Monday, December 10, 2007

"Lawrence of Arabia": What insight about change and decision-making do you see portrayed in the movie?


In the same year “Experiment in Terror” came out, 1962, David Lean directed Lawrence of Arabia,” based on the story of T.E. Lawrence. I organize the story as follows:


1. Where are you coming from? [The hero is seen in his or her ordinary world.]

Out of the darkness of a black screen comes an overture that tells us the themes of the story in music. Then the opening credits roll out as we see a motorcycle rider prepare and then ride off. Speed down a country road, passing signs of danger ahead with only slight slowing, only to come up over a hill and spot two boys bicycling on the road. The motorcyclist flies off the road trying to avoid a collision with the children. We learn later that the motorcyclist was Lawrence (Peter O’Toole).

At Lawrence’s funeral some say he was the most extraordinary man they’d ever met. Lord Allenby agrees but says he really didn’t know Lawrence that well. Jackson Bentley, a reporter, responds that Lawrence was a “shameless exhibitionist.”

Lawrence, when he was lieutenant in the British Army, was stationed in Cairo on Murray’s staff. Though clearly a well-educated man, he exhibits a dangerous trick to his comrades when he slowly moves his fingers up a burning match stick before he puts it out. When another tries it, he cries out in pain. In response to the fellows asking what the trick is to not feeling the pain, Lawrence says there is no trick. He feels the pain, but doesn’t mind that it hurts.

2. Where are you wanting to go? [The hero is called to adventure.]


He almost shows this trick again after meeting with Murray and a French diplomat, Dryden, where Dryden convinces Murray to let Lawrence be assigned to do some work for Arab Bureau. Though Murray protests since he has already assigned Brighton to advise Prince Feisal, Dryden prevails. Dryden wants Lawrence to “find out what Prince Feisal’s intentions are.” Lawrence leaves with his guide, Tafas, shortly thereafter to find Prince Feisal.

Lawrence learns more about live on the desert from Tafas. They become friends and as a mark of their friendship Lawrence gives Tafas his handgun.

When they reach a well, Tafas tells Lawrence about the importance of water in the desert and how the various Arab tribes regard them. While Lawrence rests and plays with his compass, Tafas sees a rider coming in the distance. Tafas suddenly makes for the handgun. The rider shoots Tafas with his rifle. The rider, Ali (Omar Sharif), and Lawrence get into some biting arguments. “You are angry, English.” Lawrence says: “So long as the Arabs fight tribe against tribe, so long will they be a little people, a silly people, greedy, barbarous, and cruel – as you are.” Finally Ali offers to take Lawrence to Prince Feisal, but Lawrence refuses to ride with him. “Have you no fear,” asks Ali. “My fear is my concern,” says Lawrence.

3. What are you waiting for? [The hero is reluctant.]


After Ali rides off, Lawrence proceeds by himself with Tafas’s body carried by his camel. Lawrence eventually runs into Colonel Brighton after singing a tune that echoes among the tall desert mountains. (“I’m the man that broke the bank at Monte Carlo...”) Brighton tells Lawrence that Prince Feisal knows he is coming. He also tells Lawrence about the bloody battle the Turks won over Prince Feisal’s men at Medina and how it has lowered morale.

Just as Lawrence and Brighton come to a place where they can see Prince Feisal’s encampment, aircraft strafe and bomb it. We see Prince Feisal (Alex Guinness) for the first time riding a white Arabian stallion, raising his sword and chasing one of the planes. He yells to his people: “Stand and fight!” Then out of a cloud of smoke appears Lawrence in front of him. Prince Feisal tells Lawrence that his people are not used to what modern weapons can do, not used to explosives and machines like the enemy has. As Brighton had suggested earlier, Prince Feisal agrees to move his encampment further away and out of range of the war planes.

4. What are your wise ones generally advising? [The hero encounters a wise one.]


In Prince Feisal’s tent that night, a wise servant of Prince Feisal recites from the Koran. Later when Prince Feisal recalls a verse, Lawrence takes it up and completes it. Brighton and Lawrence continue to listen and then Ali arrives.
Prince Feisal and Brighton discuss support from the British. Brighton says he cannot supply Prince Feisal, except through Aqaba and the Turks have 12-inch guns there. The British Navy has more important matters to attend to, like protecting the Suez cannel. Ali is unimpressed with Brighton’s answer when he suggests that Prince Feisal fall back to Yenbo. When asked his opinion, Lawrence says that Yenbo is far from Damascus. Dreaming about Damascus won’t get you there. Prince Feisal asks if Lawrence has been there and is answered with an appreciative yes. Lawrence adds “It’s time to be great again.” Brighton is frustrated by Lawrence’s knowledge. Prince Feisal closes the discussion but has Lawrence stay behind.

Prince Feisal tells Lawrence that what is needed is what no man can provide. “We need a miracle.”

Lawrence walks out alone. Wanders over the sand dunes. Stares off, contemplating what to do. The boys who would be Lawrence’s servants follow him and try to wake him by rolling a stone down a dune. Lawrence does not break his concentration, but grasps the stone as if to squeeze the water of an answer out of it. Then he finally sees it: Aqaba! The first step in the strategy is to capture Aqaba, not from the sea, but from the desert.

5. What are the pros and cons of the issue being decided? [The hero passes through the first threshold.]


When Ali learns of Lawrence’s idea, he is horrified. “The Nefud cannot be crossed.” Lawrence responds that he’ll cross it if Ali will. They will cross with only 50 men and gain allies on the other side of the Nefud, attracted to them by their feat. It’s only a matter of going, says Lawrence. Ali says Lawrence is mad.

Lawrence doesn’t tell Colonel Brighton what he’s up to, but he does talk with Prince Feisal. The prince wants to know in whose name they will ride. Lawrence says they will ride in the name of Prince Feisal of Mecca. That made clear, the men begin their trip.

At an oasis, Ali watches as Lawrence reads. Then Gasim discovers that the boys who would be Lawrence’s servants have followed the war party. When they are about to be whipped because they are outcasts, Ali judges them unsuitable to be Lawrence’s servants. But “Allah favors the compassionate.” So Lawrence protects the boys by employing them. Now Ali sees them not as servants but as worshippers.

Crossing the Nefud is difficult enough, but when they pass over a railway, they will soon face a stretch of desert called the “Sun’s Anvil.” There is no time to waste. So they begin immediately traveling by night, resting during the heat of the day. Though Lawrence drifts off to sleep, Ali is quick to point it out. One of the boys falls off his camel, but is quickly retrieved. The riders spread out as the tortuous anvil continues. When they hit a stretch of rocks, they must walk their camels. But once they reach the “Sun’s Anvil,” the push is on. “God willing” they will reach the other side before sunrise or they will surely die.

Finally they make it across. But Gasim’s camel is rider-less. Lawrence, despite Ali’s warnings, wants to go back after him. Ali says Gasim’s time has come. “It is written.” Lawrence responds by riding off. Ali calls him an English blasphemer. “I shall be at Aqaba. That is written.”

Back on the anvil, Gasim walks and slowly strips off the weapons and bullets he is carrying, as well as his outer garments. After a harrowing trip, Lawrence finds Gasim and rescues him.

When Lawrence and Gasim rejoin the war party, Gasim is helped by his friends, but Lawrence refuses water and a place to rest from everyone but Ali. When he accepts he tells Ali: “Nothing is written.”

As a way of celebrating Lawrence’s feat, Ali gives Lawrence the robes and weapons of a Sharif (having burned Lawrence’s worn-out uniform) and all the men hail him as “El Aurens.”

