Friday, September 05, 2008

Invitation: Education, Creativity and The Kaospilots

I've been studying for two years in Denmark, and many people have been asking me, either by curiosity or interest, about this school with this strange name "Chaos Pilots?". What is it? How does it work? How can I study there? Is there anything like that in Brazil?

As this is my last week in São Paulo, before returning to Denmark and finish my studies, I would like to invite you for an informal conversation about Education, Creativity, Innovation, and much more...

September 9th, 2008 (Tuesday)
Location: The Hub - Bela Cintra 409 - São Paulo
Reception at 7pm, chat goes from 7.30 until 9.30pm
Cost: suggested R$ 5,00 (for drinks and snacks)

This invitation extends for all interested people, and curious about the subjects!
Let me know in advance if you're coming by e-mail henrique@kaospilot.dk.


TWO roads diverged in a yellow wood,
And sorry I could not travel both
(...)
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I—
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference.


Labels: , , , , ,

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Spanish Inspiration...

Between John Milton (see previous post) and Dee Hock (wait for next post), I got a small paid assignment in Denmark: join a group of 10 young Spanish guys and girls, for 2 days, awarded for their brilliant ideas for the future of Extremadura, the province in Spain they came from. This was part of their inspirational tour in Denmark, where they visited organizations and enjoyed a nice experience. Initially I thought my role was to be translator and helper for their trip, but soon I realized that the organizers wanted someone still young, with knowledge about innovation and creativity, capable of sharing stories, to inspire the youngsters in an informal atmosphere. I think it was a very innovative idea and I had a great time! I joined them to Christiania, Legoland, besides having nice conversations about the Kaospilots, Education today and in the future, and what young people want.

Spanish group

Muchas gracias!!

Labels: , ,

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Hitchhiking - life is good and fun!

Hitchhikers' shadowsI really wanted to join the Nature Quest with John Milton in the Swedish Mountains (see previous post), and even tough the fee was highly subsidized, I still needed money to get there. 1,500km north from Aarhus, and transportation in Scandinavia is very expensive.

I decided to challenge myself once again, as I did last summer (read story), and I had a tent with me this time. It's legal to put a tent anywhere in Norway and Sweden, as long as it's not to close to houses or at plantation fields. Louise from Team14 accepted my invitation to hitchhike, as she was also joining the program. She did her final first year project in India, trying to connect spirituality with leadership from a Buddhist and Hinduism point of view. She had never hitchhiked before.

Hitchhiking alone or accompanied with someone is very different. Time flies much easier and faster, especially when you travel with someone so enjoyable as Louise (also very effective at smiling for drivers to stop ;-)). We had planned 5 days to arrive there, and we managed in 3,5 days, after 17 different cars! We started Thursday June 26th in Aarhus by the ferry to Copenhagen, drove through Malmö, spent the night in Jönköping (watching football with Klas and couchsurfing at his newly bought house) and we had a whole Saturday to relax in Stockholm, where I could meet old friend Elvio, nice surprise and great host. We left Stockholm on Sunday morning, and we were lucky enough to reach Östersund (527km), where we couchsurfed with Ola, a great chef who cooked for us, besides sharing his knowledge about the region. On Monday afternoon, we arrived in Undersåker at the same time as the train, meeting all the other Kaospilots, full of stories to share and well prepared for a great week.

Mark, Louise and I, together with all our luggage!

Six days later, at the end of the meeting, Mark and Louise convinced me to return through Norway, instead of going back through Sweden as planned. I had friends to visit, places to stay, cool people to hang out with, but the temptation of seeing Norway was high enough. And for some reason, I was not worried that we were 3 people with lots of luggage (tents, sleeping bags, food...). I knew we would make it, even without ANY preparation at all, not even a map!

