[Publib] Where is YOUR administrators' office? --- was Seattle PL
John
jrichmond at alphapark.org
Fri Feb 2 12:49:24 EST 2007
I thought that in this Brave New World of Management by ... (fill in the blank yourself, depending on your favorite management self-help book or book-on-CD/Playaway/E-book of the quickly-passing second) ... we weren't supposed to even whisper the "H word," i.e., (very softly now) "hierarchy." Or any variation thereon. We are all *collaborators* now. I mean, isn't that the Gospel? Isn't that what Mr./Ms. Generation-Whatchamacalit expects in her/his workplace? Or maybe I'm behind the times.
On the other hand, if you're a Jungian, I seem to recall that old Carl claimed that the human psyche was naturally hierarchical. I'm not a true Jungian, but I've often thought about that. What CGJ said, I mean.
As for me and my office, I am in the southwest corner on the first floor, with big, tall windows that let in lots of light, which can be helpful in a dull, gray central Illinois winter, and at other times, too. There are deceptively brief or narrow or shallow woods to the west, out of which emerge deer and, sometimes, a wild (as opposed to civilized?) turkey. Beyond the shallowness lies land belonging to the Peoria Airport Authority, I think. I'm not sure if I'm king of all I survey, or not. I own neither ermine nor crown, though I have a kingly-looking tea cozy, acquired by my parental units in Europe, which I sometimes wear on Halloween as if it *were* a crown, when the pre-school story-timers parade through the library, gathering treats of library personnel.
TGIF!
("King John was not a good man--he had his little ways...." -- A. A. Milne)
John D. Richmond, Director
Alpha Park Public Library District
3527 So. Airport Road
Bartonville, IL 61607-1799
Ph: (309) 697-3822, x. 12
Fax: (309) 697-9681
Email: jrichmond at alphapark.org
______________________________________________________
"Satyrs and Sylvan boys were seen Peeping from forth their alleys green." -- Quoted in SISTER BERNADETTE'S BARKING DOG: The Quirky History & Lost Art of Diagramming Sentences, by Kitty Burns Florey
More information about the Publib
mailing list