Then Lawrence goes off by himself to get the feel of his new self, dancing about, raising his golden dagger into the sun. But this self-admiration is short-lived because Auda abu Tayi (Anthony Quinn) arrives with his gun-toting young son. They go back to the war party’s camp and Auda abu Tayi demands an explanation for their use of the water from his well.

Ali and Auda confront each other about past differences between their tribes (“Does your father still steal?” “Does yours still have bastards?”) Lawrence still with raised hands before the son, intervenes before it escalates any further, asking Auda to call off his men (referring to the single boy). After a little more banter about their differences, Auda finally invites them to dine with him at Wadi Rum.

Audar takes Lawrence, Ali and the war party to the massive encampment of Howitat. Once in Auda’s tent, Lawrence and Auda talk about Prince Faisel’s mission. Lawrence’s suggestion that Auda is a slave of the Turks brings provokes Auda and he speaks to his surrounding followers saying he is a river to his people and Lawrence backs off. He finally gets Auda to come with them for his pleasure and after he learns of a great box of money in Aqaba.

Lawrence, Ali, Auda and their now combined war party leave the encampment in force, making their way to Aqaba.

When they arrive within sight of Aqaba, a quarrel builds into a killing and it looks like Auda will withdraw his men. The killer, one of Ali’s men, must die according to Howitat law. If Auda executes the man, Ali will not go forward. Lawrence solves the problem by saying he will execute the law since he has no tribe involved and neither side will be offended. Then he discovers that the man he is to execute is Gasim, the man he rescued from the desert, and he is greatly troubled. Trembling, Lawrence executes the man. In the aftermath, Ali advises Lawrence he should not be ashamed, that he gave life, he can take it. When Auda questions Ali about why Lawrence acted this way, he is told about the rescue. Auda says it was Gasim’s time to die. “It was written.”

6. What are “The Powers That Be” saying? [The hero encounters tests and helpers.]


The rift healed, the war party assembles again and rides for Aqaba. Once there, with the 12-inch guns immobile and pointing to the sea, the war party easily overcomes the Turks who are completely surprised. “The miracle is accomplished.”

Lawrence, bloodied and battle worn, rides his camel to the sea where Ali throws him a garland of flowers. But the honor is short-lived. Auda finds only paper money in the great box, no gold. In their rage, his men have destroyed the communications equipment. When Auda appears to be ready to withdraw, Lawrence writes out a promissory note on behalf of the Crown of England to pay Auda 5000 golden guineas within 10 days. Lawrence will ride to Cairo himself to see that this is accomplished.

On his trip to Cairo, he only has the two boys with him. The trip is grueling. They see whirlwinds in the sands. Lawrence loses his compass in a sand storm. The only way to get to Cairo now is to aim for the sun, since they know they will hit the Suez Cannel sometime. But at one point, one of the boys, Saud, falls into quicksand and neither Lawrence nor the other boy, Ferraj can save him.
During the rest of the trek, Lawrence is dazed. Ferraj eventually has to throw water in Lawrence’s face to keep him from losing focus.

Finally they hit the Suez and with help from a passerby (who yelled to them “Who are you?”), Lawrence and Ferraj make it to Cairo. Lawrence takes Ferraj past the security guards at the British officer’s club and they make their way to the bar. Lawrence asks for lemonade for both of them and then a bed with sheets, not for him but for Ferraj. Lawrence wants to tell the Powers That Be that they have taken Aqaba. He then prepares to see General Allenby, since Colonel Murray is no longer in charge.

7. What is your real agenda? [The hero reaches the inner sanctum.]


When Lawrence meets with Allenby, with Dryden in attendance, Lawrence debriefs the General and the General acknowledges Lawrence’s great knowledge of the current status of the war. Allenby wants Lawrence to go back, this time to Jerusalem, but Lawrence balks at the assignment. Allenby promotes him to major. But Lawrence explains that he killed two people, Saud in the sand storm and Gasim whom he executed. When the General brushes off such talk, Lawrence realizes that he has not made himself clear about Gasim. It’s not that he felt back about executing Gasim. What troubles Lawrence is that he enjoyed it. “Rubbish,” says Allenby. He won’t hear of a complaint that Lawrence is not fit. Brighton, at this point, says he will recommend a decoration. Allenby takes Lawrence back to the bar and celebrates Major Lawrence.

Allenby and Lawrence move to the patio where Lawrence finally agrees to go back. They talk strategy. Lawrence proceeds to tell the General all of what he needs, including that Prince Feisal wants artillery and that Lawrence will need a lot of money. Lawrence tells Allenby that he has told the men who followed him that Arabia is for the Arabs and wants to assure them that Britain has no ambitions in Arabia. Allenby acquiesces to all that Lawrence wants, letting that answer the Arabia questions. When they are done, Allenby leaves and Lawrence walks back through the bar. He is hesitant to walk among the officers who begin to surround him, but discovers they are crowding in out of a newly found congratulating appreciation.

As Allenby and Dryden walk away Allenby says he doesn’t have to concern himself with the Arabia question. He has orders to obey, “not like that poor devil.” Lawrence is “riding a whirlwind.” Dryden answers: “Let’s hope we’re not.”

8. What facts and reasons are you contending with? [The hero endures the supreme ordeal.]


Jackson Bentley, an American Journalist, arrives at Prince Feisal’s residence hoping to find out where Lawrence is. Bentley tells Prince Feisal that he’s looking for a factual story of a hero to draw the Americans into the war. The prince needs to have his story told, he needs a story to tell. Prince Feisal, who is moving to Cairo to deal with Allenby, a “slim costumer,” tells Bentley that Lawrence is with his army.

Bentley finds Lawrence and Colonel Brighton in the battle field where the war party is destroying the Turkish railways. When Bentley inquires about the seeming disproportion among dead and wounded (more of the former than the latter), he is informed that they have to kill the wounded for fear of what the Turks will do with the wounded if they find them. Lawrence appears at this point to have a horror of bloodshed. He has trouble stopping the men from shooting at a disabled train.

Lawrence then goes to parade atop at train. The men cheer him. But one of the enemy is not dead. He shoots Lawrence in the arm. Lawrence winces in pain, but says “Good, good.” He dares the man to keep shooting. The man does, but does not hit Lawrence. Finally Auda takes the enemy out with his sword.

Many leave afterward, with their annual fill of booty. Lawrence claims that he can be killed only with a golden bullet.

At the war party’s camp, Bentley, sees Ali reading a children’s book on the Parliament. Gathering more facts, Bentley asks Ali if the Arabia he wants would be a democracy and what he hopes to gain from the war. Ali says he hopes to gain freedom. Bentley replies, “There’s one born every minute.” Then he asks why Lawrence is attracted to the desert, he responds, “It’s clean.”

Auda is not happy with his loot, a clock that does not work. He must find something honorable. And he finally finds it when a train with many horses comes along, with one very special, white Arabian stallion. When Auda is questioned about leaving now that he has found what he wanted, he retorts to Brighton that when Lawrence has found what he wants, he too will go home. Brighton calls Auda a fool. Auda replies, in effect, if you don’t see my point then you are the bigger fool.

With winter coming on and the remaining war party still trying to knock out trains, Lawrence asks Ferraj to get him a detonator. Ferraj places one under his shirt, but cannot find it as the train is coming. Lawrence tells him to fetch another. Ferraj goes over a slight hill. Boom. The detonator has gone off and the Turks in the train are bearing down. All know that Ferraj can’t go on with them and that he can’t be left alive for the Turks to find him. No one else will pull the trigger, so Lawrence has to do it to his friend himself. He shoots Ferraj in the head and escapes.