At the border between Sweden and NorwayIn Trondheim, after our first 230km, we tried but we didn't manage to find hosts, so we setup our tent outside the youth hostel, quite cool, never dark, and in the next day we head through the west coast, and after 8 rides (including a taxi for free!) and 300km, we reached Molde, a little town with snow mountains and the fjordes, the city of roses, where a new surprise would be waiting to meet us: Inga Mette. She was recommended to us by Göran Gennvi, CEO of Naturakademin Learning Lab and organizer of the program with John Milton. We didn't know what to expect, and she took us to the top of the mountain, where we spent the night, next to a beautiful creek. Next morning we were inspired and challenged by Inga and her great visions, ideas and plans. Invitation to come back to collaborate, contacts in Egypt, and we finalized our morning with an interview and photos for the local newspaper!!!

Blessed by Inga, we decided to change our route, instead of going to Oslo we wanted to continue on the coast and get the ferry in Bergen. The road included 5 ferry passages, over 500km and about 9 expected hours drive by car. A beautiful but slow road. We left Molde at 12pm and we wanted to sleep in Bergen, make it in 12 hours (haha!), or at least be there before 11pm next day, in time for the ferry to Denmark. I had to be in Copenhagen by Friday morning so I couldn't miss that ferry! An incredible day, 7 different cars and we arrived in Bergen at 0.30am... and we even got a house to sleep, amazing help from Torhild and Jo, a married couple of graduated Kaospilots, who even being outside town, placed us in their Jo's parents house! Too good!

Long wait but we managed to reach Bergen!

Next morning we met Paola from Team 12 for an ice-cream and walk around the harbour of Bergen, and 18 hours later we arrived in the north-west coast of Denmark. Of course we were tired, but we wouldn't stop here. We still had about 4-5 hours to hitchhike, and with the help of 3 cars we arrived home for lunch-time!!

I conclude this trip by realizing that traveling by hitchhiking has several key positive points, some of them are:

Cultural: by meeting different people and being curious, we got to know a lot about their daily routines, thoughts, worries and views. It's an amazing way to learn about the local culture. Some drivers coming back from work, some going on holidays, some immigrants, many former hitchhikers...

Cheap: we didn't pay for any ride and we even got the ferry paid once. People are generous.

Sustainable: hitchhiking is climate-neutral by nature. The cars and trucks would be there anyway, so we become "invisible" from the energy consumption and gases emissions point of view.

Hopeful: by allowing themselves to give us rides, people show trust in strangers, in a world that currently is driven by fear and isolation, hitchhiking bring people together, and we need more of that!

Self-development: we learn to be patient (when waiting for rides), to be communicative (to talk for hours with the drivers), to be curious (to know what to ask them), to be thankful. We need to keep positive attitude at all times, be relaxed and have fun...

The summary of the adventure:

Number of days: 14 (6 camping in Vålådalen)
Number of rides: 40 (17 to get there, and 23 to get back, 39 cars and 1 truck)
Number of taxi rides (for free): 2
Number of ferries crossed: 8
Minimum time waiting: 30 seconds (at the exit of Copenhagen towards Sweden)
Maximum time waiting: 1h45min (half-way between Molde and Bergen)
Nights couchsurfing: 2
Nights in tent: 8 (6 in Vålådalen)

Money spent (myself): around 250 euro (plus the program fee)

As I wrote in my travel journal...
"The story continues, but the myth of the trip to Sweden and Norway finishes here."

Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Summer plans?

I came back from China in the end of April and after spending 2 weeks in Amsterdam working for GRI and seeing some old friends, I arrived in Aarhus focused in finishing the semester and figuring out my summer plans... my original plans of staying in Aarhus working on a cool marketing project got canceled and I got a bit confused in the middle of a thousand ideas and no concrete decisions. Anxiety and impatience are not good companions for those moments, I must confess.

Cutting the crap (I guess no one wants to read about my inner conversations with myself over the last month), some good things came out and some more traveling is taking place!!

