terça-feira, janeiro 14, 2014

Para reflexão

Leio isto a pensar nas empresas e porque é que umas sobrevivem a "cataclismos" e outras não
"With my interest in science, then, I thought there must be some research that could help me to understand the mysteries of survival I'd encountered. I found otherwise rational people doing inexplicable things to get themselves killed—against all advice, against all reason.
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After reading hundreds of accident reports and writing scores of articles, I began to wonder if there wasn't some mysterious force hidden within us that produces such mad  behavior. Most people find it hard to believe that reason doesn't control our actions. We believe in free will and rational behavior. The difficulty with those assumptions comes when we see rational people doing irrational things.
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Those who survive are just as baffling. I knew, for example, that an experienced hunter might perish while lost in the woods for a single night, whereas a four-year-old might survive. When five people are set adrift at sea and only two come back, what makes the difference? Who survived Nazi prison camps? Why did Scott's crew perish in Antarctica while, against all odds, Shackleton's crew survived and even thrived in the same circumstances? Why was a seventeen-year-old girl able to walk out of the Peruvian jungle, while the adults who were lost with her sat down and died? It was maddening to find survival so unpredictable, because after all, science seeks predictability. But as I raked the ashes of catastrophe, I began to see the outlines of an explanation. Most of what I discovered through the years of research and reporting was not new.
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The principles apply to wilderness survival, but they also apply to any stressful, demanding situation, such as getting through a divorce, losing a job, surviving illness, recovering from an injury, or running a business in a rapidly changing world. It's easy to imagine that wilderness survival \could involve equipment, training, and experience. It turns out that, at the moment of truth, those might be good things to have but they aren't decisive. Those of us who go into the wilderness or seek our thrills in contact with the forces of nature soon learn, in fact, that experience, training, and modern equipment can betray you. The maddening thing for someone with a Western scientific turn of mind is that it's not what's in your pack that separates the quick from the dead. Ifs not even what's in your mind. Corny as it sounds, it's what's in your heart."
Trechos retirados de "Deep Survival" de Laurence Gonzales. Um livro que comecei a ler só porque foi recomendado por William Dettmer e, que vou recomendar sempre.

1 comentário:

CCz disse...

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/washed-ashore-the-man-who-spent-16-months-adrift-on-the-pacific-in-a-powerless-boat-9099116.html