At the winter encampment, Ali now asks what Lawrence will do now, since the war party has diminished to a handful of men. Lawrence wants to go into Deraa. Ali warns him that the Turks will not buy his going native, especially with 20,000 Turkish pounds on his head. Lawrence replies that no one is offering that much for Ali. Lawrence thinks of himself as a prophet. Ali says one more failure and Lawrence will be done. Lawrence asks who does he think he is to tell Lawrence what can be done. “Do you think I’m just anybody?” He claims he can walk on water.

So Lawrence and Ali go into Deraa. Lawrence has an early opportunity to jokingly walk across a puddle of water, but the humor doesn’t last long when some Turkish soldiers pass them by. Lawrence and Ali are arrested. They quickly send Ali away, but detain Lawrence.

The Turkish soldier in charge of Deraa (played by Jose Ferrar) examines Lawrence, singles him out. Says he is surrounded by cattle, referring to the men under his command. He says Lawrence has an interesting face and judges he must be a deserter. Then he pulls off Lawrence’s outer garment to reveal his lily-white skin and pinches it. Lawrence recognizes the gesture and knees the Turk in the groin. The Turk’s response: “Beat him.” And they do, brutally, with a cane, stretching Lawrence face down across a bench, while the Turk watches from behind his office door. Lawrence does not yell out.

When the Turks are done with him, they toss Lawrence out on the street at night. Ali retrieves him.

9. What insights and oversights are emerging? [The hero seizes the sword.]


In their winter encampment, Ali cares for Lawrence who is almost catatonic. Ali has to tell him to sleep and to eat.

Finally, Lawrence tells Ali that he is going. Ali asks why. “I have come to the end of myself.” “A man cannot want what he wants.” Then pinching his white skin, Lawrence says:”This is the stuff that decides what he wants. He will go to Jerusalem where he can be ordinarily happy. “Trust your own people. Let me go back to mine.”

10. How are you going to tell your decision? [The hero takes the road back.]


So Lawrence goes to Jerusalem, borrows an ill-fitting uniform and meets with Allenby. In Allenby’s office, he finds Prince Feisal and Dryden. The price notices the uniform and talks of Major Lawrence not El Aurens. Since Lawrence was apparently unaware of the treaty between the British and the French concerning Arabia, they tell him about it. He requests to be released from Arabia. He says the truth is “I’m an ordinary man.” That what’s holding him back is he doesn’t want to go mad. During the conversation, Dryden discovers that Lawrence’s back is bleeding. As Dryden leaves the meeting, he observes with Allenby and Lawrence remaining behind: “one’s half made and the other wholly unscrupulous.”

When Lawrence returns to Ali and Auda, he brings with him a body guard of mercenaries. He’s not the same man as before. Ali questions the use of “these things,” but Lawrence dismisses his complaints saying that the some of the forming Arab Army will come for Damascus, their new objective, but the best will come for Lawrence.

At a British staff meeting, Allenby wants Brighton to go with Lawrence. The British will shell the Turks.

On the road to Damascus, Lawrence, his bodyguard, and the war party come upon a Turkish column leaving the scene of a village massacre. Lawrence becomes possessed with a bloodlust. Ali cannot persuade him to go around them and on to Damascus. “No prisoners!”

Bentley arrives late at the carnage, saying “Jesus wept.” Finds Lawrence. “Oh, you rotten man.”

11. What are you willing to risk in order to gain what you can only hope for? [The hero experiences a death and a resurrection.]


When Allenby reaches Damascus, chaos abounds. While Lawrence deals with the many who petition the new leaders of Arabia, Allenby practices his casting with a fishing pole, knowing full well that without his help the city’s utilities will not be maintained.

At the Arab Council meeting, Ali and Auda get into an argument about who’s responsible for the collapsing utilities, each blaming the other. When the electrical power goes out, many of the Arabs begin leaving the city.

12. How do you determining that the decision you are discerning is the right one? [The hero returns with the elixir.]


Lawrence, Ali, and Auda are left alone in the Council. Before Auda leaves, he offers to have Lawrence come with him. But Lawrence reuses. “I pray that I will never see the desert again.” Ali follows Auda out and confronts him about Lawrence. Auda turns the question around and Ali admits he loves Lawrence, but also fears him.

A British doctor arrives on the scene and insists on the British taking over the local Turkish military hospital. Lawrence visits it and is overwhelmed by the human destruction. There is no water for the wounded. The British doctor doesn’t recognize Lawrence but calls the scene “outrageous.” Lawrence leaves.
Allenby finally agrees to let Lawrence go home. Prince Feisal tells Lawrence “There is nothing further here for a warrior.” “Old men make the peace.” Promotes him to Colonel, as Dryden and Prince Feisal look on. Lawrence, still dazed at what’s happening, has to be encouraged to say thanks. As Lawrence leaves, Prince Feisal says “What I owe you is beyond evaluation.” Once he’s out the door, Prince Feisal says to Allenby, “Aurens is a sword with two edges. We are equally glad to be rid of him, are we not?” To which Allenby replies: “I thought I was a hard man.” Prince Feisal has the last word: “You are merely a general, I must be a king."


Disguising his disgust at this kind of talk, Brighton leaves to follow Lawrence, but Lawrence has made it out to a military vehicle that hurries down a dusty desert road. As they pass some camel riders, his driver congratulates Lawrence on his “going home.” And just then, a motorcyclist speeds past them.

© 2007 John Darrouzet

QUESTIONS TO PRIME OUR DISCUSSION


1. How does this movie strike you?

2. How does "Lawrence of Arabia" present change in the world we live in?

3. How does it treat judgment?

4. How does it treat progress?

5. What does it seem to be saying about our education?

6. What does it seem to be saying about "liberty"?

7. What is the issue Lawrence must decide by the end of the story?

8. What about value does "Lawrence of Arabia" depict for you?

9. What about mission does "Lawrence of Arabia" evoke within you?

10. What about purpose does "Lawrence of Arabia" ground you in?

11. What about vision does "Lawrence of Arabia" open you eyes to?

12. What about an individual's personal genius does "Lawrence of Arabia" reveal?


Thanks.


John

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Is the act of deciding an act of being, of knowing, of doing, or making?



Simple question? Not really.

Simple answer? No way.

But I am beginning to wonder if I have found a significant clue to the answer in The Arts of the Beautiful by Etienne Gilson. Therein the author suggests that human acts can be distinguished into first, simply being; then knowing, primarily via our senses; doing things, meaning activity; and finally, making things.

Most books I have read on decisions do not tie decisions to being in any direct manner, suggest they are at the most a momentary activity, and at the end of a process of knowing the facts and reasons involved in an issue. To me this is the way we know to make judgments.

From my perspective and from seeing the process of deciding played out in stories and real life, I wonder if decisions are really not rather the result of a process of making.

While I've heard that some people prefer to speak of deciding as a process of "taking," rather than "making," a decision, the former approach suggests that decisions are already out there now, like fruit on a tree, or raw data waiting to be mined. The latter approach suggests that deciding is more an art than a science, something that is made out of somethings, and not created out of nothing.

Following this approach then, Gilson's book may be of help to recognize that we can make beautiful decisions (comedies?) or we can make, by contrast, ugly decisions (tragedies?); but in either case, the best way of to decide an issue is to realize it is a process of making a work of fine art.

A fine art of what?

The fine art of making happiness in the story of our lives or the industrial art of making success in the resume of our work lives?

What do you think?

John

Monday, December 3, 2007

What issues do you want your children to hear your decisions about before you die?



