Across the Town. Early for the Bakery.
Across the Town. Early for the Bakery.
Just Checking !
I cannot recall when I first heard the term ‘old school,’ but I soon realised it was the highest compliment.
Think of the colleague everyone trusts in a crisis: there on time, reliable, and quietly effective. When someone says, ‘That’s Sarah, she’s old school,’ they are naming a rare and valuable quality: dependable professionalism. I noticed it in certain teachers and then discovered individuals showing the trait while I was doing vacation work. I now knew who to seek out with my first jobs on the career ladder, and by the time I launched out on my own and became an entrepreneur, I learned to select my suppliers and clients based on this magic.
‘Old school’ means living by timeless principles. Who does not value punctuality or resourcefulness under pressure? These are never obsolete; they are the foundation of ease of working and ease of living.
Pilates’s Magician
now out in paperback. Go read it this weekend. I have read it and it’s five star excellent.
Unintended consequences
arise when actions yield results that decision-makers neither foresaw nor intended. They remind us that complex systems defy expectations, and good intentions don’t ensure good outcomes.
These consequences fall into three categories: unexpected benefits, unexpected drawbacks, and perverse results, cases where actions produce the opposite of what was intended. Of these, the last category is especially frustrating, as it suggests our intervention made things worse.
Perhaps the most famous example is the “Cobra Effect,” named after an incident in colonial India. The British government, concerned about dangerous cobras in Delhi, offered a bounty for every dead cobra brought to authorities. At first, this approach appeared effective, as people killed cobras for money. However, enterprising locals soon began breeding cobras specifically to kill them and collect the bounty. When the government discovered this and cancelled the program, the breeders released their now-worthless cobras into the wild, worsening the original problem.
This happens often: rent control cuts housing, prohibition raises risky drinking, and social media meant to connect increases isolation.
Understanding unintended consequences doesn’t mean avoiding action; it means thinking through second and third-order effects before implementing solutions. What behaviours might this encourage? Who benefits? What could go wrong? The cobra effect teaches us that the cure can indeed be worse than the disease.
The Moon
Happy 1st April
Real photo. Real iPhone. Real run. No AI. Phew….
Get Well, Soon.
Daily MEDS: A simple, powerful strategy for looking after ourselves.
Public Service Patrick
Phones, Chevys and great music. All here.