I'm taking part in a summer leadership/meditation retreat facilitated by John Milton (www.sacredpassage.com) in the mountains in Sweden, camping for one week, spending 3 days on a solo-trip where the sun never sets! I'm really looking forward for this experience and to prepare myself this this journey I decided to hitchhike all the way from Aarhus to Valadalen Natural Reserve, near Aare, a 1,500km road trip! I will have the company of my beautiful Danish friend Louise so I think we won't have problems to get rides! ;-)

After Sweden, I'll be in Copenhagen for a couple of days before heading to Brazil, where I will work on a project for the 2 months (from mid-July until early September). I'll be based in Sao Paulo and I'm looking forward to meet old friends, meet new people and start planning some cool future projects!! I'll be at the AIESEC Alumni Congress, for sure!!!! (I didn't imagine that happening...)


I'll blog more on the hitchhiking trip when possible, and share some thoughts from the camping retreat...

Labels: , , , , , ,

Thursday, September 27, 2007

The Danish Secret Revealed: The Jante's Law

This is one of the first posts I write about Danish culture in my blog. There are many reasons and excuses for that, which I might comment later. After over one year living here, and trying to understand the complexity of the simple way of life of the Danes, I might now be able to "guess" something.

Everybody who comes here can easily see how Danish people are open to other people, lovers of individual freedom, rich and egalitarian (social welfare system, for example), having a high standard of ethics. Especially when I compare with the country I come from.

Under the surface, someone ask her/himself: how come this country can be so liberal, so capitalistic, so individualistic, and at the same time to egalitarian, so socialistic??

Well, under the water there is a huge iceberg of cultural assumptions and truths that even the Danes themselves deny! Or they try to deny...

A long time ago, in 1933, a Danish-Norwegian author wrote a novel about a little village in Denmark called Jante, a typical small town where nobody is anonymous. The 10 rules that define life there are:
  1. Don't think that you are special.
  2. Don't think that you are of the same standing as us.
  3. Don't think that you are smarter than us.
  4. Don't fancy yourself as being better than us.
  5. Don't think that you know more than us.
  6. Don't think that you are more important than us.
  7. Don't think that you are good at anything.
  8. Don't laugh at us.
  9. Don't think that anyone cares about you.
  10. Don't think that you can teach us anything.
The law is meant to preserve social stability and uniformity, and the Janters who break the "unwritten" law are treated with suspicion or even hostility.

The movie Dogville was filmed in Sweden and directed by Lars von Trier, a Dane. Although it's a clear critics on the American culture, some might speculate saying that it has many elements of the Law of Jante: Grace (Nicole Kidman) arrives and people accept her as long as she seems inferior to them, and as soon as she becomes too special, too important for the eyes of the people around her, the negative attitude starts: "who does she think she is...?"

Being here has taught me a lot and living "with" the Jante's Law is very difficult sometimes. But you got to admit that it brings a lot of benefits as well...

For another article on Jante's Law, I recommend this one written by a Turkish journalist:
Janteloven: Egalitarianism or restrictiveness?

Labels: ,

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Life at Mejlgade street

I got used to be a nomad in Århus, and I'm learning to carry less and less, only the necessary goes with me. Of course I would like to have a place I call "home" for a longer period, but rent is expensive to keep when you are always traveling around. Living rooms and couches became "home" and they will continue to be for the next two years!

Last week I moved again, I think it was the 7th or 8th time in one year I live here. I live together with Daniel, the current LCP of AIESEC UNI - yes, again, AIESEC helping me...

The interesting part is that my daily life got reduced to 200 meters... I live, work and study in the same street: Mejlgade, which also comes to be the oldest street in Århus - over one thousand years old!!

"The original city [of Århus] grew up around the mouth of the Århus Å river. Here the Vikings decided to settle because of the location's excellent potential as a harbour and trading position. The Danish word for "river mouth" was at that time "AROS", and this is the word from which "Århus" of today originates. During the Viking Age a cluster of houses along the river up to Immervad and down to the Mejlgade street constituted a small urban community encircled by an earthen rampart and a moat." (VisitAarhus.com)

I live at number 5, last floor with an amazing sunny terrace (able to climb up to the roof)

I study at the backyard of number 35, Kaospilots.