Recently I came across the following book: “Before I Go” by Peter Kreeft, a professor of philosophy at Boston College. I found Kreeft's premise intriguing: writing our children letters about what really matters in life. I have not taken the time to write my children such letters, though I have often asked them what questions they have of me, only to get that blank expression from them as only children can give you.



So as is my custom, I have taken Kreeft's answers and transformed them into questions (with references to the chapters giving his answers in parentheses) so we can have a beginner's list of questions and answer them ourselves. My hope is that participants in this question will share other questions to add to the list or share answers so our community will be able to write their own letters to benefit our children before we go.

Here are the questions based on Kreeft's answers.

WHY:

  • Is life an art? (36)
  • Is Life a fish fry? (42)
  • Is life a rehearsal for another birth? (75)
  • Is time natural? (136)
  • Be practical about the use of time and what are your recommendations? (22)
  • Are modern times different? (30)
  • Enjoy mornings? (43)
  • Keep it simple, stupid? (68)
  • Is it better to be a bumper and bleeder than a noodle or a skeleton? (103)
  • Stop and smell the roses? (52)
  • Is it best to get the Big Picture? (150)
  • Are most of us dyslexic with respect to the priorities among our relationships? (156)
  • Handicaps? (154)
  • My obsessions? (147)
  • Letters from the dying to the living? (1)
  • Unnecessary answers? (131)
  • Is anything the best thing in life and what is it? (3)
  • Do we want to say just one last thing and what is it? (4)
  • Is it good to remember death? (7)
  • Is it important to be a good person? (9)
  • Always do your best? (10)
  • Pray every day and what for? (11)
  • Mean something by "I love you" and what? (13)
  • Is there no way out? (15)
  • Is only one thing necessary? (32)
  • Learn how to get to heaven from here? (40)
  • Is dying a beginning? (65)
  • Do we exist? (66)
  • "If"? (74)
  • Be happy and how? (127)
  • Be concerned about anything when we die? (161)
  • Mother? (21)
  • Idols? (38)
  • Work and play? (64)
  • Work and play and roses? (135)
  • Discover two philosophies of life? (88)
  • Develop style? (47)
  • Find a therapy for fear? (69)
  • Slow down? (70)
  • Understand and what? (73)
  • Have a last resort and what is it? (81)
  • Have stupid thoughts? (83)
  • Eat the fruits in the toy box? (96)
  • Respond with "I didn't deserve that"? (111)
  • Fail? (113)
  • Acknowledge our inner zoo? (121)
  • Do good people suffer? (137)
  • Have a plan when everything seems senseless? (144)
  • God is like a cat? (149)
  • Have a sane scale of values and what might they be? (19)
  • The big deal about church? (28)
  • Honor? (41)
  • Am I giving anyone else advice? (2)
  • List some maxims of life and what are they? (44)
  • Surf for wisdom? (124)
  • Seek the highest wisdom and what is it? (56)
  • Seek the profoundest wisdom and what is it? (80)
  • See everything in four dimensions and what are they? (61)
  • Religion? (62)
  • So much religion? (159)
  • Be good? (71)
  • Want to be better than right? (146)
  • Be a good person in steps and what is the first step? (33)
  • Ten ways to be a good person in step 2? (34)
  • Be good for the payoff of step 3 and what is the payoff? (35)
  • Establish priorities and what are mine? (95)
  • Minds and mouths and what goes in and what comes out? (117)
  • Keep a journal? (118)
  • Be a family? (31)
  • Have children? (126)
  • Does time equal life equal family? (14)
  • Set aside sacred time? (23)
  • Find the meaning of sunlight? (134)
  • Find the four things that make you happy and what are they? (139)
  • Recall the wisdom of childhood? (145)
  • Change the world and with what kinds of acts do it the most? (151)
  • Accept this one gift and what is it? (39)
  • Find the most precious gift and what is it? (128)
  • We never want to fail the test and piss off Oprah? (48)
  • Look for easy ways to be good and what are they? (54)
  • Find 10 things to do every day to be happy and what are they? (92)
  • Find 10 things not to do every day? (93)
  • Discover both nature and grace? (101)
  • Look at life as a blessed mess? (108)
  • The shit that happens is holy shit? (89)
  • Accept love and pain? (114)
  • Take the practical solution to the problem of evil and what is it? (153)
  • Bad days are good? (155)
  • We need to be unhappy? (78)
  • Do bad things happen to good people (160)
  • Tell you about sex and what about it? (29)
  • Be peaceful? (77)
  • Seek peace and social justice? (76)
  • Deal with difficult people? (84)
  • Marry and what is the one word of advice about marriage you offer? (87)
  • Want to be a saint? (99)
  • Are the poor blessed? (123)
  • Money? (46)
  • Pay it forward is more important than pay it back? (143)
  • Find the most important person in your life and who is he or she? (6)
  • Be optimistic or pessimistic and which are you? (17)
  • Live in the present? (18)
  • Be concerned about self-esteem? (20)
  • Have a one-minute to sanity plan and what is it? (24)
  • Appreciate emptiness? (50)
  • Appreciate the beauty in sadness? (125)
  • It's possible to have joy in suffering? (100)
  • Never and what, if any "nevers" do you recommend? (63)
  • Be honest? (16)
  • Is Honesty the single most important virtue? (79)
  • Climb Jacob's ladder? (90)
  • Burn the "I"? (97)
  • Are we designed to burn? (157)
  • Avoid anorexia of the soul? (102)
  • Consider cheap psychiatry and what is it? (115)
  • Confess? (116)
  • Be unique? (132)
  • Be logical about love? (53)
  • Does truth lord over us? (60)
  • Experiment with realistic thoughts and what experiments have you tried? (106)
  • Be "liberal" or "conservative" and which are you? (112)
  • Be pro-life or pro-choice and which are you? (120)
  • Have reasons? (148)
  • Have a one-minute, life-changing prayer and what is it? (8)
  • Discover where good stuff comes from and where have you found it? (25)
  • Forgive? (57) (91)
  • Not hold grudges? (27)
  • Make the four most important choices in your life and what are they? (37)
  • Assent to divine grace in the midst of human freedom? (45)
  • Laugh and what have you laughed about? (26)
  • Give the best gift to your children and what is that gift? (86)
  • Discover what we want most of all and what is it? (138)
  • Communion works? (141)
  • Not other issues? (140)
  • Write the meaning of life in one sentence and what is that sentence? (12)
  • Do poets write best and what example do you love best? (51)
  • In the beginning was the Word and what or who is it? (58)
  • Have prayers for children and what are some? (67)
  • Be wiser, happier, and better in seven minutes and how? (104)
  • Walls? (109)
  • Four images of your life and what are they? (110)
  • Play with God? (119)
  • Trickle to the sea? (130)
  • Seven questions with one answer? (152)
  • Be simple-hearted? (158)
  • Be tempted in old age and by what or whom? (55)
  • Was Jesus a comedian and how? (59)
  • Do all fathers fail, but one? (85)
  • Is God a comedian? (105)
  • Sacrifices? (129)
  • Not Balance? (142)
  • Is everything love? (5)
  • Simplicity? (49)
  • Simple things? (72)
  • Be grateful? (82)
  • No one ever uttered these 10 sentences on their deathbed and what are the sentences? (94)
  • Be a mystic to the max and compare lessons from different religions? (98)
  • Be holy? (107)
  • Dying is easy? (122)
  • God has children but no grandchildren? (133)
  • Have a last word and what will it be? (162)

Friday, November 2, 2007

Why do people fear success?"

On LinkedIn we have had a very good discussion of "Why do people fear success?"

My summary answer was that we do not necessarily have a fear of success until we've experienced success. Once that happens, there are many reasons to fear it, many of which have been pointed out in the 40+ responses.

