The ultimate lean machine |
For example. So, so many of the engineers I work with have the typical house in the burbs with the sprawling lawn and the long commute. They complain about cutting the grass, talk about their "new expensive tools" needed cut the grass faster, and bitch about getting stuck in traffic. If they spent 30 minutes evaluating the things they like to do (consider that their value added activities) and then listed the fluff and suffering (non-value added activity, wasted time, and rework). Consider the list below for example. I know some folks enjoy cutting the lawn and their jobs, but let's not get stuck on that. You can make your own list, it will be different. The important thing, I think, is to actually make some sort of list like this once in a while.
Value Added (increase these)
- Spending time with family and / or friends
- Unstructured time spent relaxing or recreating
- Going out to a nice dinner
- Seeing shows or attending cultural events
- Exercising and staying healthy
- Improving my community
Non-Value Added, Wasted Time (reduce or eliminate these)
- Stuck in traffic. Commuting to work and other things.
- Time spent at work - assuming that your job is stressful and you'd rather do other things
- Cutting grass
- Standing in line
- And it could go on and on...
With that list in hand, a reasonable person might conclude that their lifestyle is set up to maximize non-value added activity. The full hour spent commuting per day in a car. The two nights per week spent cutting grass or pulling weeds in the lawn. The 400 yard long driveway that requires an industrial snow blower. How did they get there, in a life overweight with wasted time and busy work? The opposite of a Lean lifestyle. Spending their valuable time during the week making money to support expensive after work activities that they don't even enjoy. Tirelessly chasing the suburban dream until they retire and full time commit themselves to the non-value added list. If they moved closer to work, down sized the lawn (moved near a park), and changed some structure in their lives the balance of the list could change.
A side benefit of a value added life is that things get more interesting. As soon as someone starts talking about mulch, cutting the grass, or highway traffic - it's the most boring thing in the world.
And we'll be hip deep in the "right tool" on Saturday, June 7th. In the morning, there is a bike swap meet in Wethersfield. Then Dinner and Bikes that evening in Hartford. After Dinner and Bikes, there are local bands and DJ's at Arch Street Tavern - come get some Shag Frenzy. This is what I call maximizing the value added activity. Huzzah Hartford!
Righteous!
ReplyDeleteBTW (By the way), check out Paul Tranter's essay, "Effective Speed: Cycling Because It's "Faster" in the book "City Cycling", edited by John Pucher and Ralph Buehler. There are some pretty good observations and insights about how fast is fast and efficiency.
Another complaint I love from co-workers is about the price of gas to fill up de SUV, John Deere, or snow blower! But then again, they probably hate my complaints about people in cars!
ReplyDeleteDrive into the city? I will have to pay to park! Oh my friend, nothing is free!