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Emergency shows you how to save your life

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As soon as I heard about Emergency by Neil Strauss, I wanted it. In fact, it was the first book I pre-ordered on Amazon in a long time. It's 414 pages, but a quick read because it's pretty entertaining. There are some solid, positive messages in the book, too, such as Strauss' description of how he changed over the years he spent researching. According to Strauss, when he set out on the journey to survive just about anything, he was mainly concerned with making a quick exit from a disaster situation, but by the end of it, he'd become the first responder in a time of crisis--actually becoming an EMT.

Emergency is chock full of amazing resources. The kind of things you'd learn if you'd spent a lifetime as a cowboy or Bear Grylls from the Discovery Channel's "Man vs. Wild." And since I've always been fascinated by those shows where people are dropped into the jungle and have to find their way out, this sounded like the book for me, and it was. But please keep this at the forefront of your mind: these tactics and firearm training are for survival situations, not mindless violence. It's the kind of stuff you want to know when you have no other choice but to make your own "good luck."

If you don't feel like reading the book, I've compiled a list of the resources Strauss outlines. If you have read the book, this list pulls out the major outside resources referenced. This excerpt got my attention and maybe will do the same for you.

"Today I can draw a holstered pistol in 1.5 seconds, aim at a target seven yards away, and shoot it twice in the heart. I can start a fire by rubbing two pieces of wood together. I can identify seven hundred types of footprints when tracking animals and humans. I can survive in the wild with nothing but a knife and the clothes on my back. I can find water in the desert, extract drinkable fluids from the ocean, deliver a baby, fly a plane, pick locks, hot-wire cars, build homes, set traps, evade bounty hunters, suture a bullet wound, kill a man with my bare hands, and escape across the border with documents identifying me as a citizen of a small island republic."

Education

Resources & Books

There is a ton of information in the book and Strauss is an engaging writer. Maybe I will take one of these classes to satisfy my "learn two new things every summer" requirement. if I missed something or you have a better resource, let me know.

The Alchemist

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The Alchemist
by Paulo Coelho

International best seller with substance. Very enjoyable story--finished the book during one long plane ride. All about following dreams, love and destiny, the book is really different for everyone; the message of following your true self is meant to give the story universal appeal (and I think it does). I was surprised how a simple story made me think about larger life goals.

Key takeaways:

  • Follow your dreams
  • The universe conspires to make dreams happen
  • Personal legends are the reason for living

Presentation Zen

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Presentation Zen: Simple Ideas on Presentation Design and Delivery
by Garr Reynolds

Death by PowerPoint is a hyperbolic title for an all too real phenomenon in both academia (primarily business schools) and enterprise: mind-numbingly boring and useless PowerPoint presentations. Garr has some great sample processes and thoughts about how to change PowerPoint presentations to make them effective and useful. Super easy read, lots of pictures, examples, graphics, and quotes. If you want a quick overview watch the Authors@Google video where he talks and gives examples.

Key takeaways:

  • Tell a story in your PowerPoint presentations
  • Don't worry-- it's a process and takes time to perfect
  • You don't need to be a designer
  • Less is more
  • Use vivid graphics

Mavericks at Work

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Mavericks at Work: Why the Most Original Minds in Business Win
by William C. Taylor and Polly G. Labarre

This was a very quick read because it was engaging right from the start. Excellent real-life examples from companies that truly do things differently. Not a traditional management study with a framework and suggested themes. Instead, the book really allows the reader to take away the points that are meaningful to him/her.

Key takeaways/notes (not a summary):

  • Why would great people work here (at my business, or anyone else's)? - Best companies have answer
  • Company vocabulary
  • Company University - Pixar was a great example of helping employees advance in areas beyond the company or position
  • Job candidates are customers

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