But there is also and underlying problem. We probably were not be responding to the same thing; that is, what we mean by "success" probably was vastly different to begin with.

Below are a series of questions to ponder about the meaning of "success" and I hope to write about them more extensively on this blog.

Please feel free join in the discussion.

What do you mean by "success"?

1. When you describe yourself, do you claim to be or want to be a "success"?

2. How important is "success" to you? Why do you want to be a "success"?

3. How do you define "success" in a way that is valid and verifiable?

4. What are the best approaches to "success"?

5. What does deployment have to do with "success"?

6. What things do you want to learn and integrate in the process of pursuing "success"?

7. What is your strategy map for acheiving "success"?

8. Are there different levels of "success"? If so, what are they?

9. Are there different types of evidence that support a claim to "success"? If so, what are they?

10. How will you tell the story of your "success"?

11. Are you willing to be examined by someone to demonstrate that you are not "unsuccessful"?

12. Are "success" and "happiness" the same or different for you? If they are different, how are they different? How do they relate?

Thanks.

John

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Do you have a novel in you about decision-making?

The 2007 National Novel Writing Month, a fun, seat-of-your-pants approach to novel writing, finished November 30.

Participants began writing November 1. The goal was to write a 175-page (50,000-word) novel by midnight, November 30.

There is a non-profit organization on the Internet who sponsors this"marathon" writing contest for people who have always wanted to write a novel. I decided to give it a try and completed the task with my first novel.


By trying to write a novel you get to understand your own "story" and that is essential in decision-making.

According to the site here are the statistics about participation in the past:
Founded: 1999 in Oakland, CA
Annual participant/winner totals:
1999: 21 participants and six winners
2000: 140 participants and 29 winners
2001: 5000 participants and more than 700 winners
2002: 13,500 participants and around 2,100 winners
2003: 25,500 participants and about 3,500 winners
2004: 42,000 participants and just shy of 6,000 winners
2005: 59,000 participants and 9,769 winners
2006: 79,813 participants and 12,948 winners

Just go to
http://www.nanowrimo.org to enter.

John Darrouzet

Here is a region by region report of words written and dollars donated to supporting writing programs for children:


