Thank you…

I haven’t been updating sneaker.org in a while… as I’d mentioned feedback is fuel and in the absence of feedback, I don’t feel compelled to keep writing. I love people who challenge what I say and what I think. Give me an argument. Give me a spirited discussion so that there is some fun in writing things. If everyone agrees with me then it’s no fun is it! 🙂

Anyhow, in the past couple of days several people… everyone from random people, to net-friends, to highschool friend and even my Mom have told me to go update my site! And you know, it actually feels good to know that someone actually reads this shit I keep posting on here! Anyhow, thank you all for your input and please keep it coming. Again… feedback is fuel… I love to hear from you either via email or IM.

Here is some new stuff….

New in Thought — caught in the act!* on Thursday, March 7, 2002

  • Raising the bar… – What Victor Frankl said is basically that the reason why we raise the bar is because we need something to look forward too. It is part of our search for meaning.
  • Transactional Integrity – I think I took transactional integrity a step too far. At the time I thought this is cool… I can apply this to everyday stuff. And so I became anal. Very anal.

    New in Rants and Raves* on Thursday, March 7, 2002

  • Make a Left on Route 66 – …and that’s when it hit… the guy changed the rules on us!! The rules for tonight were – one person, one straw Gulp! (literally!).

    New in Eavesdropped!* on Thursday, March 7, 2002

  • Journal entries are to accounting as hacking is to software development– My comment to Jake since I hate making journal entries when doing accounts 🙂
  • Amazing how you can try everything in your power to prevent users from doing something stupid and they will *still* find a way. – sneaker
  • When an founder is booted out of the company, they say the company has been foundersized.

    This is also known as The Mushroom Effect for Entrepreneurs —

    – first they keep you in the dark

    – then they throw shit on you

    – then they can you.


    – Nolan Bushnell at the Stanford GSB Conference on Entrepreneurship 2002

  • Leadership is the ability to build consensus in the face of adversity – Jerry Kaplan at the Stanford GSB Conference on Entrepreneurship 2002
  • Venture capitalists have deep pockets, but very short arms. – Kamran Elahian at the Stanford GSB Conference on Entrepreneurship 2002
  • Attitude is the mother of luck – Kirk Perron, Founder, Jamba Juice, at the Stanford GSB Conference on Entrepreneurship 2002
  • I am the Market. – Chip Conley, Joi de Vivre @ the Stanford GSB Conference on Entrepreneurship 2002
  • There is a reason they are called Kamikazes dammit! – sneaker
  • “I’m not looking for Mr. Right. I’m just looking for Mr. Right-place-at-the-right-time” – Rachel (umm.. okay she was a little tipsy)
  • Never a dull moment, always a fire to fight. – sneaker
  • When it comes to taking your money, people are flexible – My response to Q, when he asked if his checks he dated as 02/29/2002 will get cashed.
  • “The biggest tragedy is not death. It’s what dies inside you while you are still alive.” – as quoted to me by a friend during an IM conversation.
  • sneaker: you running a peepshow or something on your cam Q!

    lovicks_30: yup

    lovicks_30: it’s kitty porn







    – Q’s webcam showing kitty porn! 🙂

  • Technically, we’re all dying. – an astute observation.
  • What if a chameleon was color-blind? – topic of discussion over lunch @ Charlie’s

    Post to Twitter

  • Raising the bar…

    Several weeks ago, someone asked me: “Why do you keep raising the bar?” And I didn’t have an answer. I just felt I had to do it. I didn’t know for what. I didn’t know what the heck it was that drives some of us to never be satisfied. Enough is never enough. There is always more. There is always better. And along with it there is always this sense of failure. This sense of inadequacy.

    I didn’t know how to answer that question. Because rationally I could see the argument aht we are our own worst enemy as we are never satisfied with what we’ve done or what we can do because as soon as we’ve done it, we start thinking that whatever we’ve achieved is not enough and eventually make ourselves miserable all over again. But as I’ve mulled over this question now for several weeks and seen myself push things to the limit, I think I may have an answer to why we do it… or at least to why *I* do it.

    Victor Frankl in his book, Man’s Search for Meaning made several astute observations. You’ll find a whole lot of them documented in the Eavesdropped! section. One of the key observation he made was: “It is a peculiarity of man that he can only live by looking to the future — sub specie aeterniatis. And this is his salvation in the most difficult moments of his existence, although he sometimes has to force his mind to the task.”

    What Victor Frankl said is basically that the reason why we raise the bar is because we need something to look forward too. It is part of our search for meaning. It’s the need to have markers which when we cross we can say we got there. It is something to keep us from thinking about the futility and pointlessness of life otherwise in the absence of these markers. It’s our reason. And yes, though we may make things difficlut for ourselves by moving the end marker up each time… we do it so that we can keep going.

    I had to create my own new marker. I needed a new marker. And hence I had to raise the bar. I just don’t know how to do it any other way. And if someone does, I wish I could learn from them. because otherwise there is no rest.

    Post to Twitter

    Manu Kumar | California | U.S.A