picture-21At the start of my career in the early 90s, I interned at a new agency in London called Mustoe Merriman Herring and Levy. I was a wannabe junior planner, so when I met with the planning director, I was determined to learn as much as I could from him.  He passed on this pearl of wisdom about planning that I still remember today. He told me a story about commuting on the train during the winter. It was a dark evening and as his train slowed down to a station, he looked out the window and was able to see into the kitchen of a house near the train tracks.  In the kitchen, a woman stood at the sink doing dishes. The train stopped and he was able to watch her for a moment, and she was singing (maybe to a song on the radio, maybe not). The house was close enough to the train that he was able to see the brand name of the dish detergent she was using.  He ended his story by saying…”that’s planning”.

I thought of that the other day when I came across this wonderful series of short films about the lives of New Yorkers run in the NYT back in the summer of 2009. It showed me that even though we are often looking for big insights or truths that resonate with huge numbers of people, it’s the individual stories within that reveal the gold. The piece is called 1 in 8 million.  A belated Happy New Year from Egg - 2010 has started like 2009 finished, hence the rather late first post of the year!

2 Responses to “Looking Through The Window”

  • Meg Says:

    Great story. Thanks for sharing.

  • Nick Black Says:

    It’s the damndest thing… I spent at least an hour watching those same vignettes and was playing with a post along the same lines; well written. For my part those vignettes reminded me of one of my favourite quotes from a psychology professor in Germany:

    “We act as though everything were at stake, as though we had a definite meaning to express in our activities. Everyday life treats the every-day; this is why everyday actions are so dramatic… For this reason, the course of day-to-day life always displays more rage, more anxiety, or happiness than can be explained by the isolated observation of individual situations and activities.” – Wilhelm Salber

    There’s real power in the study of everyday life.

    Nick Black
    b: http://nickblackonblack.blogspot.com

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