Rank
Region
Total Words
Average Words
Donations
1
United States :: Washington :: Seattle
15,542,599
27,655
$4,550.00
2
United States :: Maryland
15,128,568
27,209
$2,450.00
3
Europe :: Germany & Austria
12,221,249
31,018
$1,475.00
4
United States :: Minnesota :: Twin Cities
12,219,949
26,739
$1,940.00
5
United States :: California :: Los Angeles
11,640,568
23,659
$3,035.00
6
United States :: Illinois :: Chicago
11,228,045
25,576
$1,865.00
7
Europe :: England :: London
9,440,597
24,713
$1,280.00
8
United States :: New York :: New York City
9,422,500
28,466
$1,660.00
9
United States :: Oregon :: Portland
9,360,609
24,763
$1,155.00
10
Europe :: England :: Elsewhere
9,197,798
27,212
$890.00
11
United States :: California :: East Bay
9,041,273
27,150
$2,750.00
12
United States :: Massachusetts :: Boston
9,037,115
25,673
$1,755.00
13
United States :: Virginia :: Northern
8,528,410
24,228
$2,970.00
14
Canada :: Ontario :: Toronto
8,307,650
26,542
$830.00
15
Europe :: Holland & Belgium
8,277,224
29,456
$685.00
16
United States :: Texas :: Dallas/Ft. Worth
7,941,886
21,581
$865.00
17
United States :: Texas :: Austin
7,545,802
26,020
$1,630.00
18
United States :: Pennsylvania :: Elsewhere
6,822,543
24,809
$815.00
19
United States :: Georgia :: Atlanta
6,646,219
24,799
$3,265.00
20
United States :: New Hampshire
6,475,152
31,432
$1,075.00
21
Australia & New Zealand :: Melbourne
6,384,621
26,713
$585.00
22
Canada :: Alberta :: Edmonton
6,204,723
32,148
$600.00
23
United States :: California :: South Bay
5,990,018
32,378
$1,365.00
24
United States :: Texas :: Houston
5,934,566
27,222
$970.00
25
United States :: Colorado :: Denver
5,759,198
25,596
$1,005.00
26
United States :: Arizona :: Phoenix
5,587,053
25,395
$880.00
27
Australia & New Zealand :: New Zealand
5,330,392
29,287
$440.00
28
United States :: California :: Sacramento
5,116,626
26,788
$1,010.00
29
Europe :: Scotland
4,983,816
24,550
$550.00
30
United States :: California :: San Francisco
4,873,560
22,773
$1,215.00
31
United States :: Pennsylvania :: Philadelphia
4,580,509
26,630
$580.00
32
United States :: Virginia :: Elsewhere
4,507,669
24,105
$410.00
33
United States :: California :: San Diego
4,356,123
24,892
$1,215.00
34
Australia & New Zealand :: Sydney
4,315,218
24,242
$730.00
35
United States :: New York :: Elsewhere
4,255,668
27,814
$575.00
36
United States :: Ohio :: Columbus
4,246,021
25,733
$480.00
37
Europe :: Sweden
4,197,257
25,593
$575.00
38
United States :: California :: Orange County
4,168,951
23,553
$660.00
39
Europe :: Finland
4,165,294
24,076
$60.00
40
United States :: Michigan :: Elsewhere
4,144,300
25,901
$290.00
41
United States :: New Mexico
4,103,583
25,647
$685.00
42
Canada :: British Columbia :: Vancouver
4,082,527
23,196
$360.00
43
Canada :: Ontario :: Elsewhere
4,005,066
26,176
$810.00
44
United States :: Missouri :: St. Louis
3,986,788
27,686
$400.00
45
United States :: Pennsylvania :: Pittsburgh
3,911,696
21,030
$525.00
46
United States :: Maine
3,749,912
27,984
$215.00
47
United States :: Connecticut :: Shoreline
3,707,351
31,418
$3,410.00
48
United States :: Illinois :: Naperville
3,702,627
29,859
$560.00
49
United States :: Michigan :: Detroit
3,619,567
23,054
$915.00
50
Europe :: France
3,598,887
33,323
$235.00
51
Canada :: Ontario :: Ottawa
3,555,406
29,383
$470.00
52
United States :: North Carolina :: Elsewhere
3,530,327
22,630
$635.00
53
United States :: New Jersey :: Central
3,461,667
27,916
$970.00
54
Australia & New Zealand :: Elsewhere in Australia
3,447,148
28,255
$170.00
55
United States :: Oklahoma :: Elsewhere
3,380,172
22,237
$485.00
56
United States :: Florida :: Orlando
3,373,748
29,336
$325.00
57
United States :: Colorado :: Boulder
3,372,147
25,741
$340.00
58
United States :: North Carolina :: Raleigh-Durham
3,283,686
22,646
$425.00
59
United States :: Arizona :: Tucson
3,263,631
25,901
$440.00
60
United States :: District of Columbia
3,256,824
24,124
$920.00
61
Europe :: Elsewhere in Europe
3,254,886
22,761
$190.00
62
United States :: New York :: Brooklyn and Queens
3,231,353
19,120
$545.00
63
Australia & New Zealand :: Brisbane
3,223,551
23,702
$250.00
64
Europe :: England :: Manchester
3,221,581
26,191
$380.00
65
United States :: Missouri :: Kansas City
3,221,339
29,827
$425.00
66
United States :: Vermont
3,177,155
28,623
$735.00
67
Canada :: British Columbia :: Elsewhere
3,158,557
27,706
$825.00
68
United States :: Utah :: Salt Lake City
3,133,948
23,923
$300.00
69
United States :: Nebraska
3,082,893
26,807
$400.00
70
United States :: Wisconsin :: Elsewhere
3,065,503
25,127
$380.00
71
United States :: Massachusetts :: Elsewhere
3,054,662
22,460
$530.00
72
United States :: Washington :: Elsewhere
3,026,229
24,603
$540.00
73
United States :: New Jersey :: Northeast
2,948,945
23,975
$800.00
74
United States :: California :: Inland Empire
2,907,377
25,503
$290.00
75
United States :: Indiana :: Indianapolis
2,906,555
26,423
$550.00
76
United States :: California :: Elsewhere
2,904,031
26,889
$345.00
77
Canada :: Alberta :: Calgary
2,866,693
22,751
$210.00
78
Europe :: England :: York & Leeds
2,844,137
27,087
$385.00
79
Canada :: Quebec :: Montreal
2,802,314
24,367
$375.00
80
United States :: Tennessee :: Nashville
2,789,058
24,902
$275.00
81
United States :: Alaska
2,772,267
24,975
$150.00
82
United States :: Ohio :: Cleveland
2,769,210
25,640
$495.00
83
United States :: Arkansas
2,724,780
25,229
$380.00
84
Europe :: Wales
2,708,519
38,148
$180.00
85
United States :: Illinois :: Elsewhere
2,672,487
21,043
$375.00
86
United States :: Colorado :: Colorado Springs
2,629,921
28,586
$195.00
87
United States :: Colorado :: Fort Collins
2,593,302
30,509
$885.00
88
Asia :: Japan
2,564,217
28,811
$310.00
89
United States :: Montana
2,542,208
28,888
$250.00
90
Europe :: England :: Birmingham-West Midlands
2,498,960
29,399
$195.00
91
United States :: Kansas :: Elsewhere
2,453,242
25,823
$215.00
92
United States :: Wisconsin :: Madison
2,451,897
22,289
$170.00
93
United States :: Texas :: Elsewhere
2,431,943
26,434
$850.00
94
United States :: Florida :: Tampa
2,425,421
22,667
$70.00
95
United States :: Georgia :: Elsewhere
2,418,400
19,986
$335.00
96
United States :: Michigan :: Ann Arbor
2,395,670
25,217
$345.00
97
Canada :: Nova Scotia
2,394,951
29,567
$750.00
98
United States :: Wisconsin :: Milwaukee & Waukesha
2,392,559
21,950
$205.00
99
United States :: Texas :: San Antonio
2,375,260
23,060
$200.00
100
United States :: Ohio :: Cincinnati
2,358,618
22,463
$180.00
101
United States :: Utah :: Elsewhere
2,355,902
23,559
$280.00
102
United States :: Iowa :: Central Iowa
2,341,217
29,635
$310.00
103
United States :: Indiana :: Elsewhere
2,285,391
20,405
$120.00
104
Asia :: Philippines
2,283,893
23,545
$60.00
105
Africa :: South Africa
2,261,609
23,558
$160.00
106
United States :: New York :: Long Island
2,208,038
22,080
$1,758.50
107
Europe :: England :: Cambridge
2,192,310
33,216
$550.00
108
Asia :: Singapore
2,185,739
24,558
$110.00
109
United States :: Ohio :: Dayton
2,161,073
23,237
$160.00
110
United States :: Connecticut :: North
2,094,649
29,092
$480.00
111
United States :: Michigan :: Lansing
2,090,506
25,808
$390.00
112
Canada :: Manitoba
2,079,801
24,759
$85.00
113
United States :: Virginia :: Richmond
2,078,829
21,431
$260.00
114
United States :: Washington :: Bellingham
2,070,952
29,585
$350.00
115
United States :: Oregon :: Eugene
2,047,556
24,375
$265.00
116
United States :: California :: Central Valley
2,005,448
24,162
$240.00
117
United States :: California :: Marin-Sonoma
2,004,069
24,145
$505.00
118
Canada :: Ontario :: Hamilton
2,000,714
33,345
