Personal tools
You are here: Home Blogs Berkeley Bottom Line 2008 Archive 2008 March 29 Singing in the Rain

Mike Lee, Roxanne Miller, & Omar Garriott
 

The X-Interview
Josephine Nzerem

Featured Blogger
let there d.light!

Issue Area
Microfinance

Our New Blog
SVT On Impact

 
Document Actions

Singing in the Rain

by Omar Garriott last modified 2008-04-29 00:32

Omar writes from the heart about why the SWF resonated for him…

It’s time to get real with you Social Edge readers, my fellow travelers.

My favorite (favourite?!) band is Keane (British lads, appropriate given my current location).  A line from one of their songs often echoes in my mind: “You’ve wandered too far / from the person you are.”

Thanks to the Skoll World Forum, I’ve returned to the person I am. It educated me, to be sure. But more importantly, it both grounded and moved me, and reconnected me with my core.

My head is bursting with social enterprise ideas. My gut is telling me to get started. My feet are walking on air. My heart is singing and I’m inspired in my bones.

Why? Well, it was partly the content of the breakout sessions, partly the organic conversations (with social entrepreneurship luminaries, moral compasses and modern-day heroes like Bill Drayton, Jeff Skoll, Eric Schwarz, J.B. Schramm, and Paul Farmer—to name just a few), and partly the plenary speakers (how could you NOT be inspired by Al Gore and Jimmy Carter?!).

Even at a school as socially-minded as Haas (see our recent #1 ranking in CSR), it’s easy to get disconnected from the social enterprise community. There are lots of distractions, carrots and open doors—clubs and case competitions, academics (), interviewing for companies you couldn't care less about, and generally questioning who you are and what you’re meant to do.

Sometimes it’s hard to feel like you’re moving in the direction of your dreams—that you’re exercising your passions day in and day out and staying plugged into a world that really excites you—when you’re immersed in learning finance and accounting skills, and generally way busier than you want to be with things that, frankly, feel a bit peripheral. It’s not an indictment of Haas, it’s just a fact of life in business school.

Maybe it’s strange to type this from a country in which I’m a foreigner and have never visited, but the World Forum brought me home. I felt like a local amidst this sea of humanity, passion, empathy, power, possibility, hope, and realistic idealism.

Indeed, the Skoll World Forum delegates and their counterparts are my lighthouses of compassion and morality, and my aspirational models for true leadership and social impact. These people are dreamers AND doers. They will undoubtedly be seminal touch points for me as I go back to my frenetic b-school life.

 
What an incredible way to spend my spring break. There’s no way I would have traded the pounding rain and wind chill of Oxford for the sun and sand of my tanned classmates laying on tropical beaches sipping pina coladas.

Indeed, they'll be jealous of ME, for my soul is sunny.

My Sentiment Exactly

 Posted by Tim LaRose at 2008-03-31 14:43

Omar I can say I agree with your thoughts one hundred percent. Traveling to the Skoll Forum I thought it would be good to meet people like myself but leaving I thought, Why haven't I been doing more. It is most invigorating and I am full of life since leaving Oxford. I would also like to say I enjoyed meeting with you and your colleagues, it makes me feel a lot better knowing their are leaders like yourself to pick up the torch for the planet and humanity.

peace

Tim LaRose The Global Lesson

Agree but unfair

 Posted by Dhruv Lakra at 2008-04-03 02:11

Omar, it would be unfair to compare social community/objectives with only CSR rankings of HAAS, There is more to it, much more.

Dhruv Lakra Skoll Scholar 2008

Re: Agree but unfair

 Posted by Omar Garriott at 2008-04-08 11:50

Dhruv - thank you for your comment...perhaps it didn't come through as strongly as I intended, but your sentiment was precisely one of the points I was trying to make in this post. CSR is surely only a piece of the puzzle (a piece to which we're perhaps disproportionately exposed in b-school). I cited Haas' CSR ranking only as a way to quickly underscore how socially-minded our students and faculty are; it's part of the very fabric of this place, but even here, it's all too easy to get disconnected from some of the most impactful and important community improvement efforts.

Singing in the Rain

 Posted by jecika gonzalvis at 2008-07-30 20:45

Singing in the rain is very best way to sing because I also like to sing in the rain it show our inspiration for a song. _________________________ jecika California Treatment Centers

Newsletter
Social entrepreneur news. No spam.

Manage Subscription
Top X-Interviews
Archives
Top Discussions
Things To Do
Bookmarklets

Bookmark and share.

del.icio.us Digg Yahoo Google Reddit