‘Why did the chicken cross the road?” Dramatic Pause here. “Because it was a critical path.” (Which is a major project management term that one needs to learn.) It was a groaner, but my table got to eat first. Or at least I did. The rest of my table wanted to put a bit distance between them and me.

 

The benefit of these LO techniques, excluding the lame joke telling, facilitates an effective in-house legal department and reduces the amount of legal work sent outside of the organization. Reducing outside legal work can result in reduced budgets, alternative fee arrangements or retention agreements.

 

Another LO benefit allows focus on higher priority and more strategic work. There appears to be a synergistic and not a sum zero effect. By spending more time on legal operations, this allows the remaining time spent more effectively on the legal function.

 

This is not quite the same thing as doing more with less since you need the LO expertise. You do more legal work but you need a bit more LO at the same time. If you are single legal officer worker (SLOW), then you need to become a FAST (Following A Strategic Tempo) legal operator. Yes, the acronyms sound contrived, but all business articles require several.

 

Becoming involved in other aspects of the business can be a bit of a cultural shift. Picking a few areas where you can provide value quickly and effectively would show other parts of the organization your value. Focusing on how you can help others achieve their business objectives provides the greatest value.