$195.00
119
United States :: Massachusetts :: Worcester
1,968,627
26,967
$290.00
120
United States :: California :: SF Peninsula
1,960,364
25,459
$700.00
121
Europe :: Denmark
1,951,274
26,368
$260.00
122
United States :: Minnesota :: Elsewhere
1,942,864
27,755
$150.00
123
United States :: Idaho :: Elsewhere
1,940,526
28,537
$155.00
124
United States :: North Carolina :: Charlotte
1,931,839
21,464
$170.00
125
United States :: Iowa :: Elsewhere
1,927,862
21,661
$110.00
126
United States :: Washington :: Spokane
1,915,818
23,652
$410.00
127
United States :: Massachusetts :: Western Mass
1,913,632
27,337
$195.00
128
United States :: Ohio :: Elsewhere
1,907,763
24,458
$120.00
129
Canada :: Saskatchewan
1,905,296
34,641
$130.00
130
United States :: Hawaii
1,904,014
23,800
$575.00
131
United States :: Colorado :: Elsewhere
1,903,604
26,438
$150.00
132
United States :: Oregon :: Elsewhere
1,872,618
22,030
$185.00
133
Australia & New Zealand :: Perth
1,863,692
24,203
$295.00
134
United States :: Tennessee :: Memphis
1,859,835
33,815
$185.00
135
United States :: New Jersey :: South
1,846,030
23,367
$980.00
136
United States :: Pennsylvania :: Lehigh Valley
1,841,345
26,686
$440.00
137
United States :: Ohio :: Canton/Akron
1,828,156
27,285
$145.00
138
United States :: Rhode Island
1,806,551
23,461
$175.00
139
United States :: Nevada :: Las Vegas
1,774,728
21,910
$310.00
140
United States :: Mississippi
1,749,723
29,162
$220.00
141
United States :: New York :: Albany
1,743,638
22,644
$395.00
142
United States :: Oregon :: Salem
1,681,352
28,497
$760.00
143
United States :: Washington :: Olympia
1,658,635
27,190
$425.00
144
Europe :: England :: Oxfordshire
1,655,581
31,237
$70.00
145
United States :: Kentucky :: Louisville
1,638,169
25,202
$160.00
146
United States :: Kentucky :: Elsewhere
1,633,003
24,373
$35.00
147
Europe :: Norway
1,606,867
23,630
$260.00
148
Europe :: Ireland :: Elsewhere
1,575,762
24,621
$805.00
149
Australia & New Zealand :: Adelaide
1,575,265
24,234
$125.00
150
Elsewhere :: Mexico, Central & South America
1,572,691
19,658
$65.00
151
Europe :: England :: Brighton
1,546,218
27,611
$325.00
152
Europe :: England :: Newcastle
1,543,574
28,064
$125.00
153
United States :: New York :: Buffalo
1,539,260
19,240
$205.00
154
United States :: Washington :: Vancouver
1,522,477
26,249
$155.00
155
United States :: Washington :: Tacoma/Pierce County
1,521,645
26,235
$120.00
156
United States :: New York :: Rochester
1,507,798
21,236
$195.00
157
United States :: Tennessee :: Knoxville
1,497,520
25,819
$80.00
158
United States :: Delaware
1,465,304
25,263
$435.00
159
United States :: Florida :: Elsewhere
1,447,147
24,119
$130.00
160
Europe :: England :: Nottingham
1,426,091
24,587
$115.00
161
United States :: Florida :: Tallahassee
1,384,060
25,164
$160.00
162
United States :: Michigan :: Grand Rapids
1,361,734
22,323
$85.00
163
United States :: Alabama :: Elsewhere
1,355,714
32,278
$260.00
164
United States :: Indiana :: North
1,329,021
18,205
$230.00
165
United States :: Washington :: Everett
1,286,626
51,465
$280.00
166
United States :: California :: Santa Cruz
1,284,094
27,321
$255.00
167
Europe :: England :: Bristol
1,248,485
30,450
$205.00
168
Canada :: Alberta :: Elsewhere
1,241,713
26,419
$1,080.00
169
United States :: North Carolina :: Asheville
1,239,560
24,305
$275.00
170
United States :: Missouri :: Springfield
1,233,441
27,409
$110.00
171
Europe :: Ireland :: Dublin
1,225,176
24,023
$265.00
172
United States :: Virginia :: Hampton Roads
1,223,451
30,586
$330.00
173
Europe :: England :: Southampton
1,221,903
33,941
$100.00
174
United States :: Alabama :: Birmingham
1,218,804
30,470
$85.00
175
United States :: New Jersey :: Northwest
1,208,884
30,222
$195.00
176
United States :: North Dakota
1,199,285
24,475
$55.00
177
United States :: Ohio :: Toledo
1,198,563
23,501
$90.00
178
United States :: Florida :: Ft. Lauderdale
1,196,474
28,487
$145.00
179
United States :: South Carolina :: Charleston
1,163,473
25,292
$250.00
180
United States :: West Virginia :: Elsewhere
1,140,065
18,689
$40.00
181
United States :: Florida :: Daytona Beach
1,117,529
26,607
$60.00
182
Elsewhere :: Israel
1,098,257
31,378
$200.00
183
Canada :: Ontario :: London
1,098,170
23,873
$20.00
184
United States :: New York :: Ithaca
1,088,297
25,309
$70.00
185
United States :: North Carolina :: Chapel Hill
1,075,304
22,402
$195.00
186
United States :: South Carolina :: Greenville
1,065,735
24,784
$130.00
187
United States :: Alabama :: North
1,059,777
20,380
$390.00
188
United States :: Florida :: Miami
1,057,534
26,438
$170.00
189
United States :: Illinois :: Southern
1,056,813
24,577
$35.00
190
United States :: Michigan :: Flint
1,041,183
27,399
$100.00
191
United States :: Louisiana :: Elsewhere
1,040,451
23,121
$55.00
192
United States :: Indiana :: Bloomington
1,039,560
23,626
$135.00
193
Canada :: British Columbia :: Victoria
1,023,496
22,744
$130.00
194
United States :: Oregon :: Albany-Corvallis
1,000,115
31,253
$155.00
195
United States :: Louisiana :: Baton Rouge
994,940
30,149
$200.00
196
United States :: Georgia :: Macon
989,640
30,926
$185.00
197
United States :: South Carolina :: Columbia
981,121
24,528
$90.00
198
United States :: California :: North San Diego County
973,475
25,617
$130.00
199
United States :: Illinois :: Champaign-Urbana
972,952
20,701
$130.00
200
United States :: Virginia :: Shenandoah Valley
961,113
25,292
$205.00
201
United States :: Florida :: Jacksonville
956,156
23,320
$120.00
202
United States :: Florida :: Southwest
954,295
29,821
$110.00
203
United States :: Connecticut :: East
952,755
21,172
$45.00
204
Europe :: Italy
952,490
25,742
$195.00
205
United States :: Tennessee :: Elsewhere
941,629
20,925
$130.00
206
Australia & New Zealand :: Canberra & the ACT
932,441
21,191
$130.00
207
Europe :: England :: Lancaster and Cumbria
919,661
36,786
$185.00
208
United States :: Idaho :: Boise
916,459
16,662
$335.00
209
United States :: Arizona :: Elsewhere
915,646
24,747
$30.00
210
United States :: Missouri :: Elsewhere
902,332
19,198
$205.00
211
Canada :: New Brunswick
898,428
24,281
$55.00
212
Asia :: China
896,314
28,913
$60.00
213
United States :: Florida :: Gainesville
893,804
22,918
$150.00
214
United States :: Florida :: Palm Beaches
893,005
21,780
$110.00
215
United States :: Kansas :: Lawrence
889,895
28,706
$80.00
216
Asia :: Elsewhere in Asia
887,284
26,887
$20.00
217
United States :: Florida :: St. Petersburg
879,537
30,328
$40.00
218
United States :: Indiana :: Notre Dame
829,584
26,760
$85.00
219
United States :: Missouri :: Fulton
822,134
43,270
$70.00
220
Asia :: Malaysia
811,523
17,641
$60.00
221
United States :: Massachusetts :: North Shore
805,088
27,761
$80.00
222
United States :: Iowa :: Iowa City
801,481
19,548
$170.00
223
Asia :: India
796,429
14,221
$20.00
224
Europe :: England :: Exeter and Devon
782,446
32,601
$85.00
225
Europe :: Switzerland
774,982
28,703
$110.00
226
United States :: Missouri :: Columbia
747,727
19,677
$60.00
227
United States :: Illinois :: DeKalb
722,276
32,830
$580.00
228
United States :: Illinois :: Peoria
720,692
28,827
$85.00
229
Canada :: Ontario :: Windsor
719,292
26,640
$25.00
230
United States :: Oklahoma :: Tulsa
718,121
21,121
$95.00
231
United States :: Alabama :: Mobile/Baldwin
718,047
27,617
$10.00
232
United States :: South Carolina :: Elsewhere
717,316
19,925
$85.00
233
Europe :: England :: Derbyshire
712,231
21,582
$35.00
234
Europe :: England :: Essex
709,289
25,331
$120.00
235
United States :: Massachusetts :: Cape Cod
701,313
28,052
$35.00
236
United States :: Pennsylvania :: Williamsport