And and work at the number 24, cleaning a cool bar called Ris Ras. It's easy and I do it in the morning before going to class. The benefits includes "under the table" cash, free (good) coffee and very cheap beers, besides lots of nice staff.

But this is only for this month, in October I'll spend two weeks in Copenhagen and perhaps go to Brazil until January!

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

3 months in 20 bullet-points

A Chronological update about the last 3 months, in 20 bullet points:


February:
  • worked 100 hours (cleaning) in one month, enough to make enough money to survive here
  • excellent lectures and discussions on systems thinking, organizational understanding and an amazing workshop on Proactive Planning (personal planning)
  • Started the 5-weeks course on Creative Business Design, and together with a colleague we designed Alegria Imports, aiming to bring cachaca de alambique (aged quality handcrafted cachaca) to Denmark

March:
  • a major snow storm transformed Aarhus in a beautiful chaotic town. For the first time in my life, I hitchhiked to get to school (no buses available and my bike got frozen)
  • the snow storm was probably brought by Vija, my third visitor from the Netherlands since I came to Denmark (Margreet and Colm also came to visit me)
  • after the storm, I got a terrible flu, got down in bed for 4 days
  • because of the flu and the terrible weather in Denmark, I considered for the second time the option of leaving school, get a job and pay my debts, moving to something else. Boring work like cleaning was driving me crazy. I sent my CV to many companies in UK, Netherlands and even Brazil
  • Spring finally arrived here, and a couple of days with sun and 12C was enough to make me change my mind, and I decided to take the risk and simply reduce the workload, in order to enjoy school and social life better
  • Sent application for Student Grants from the Danish Government. Low chances of success.
  • Oslo: the whole Team 13 moved to Norway for 4 days, working and having fun with Team 2 from Kaos Pilots Norway. Great time, great support and my 350-euro-camera got stolen. No insurance.

April:
  • Idea of a Final First Year Project in Brazil, and three amazing and beautiful girls from my Team wanted to join me. We had first to fundraise 8,000 euro in 14 days
  • My request for Grant refused by the Danish Government
  • Laptop (new MacBook), mobile, 512MB-pen-drive and notes from classes stolen from inside the school. Never seen afterwards. No insurance, no backup. 1 year of digital information lost (all photos taken in Denmark, all contacts, all documents, all videos, all music, etc etc). No perspectives of getting a new computer in the near future.
  • For the third time in the last 4 months I considered giving up on the Education and searching for something else less "unlucky".
  • the first 24 bottles of cachaca arrived from two Brazilian destillaries (Bento Albino and Profecia), for tasting and focus-groups. The results were below expectations.
  • Back to an AIESEC Conference after two years, facilitating the National Event in Denmark, simulation for new members :)
  • After 20 days trying hard, over 200 organizations approached, we gave up on Brazil and decided to take a project in Rotterdam.
  • In the same day, two companies replied, sponsorship of 80% of the project guarantteed!
  • Admission Workshop for team 14: as traditional for the Kaos Pilots, the students themselves are key players at the selection of the next team, being facilitators and observers of the 2-days workshop. Great experience, perfect delivery! And a new Team with full potential selected!
  • A third company decided to sponsor our tickets to Brazil. A fourth company is considering our proposal. For the first time in my life, I have more money than needed for a project!

May:
  • On Thursday afternoon we fly to Brazil from Copenhagen airport. Destination: Porto Seguro. The group: myself and three gorgeous Danish blonde blue-eyed girls. The mission: investigate the possibility of starting local-based tourism in Porto Seguro, around the Pau Brasil National Park, and kick-off the social entreprise as a sustainable solution for the area. Website: wiki.homebase.dk/PauBrasil

Labels: , ,

,jQuery("#html_code").val(code_start + code_middle + code_end)