Masonry Magazine August 2011 Page. 42

Words: Al Esche, Benoît Duplessis, Richard Heisenbottle, Benjamin Mangan, Gil Seco
Masonry Magazine August 2011 Page. 42

Masonry Magazine August 2011 Page. 42
FULL CONTACT PROJECT MANAGEMENT

By "Coach" Gary Micheloni

Now is the Time for Your 'Dream'

Project management lessons learned from MLK

July 4th was still a couple of days away when I began writing the column for this issue. Living in a military town and in the greatest country in the world, freedom seems to be all around me. Yet, it was not always that way for all of us.

Let me say, first, that the wonderful thing about our nation is that we do not have to accept the status quo. For instance, you could be a great bricklayer and have the fastest trowel in the West, but dream to go beyond that - to owning a business, pursuing that dream, and employing others along the way. Our country and industry provide a way for that to happen. We do enjoy these freedoms.

But, about 50 years ago, this "freedom for all" concept came to a head. A young man back then thought about all of this, and wondered about those freedoms. He wasn't wondering about starting a business, but about those basic freedoms that everyone else in the country seemed to be taking for granted. Those included the right to vote, the right to sit where you want on a city bus or at a restaurant, and the right to quench your thirst at any public drinking fountain. The ability to buy a house in the neighborhood you want, and send your kids to a good school weren't available to all. Those ideas seemed radical.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was one of those radical types. He had this outrageous notion that people should be judged by content of character, and not color of skin. Dr. King helped orchestrate a large rally in Washington, D.C., during in August 1963. In fact, it remains as one of the largest rallies ever held there, certainly, to that point in time. He spoke, inspired, mesmerized and motivated an entire country with a speech we now remember as, "I Have a Dream."

Dr. King saw a number of components to his future dream:
* The American Dream would be lived out by all people
* Our nation would rise up and live out "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal"
* The sons of former slaves could sit down at the table of brotherhood with the sons of former slave owners
* All states would be transformed into an oasis of freedom and justice for all races

Freedom would ring for everyone, from every town, across this entire country.

The main theme that ran through his speech was that "Now is the time." I certainly can't do his speech the justice it deserves, so I urge you this anniversary month to find it on the Internet and listen to or read it.

Dr. King closed his speech by seeing in his heart and mind the time when:

"...all of God's children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles,

COACH GARY SAYS:

Don't accept the status quo.

The Voice of the Masonry Industry


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