700,701
31,850
$30.00
237
United States :: New York :: Syracuse
694,209
19,283
$145.00
238
United States :: Michigan :: Marquette and the UP
688,926
20,262
$25.00
239
United States :: Washington :: Pullman
685,185
31,144
$0.00
240
United States :: Georgia :: Athens
685,029
21,407
$50.00
241
United States :: Arizona :: Flagstaff
678,803
25,140
$55.00
242
United States :: Louisiana :: New Orleans
659,227
15,695
$70.00
243
United States :: Kentucky :: Lexington
656,343
18,752
$65.00
244
United States :: Florida :: Northwest
648,906
22,376
$25.00
245
United States :: Massachusetts :: Berkshires
637,423
26,559
$50.00
246
United States :: Texas :: Bryan-College Station
625,812
20,860
$35.00
247
Canada :: Ontario :: Kingston
623,141
27,093
$10.00
248
United States :: California :: Santa Barbara
620,758
17,243
$470.00
249
United States :: Washington :: Tri-Cities
611,425
24,457
$25.00
250
United States :: Louisiana :: Lafayette
601,884
26,168
$45.00
251
United States :: Utah :: Ogden
601,035
21,465
$200.00
252
United States :: New York :: Poughkeepsie
598,973
35,233
$25.00
253
United States :: Colorado :: Greeley
597,407
27,154
$70.00
254
United States :: California :: Antelope Valley
595,753
31,355
$250.00
255
Elsewhere :: Brazil
587,148
27,959
$10.00
256
United States :: Pennsylvania :: Norristown
570,244
25,920
$185.00
257
United States :: Oregon :: Lincoln County
567,418
31,523
$75.00
258
Asia :: Korea
567,163
18,905
$25.00
259
United States :: Nevada :: Reno
566,894
21,803
$30.00
260
United States :: Indiana :: Terre Haute
566,582
51,507
$0.00
261
United States :: Minnesota :: Saint Cloud
565,616
31,423
$60.00
262
United States :: Texas :: Corpus Christi
565,282
29,751
$35.00
263
United States :: Minnesota :: Rochester
550,546
22,021
$110.00
264
Canada :: Ontario :: Niagara
547,303
32,194
$0.00
265
United States :: California :: Monterey
543,889
24,722
$70.00
266
United States :: Indiana :: Evansville
541,056
28,476
$45.00
267
United States :: Georgia :: Augusta
537,892
25,613
$60.00
268
Europe :: England :: Gloucester & Cheltenham
523,529
24,929
$75.00
269
United States :: Kansas :: Topeka
520,273
34,684
$300.00
270
United States :: Ohio :: Lake County
512,873
46,624
$125.00
271
United States :: Kansas :: Wichita
512,628
20,505
$0.00
272
United States :: California :: Chico
502,205
22,827
$60.00
273
United States :: Wyoming
499,836
18,512
$45.00
274
United States :: Nevada :: Elsewhere
498,573
20,773
$70.00
275
United States :: Florida :: Vero Beach
497,842
49,784
$110.00
276
United States :: South Dakota
497,487
24,874
$20.00
277
Europe :: England :: Darlington
486,263
34,733
$35.00
278
Elsewhere :: Caribbean
476,242
28,014
$0.00
279
United States :: California :: Santa Clarita
469,924
29,370
$10.00
280
United States :: New Jersey :: Elsewhere
462,646
21,029
$0.00
281
United States :: Texas :: Waco
441,691
22,084
$20.00
282
Canada :: Ontario :: Durham
437,375
33,644
$0.00
283
United States :: California :: Stockton
426,705
25,100
$110.00
284
United States :: Kentucky :: Bowling Green
424,287
28,285
$50.00
285
United States :: Texas :: Amarillo
417,391
32,107
$10.00
286
Canada :: Newfoundland
404,274
16,170
$35.00
287
United States :: New York :: Plattsburgh
402,019
36,547
$120.00
288
United States :: Michigan :: Tri-Cities
399,353
22,186
$25.00
289
United States :: Texas :: Bell County
398,078
23,416
$85.00
290
United States :: Texas :: El Paso
387,708
27,693
$0.00
291
Europe :: England :: Leicester
385,904
24,119
$0.00
292
Asia :: Indonesia
384,117
16,700
$0.00
293
Canada :: Ontario :: North Bay
379,539
22,325
$110.00
294
United States :: Tennessee :: Murfreesboro
379,136
18,956
$60.00
295
Canada :: Elsewhere in Canada
373,670
28,743
$125.00
296
Canada :: Quebec :: Quebec
371,185
30,932
$25.00
297
United States :: Florida :: Ocala
335,986
23,999
$75.00
298
Canada :: Quebec :: Elsewhere
332,802
33,280
$35.00
299
United States :: Arizona :: Prescott
330,917
27,576
$145.00
300
United States :: Massachusetts :: 5-College
325,674
18,093
$0.00
301
United States :: Tennessee :: Chattanooga
316,378
26,364
$25.00
302
Canada :: Ontario :: Sudbury
314,550
22,467
$0.00
303
United States :: West Virginia :: Huntington
302,813
23,293
$25.00
304
United States :: Texas :: Lubbock
289,401
20,671
$25.00
305
United States :: North Carolina :: Fayetteville
286,876
16,875
$10.00
306
Asia :: Thailand
280,971
40,138
$100.00
307
United States :: Texas :: Odessa
277,130
46,188
$45.00
308
United States :: New York :: Mohawk Valley
276,213
27,621
$60.00
309
United States :: Minnesota :: Duluth
263,835
18,845
$25.00
310
Asia :: Taiwan
261,552
26,155
$0.00
311
Europe :: Estonia
255,114
28,346
$0.00
312
United States :: Kansas :: Manhattan
241,090
21,917
$10.00
313
United States :: Illinois :: Springfield
238,371
23,837
$35.00
314
United States :: Texas :: Galveston
237,424
23,742
$0.00
315
United States :: Florida :: St. Augustine
233,551
21,231
$50.00
316
United States :: California :: Humboldt County
233,231
38,871
$250.00
317
United States :: Utah :: Cache Valley
225,495
37,582
$0.00
318
Europe :: Iceland
224,295
24,921
$10.00
319
Elsewhere
223,075
24,786
$0.00
320
United States :: Washington :: Lewis County
221,116
27,639
$20.00
321
Europe :: Czech Republic
215,636
23,959
$0.00
322
United States :: Iowa :: Sioux City
196,121
28,017
$0.00
323
Canada :: Ontario :: Muskoka
194,156
27,736
$100.00
324
United States :: Minnesota :: Goodhue County
192,015
24,001
$50.00
325
Canada :: Ontario :: Chatham-Kent
190,176
47,544
$50.00
326
United States :: Georgia :: Savannah
175,591
29,265
$25.00
327
United States :: Ohio :: Ada
160,233
22,890
$25.00
328
Elsewhere :: Bahamas
159,738
53,246
$0.00
329
Elsewhere :: Egypt
158,952
26,492
$10.00
330
Europe :: Luxembourg
158,178
22,596
$10.00
331
United States :: Puerto Rico
152,221
9,513
$0.00
332
Canada :: Prince Edward Island
127,056
15,882
$0.00
333
Europe :: Bulgaria
122,002
30,500
$0.00
334
United States :: New York :: Dunkirk
117,622
23,524
$10.00
335
Europe :: Scandinavia
113,920
28,480
$0.00
336
United States :: Ohio :: North Central
107,428
21,485
$10.00
337
Elsewhere :: Turkey
99,122
19,824
$10.00
338
United States :: California :: Lompoc
84,296
28,098
$35.00
339
United States :: Ohio :: Ashland
81,610
27,203
$10.00
340
Australia & New Zealand :: Darwin
79,253
15,850
$0.00
341
Australia & New Zealand :: Margaret River
69,512
34,756
$0.00
342
United States :: Indiana :: Richmond
58,898
19,632
$100.00
343
Africa :: Elsewhere
58,655
29,327
$0.00
344
Africa :: Tanzania
51,787
25,893
$50.00
345
Asia :: Sri Lanka
50,471
50,471
$0.00
346
Asia :: Pakistan
48,581
12,145
$0.00
347
United States :: Texas :: Ellis County
32,789
8,197
$0.00
348
United States :: Arizona :: Patagonia
0
0
$0.00
349
United States :: Kansas :: Chanute
0
0
$0.00

Here is a ranking of genres, numbers of words, and donatons:


Rank
Genre
Total Words
Average Words
Donations
1
Fantasy
242,414,812
24,685
$23,625.00
2
Other Genres
104,288,527
21,632
$8,840.00
3
Science Fiction
91,721,437
23,829
$13,955.00
4
Literary Fiction
84,344,358
23,415
$14,140.00
5
Mainstream Fiction
83,774,073
24,617
$12,970.00
6
Young Adult & Youth
70,104,494
21,360
$6,960.00
7
Mystery & Suspense
57,001,535
25,266
$9,005.00
8
Romance
48,293,386
24,243
$5,400.00
9
Horror & Thriller
40,437,410
22,641
$3,780.00
10
Adventure
35,276,547
21,897
$4,193.50
11
Satire, Humor & Parody
30,595,401
20,396
$5,345.00
12
Historical Fiction
26,980,720
25,192
$4,030.00
13
Chick Lit
25,713,209
20,537
$3,300.00
14
Erotic Fiction
11,444,416
23,355
$1,135.00
15
Religious, Spiritual & New Age
8,698,866
21,747
$730.00