Blogging: An Introduction

As a fan of blogging in general and an avid reader of a number of blogs written by people I have never even met and will likely not ever meet, I have decided that giving this blogging thing a shot can't do me too much harm.

This will be useful to you if you are at all interested in receiving updates as to what the heck is going on in my life, but also (and I would hope that this would be the main point of this) if you are open to contemplating my ideas, advice, opinions, insights, questions...and sharing with me your ideas, advice, opinons, questions, facts, dreams, etc. So comment or send me an e-mail if you have something you might offer.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Poverty and Wall St

“Don’t aim at success- the more you aim at it and make it a target, the more you are going to miss it. For success, like happiness, cannot be pursued; it must ensue, and it only does so as the unintended side-effect of one’s personal dedication to a cause greater than oneself or as the by-product of one’s surrender to a person other than oneself. Happiness must happen, and the same holds for success.” Dr. Viktor E. Frankl


Working for the Office of Financial Empowerment within the Department of Consumer Affairs has thus far given me a new perspective of consumerism in America and the non-monetary value of money as well as the extent to which money is important and vital to modern life and yet can lead to undesirable outcomes.


The psychological and physiological effects of not only poverty but also of just not having enough money to meet expenses are what are most disconcerting. Not being able to afford food, shelter, clothing, etc. is not conducive to building a career or becoming educated or trained, nor does it lend to having healthy relationships with family or friends. As an observer of urban poverty in NYC, it is clear that making a good amount of money is essential to meeting a basic standard of living, particularly here in "the real estate capital of the world" as the lamp posts in the Financial District so blatantly claim.


Working in the Financial District I have noticed the culture to this neighborhood and other parts on NYC that is very unique as far as any talk about culture goes. I take the train to Wall St everyday and make the short walk to my office amongst the school of suits swimming across Broadway. Just being surrounded by the world’s biggest banks and most powerful businesses let alone by a volume of highly successful, educated and powerful individuals, causes a pressure to make it big here, to be successful. Race, religion, age, gender, do not matter. Money and the ability to make money matters. It is good to make money, to steer clear of the effects of poverty or financial instability. There is danger involved in such a pursuit, however. And this is now more than ever something that can be sensed around Wall St. One year after the Lehman Brothers collapse and the Wall St crash our economy continues to struggle and the unemployment rate continues to increase. The evolution of the pursuit of money and financial success into greed (both corporate on the part of the banks and investment firms and personal on the part of the homebuyer) which then caused such dramatic problems in the global market has taught a hard lesson.


Frankl’s quote helps me to put things into perspective. True success, even for those of us working in the Financial District, happens maybe not as a result of the direct pursuit of success but perhaps as a side effect of our pursuit of a greater cause, like our pursuit of being responsible citizens who act according to what is righteous. May we dedicate ourselves to such things and allow success to ensue.

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