Wide Aware moments that stay with us for life

Archives for Experiential learning category

Roger Greenaway is an outdoor facilitator and the person behind the immensely useful site on the subject - reviewing.co.uk - a man whose writings I have read on and off for the last three years, and emailed a few times with appreciation and link exchange requests, etc.

Imagine my surprise this morning to receive an email from him saying that he was planning to come to India for the first time in October to conduct an outdoor management training program at Empower Camps. Sushil Bhasin, one of the owners is someone I have known for years and we are in fact currently in a dialogue about doing some training programs together.

I promptly called up Sushil to gossip about this new coincidence. As we caught up with current stuff, I discovered that Sushil had set a goal for himself - that of being the first outdoor training organization in India to do work with international facilitators!!! How absolutely amazing.

In our busy lives, we are so fixated with creating our own images, and glorifying ourselves, it is rare to look for resources and opportunities to widen our experience, quality of work and talent sets. Not only did Sushil have this in mind, he actually pulled it through. This programme is tentatively scheduled for October. Read more… »

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I read this post Work Happy Now! » Give Employees the Power to Impress Customers and compared it with a really bad experience at a local coffee shop last month. Gauri, Ashish, Asha and I (friends from ISABS) went out for a coffee after one of our regular meetings. Should have been an uneventful situation, yet, it wasn’t a good service experience.

Read more… »

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These days, more and more of my friends seem to turn to me for guidance and help with websites. Not just friends, even places I work for. For example, ihave recently joined Resonate Consulting on a parttime basis, and they are unhappy with their current web hosting providers and wish to move. They are some of the most talented Organization Development Consultants in India, and their site looks nice, but has little functionality and costs a bomb. We are still struggling to see how we can add simple things like a blog.

Now, at the risk of sounding really obvious, it is easier to take some time and research and choose a good hosting provider. Really, there IS no excuse. It is far more inconvenient after having a site somewhere to shift hosting providers.

There are plenty of service providers out there that are very good, and websites that can provide comparisons, tips and reviews on the different web hosting available. This site can prove a good resource in gaining information and reviews about the different hosting providers out there and the kind of services and budgets you can expect. For example, what is the best choice for blog hosting, or if you are on a budget, or for heavy traffic, and so on. You wouldn’t buy a dress without checking it out, would you? So do you really want to buy the platform for your image without research?

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Ram and Kishore, who work with the authorized dealer for Petzel in India had invited me to join them for this programme. I was working officially with them for the first time, and hence excited. The plan was for canyoning, which is basically “waterfall rappelling” when done at Kondana.

I’d been doing corporate training programs for a long time by now, and I was extremely energized by this opportunity - change in work being rest and all. Really, it doesn’t take much to be tempted to the outdoors in this weather. The beginning of the monsoon, and being paid to get wet and do what I enjoy. What more did I want? Work is a fun way of life in any case.

Plan was to leave Mumbai late in the evening and stay at the location, but traffic, rain and other events conspired to delay us till we reached the location at 2:30am.

7 instructors and a driver, a trunk full of equipment was the staff load. We were expecting about 80 participants. We slept immediately, and woke up almost immediately (it seemed)

A quick breakfast later, we had distributed the equipment load for the long haul to the Caves. We were expecting the group to reach at the rappelling location by 10am, so we had taken along some biscuits to keep us going through the day (it was going to be long) till a late lunch.

It had been raining in torrents since noon. The drizzle had been there all day, but really, after noon, it poured with a vengeance right until evening. Our plan was to rappel from the top of the Kondana Caves, and we were standing facing the valley.

Seen the rain many times, got wet many times, but this time, we stood at the edge of the valley and could see the rain in the valley, while we stood clear. And then, the wind shifted, and the sheet of rain raced to us, and we raced for cover. Half the day was spent in fun like that, as you can see from the photos.

Sam and I were working together after 4-5 years, so it was a superb time for us. Talking, flashbacks, catching up with what was current in each other’s lives… and he was leaving to the US in a few weeks.

Of course, the group came late. By then we were wishing that we’d had lunch and come….. The group reached the rappelling location by 2:30pm, we began the activity late, and we ended the day late. 60 participants of the 80 had done rappelling. Whoever wanted to do the rappel, got their moment of glory. In spite of starting late, we had somehow managed to work hard and fast enough to not refuse anyone out of a lack of time. And thus, this rappelling session was finally concluded.

In my experience, the group comes for adventure, but they take the whole experience lightly, and have no concern for the reality of the situation. In their excitement, they had no concern for the delay and danger in the dark. The stream was swollen from the days rain, and the group was unused to the terrain. This was when they realized that it was no longer the trickle they had jumped across on their way in the afternoon and finally realized why we had been asking them to hurry.

Our human caravan slipped and stumbled through the thigh deep water and shivered across to the other side. The road from here on is muddy, but pretty straightforward.

In the beginning, I had been considered the villain when they tried to rush me, and this is the point where they realized that I had been talking out of concern for them, and not myself, and I found myself happy to suddenly be the much appreciated hero.

On the way down, one of the newer instructors asked me, “Sir, I’ve got a dilemma”. I asked him what he meant. “Do we go down and have lunch or dinner?” he asked with a laugh.

I pondered for a bit and shared what I was certain of, “No matter what we call it, I’m going to eat like a starving elephant.”

What should have been done in daylight by 4pm ended at 8pm as the group stumbled and groped their way back in the dark.

On reaching down, we decided to pack up the equipment and wind up the logistics of the programme before freshening up and eating, knowing that it would be twice as hard once the adrenaline levels went down and our bodies figured out that we were tired. Finally…… we sat down to eat misal paav. It was a long time before anyone wondered if the traditional snack was lunch or dinner.

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Wide Aware is happy to announce its first training and development blog carnival. This is intended to be an ongoing effort to engage in an exploration of different perspectives and insights related with training and development.

We are inviting entries for this edition of the carnival. The theme is the people in an organization, relating, team buiding…. the people side of places and what can be done to make them happier and more effective.

Come on, join this celebration of learning and development. Send in your article now.

The last date for sending the entries is the 10th of august. The carnival will be celebrated in our articles section on the 15th.

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About Author

Footprints on the mountainside is a blog about all things that are important to me, as an outdoor person, as a facilitator on experiential learning programmes and adventure sports.

The blog largely reflects things that come to my notice, experiences in day to day life and things I wish to say to the world at large.

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