Why do we
You know, with all the current revaluation of the meaning of Blogs, their power, and perhaps, most tentatively, the urges behind their authorship it struck that like most things we've tilled this ground before. It's been covered when Radio was viewed as an abomination or a fad. When the motorcar was "an infernal machine." Probably when the first guy made a tune beating on a hollow log. Am I wrong? I went back through some archives and found the below, from last spring. Substitute Blog for Brand in many cases and, to me anyway, it's the same thing. Especially the Shackleton example at the end.
4-5-04...
Doing or Being? Branding or Becoming? The debate begins...
Seems there's a budding meta-debate on "what makes a brand?" on some of the blogs I enjoy reading. Kewl.
I've seen John Moore post that "Branding is about being remarkable". Can't disagree with that. But it seems rather passive, rather static. "Branding" is used as a verb in his example, yet it describes a state of being rather than becoming. That may seem like splitting hairs to some, but to me, the most elemental and engaging brands have a "what's next?" aura about them.
Think about the country and the era which birthed the term. Branding evolves from the need to identify a roaming piece of property amongst countless others in the middle of a boundless frontier. It was a way to make sense of things in an obviously dynamic and uncontrollable landscape.
Sound like your life? It does mine.
If that unknown opportunity was a point of pride and a magnetic attraction for people, branding was a way to symbolize and keep order of what you had without resorting to something that was all but impossible and somewhat antithetical to the time and the ambition: a fence.
In this way, I'd view a brand as girding your way for a journey into open range, new horizons, a future. It's a becoming, which begins, of course, from "being". It doesn't mean packing everything including the kitchen sink and grandma's sewing machine, either. Adventures usually demand that we travel light, and bring only the necessities. In this case, for a brand, those necessities would include a sense of what you can do, what you want to do, and where you're going with it all. And who's welcome to come.
That's how Shackleton mythically approached and wrote what is possibly the most powerful ad--one representation of a brand--of all time:
Hmm. Charging off into the unknown like nutcases, in hopes of planting a flag for some far off ambition or goal. More to come, written today and tomorrow, about what's to come and what it means, at least, to me.


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I have read through one history
Each of you has your personal story; it is your history. Keeping a diary or writing your feelings in a special notebook is a wonderful way to learn how to think and write about who you are -- to develop your own identity and voice.
People of all ages are able to do this. Your own history is special because of your circumstances: your cultural, racial, religious or ethnic background. Your story is also part of human history, a part of the story of the dignity and worth of all human beings. By putting opinions and thoughts into words, you, too, can give voice to your inner self and strivings.
A long entry by Anne Frank on April 5, 1944, written after more than a year and a half of hiding from the Nazis, describes the range of emotions 14-year-old Anne is experiencing:
". . . but the moment I was alone I knew I was going to cry my eyes out. I slid to the floor in my nightgown and began by saying my prayers, very fervently. Then I drew my knees to my chest, lay my head on my arms and cried, all huddled up on the bare floor. A loud sob brought me back down to earth, and I choked back my tears, since I didn't want anyone next door to hear me . . .
"And now it's really over. I finally realized that I must do my school work to keep from being ignorant, to get on in life, to become a journalist, because that's what I want! I know I can write. A few of my stories are good, my descriptions of the Secret Annex are humorous, much of my diary is vivid and alive, but . . . it remains to be seen whether I really have talent . . .
"When I write I can shake off all my cares. My sorrow disappears, my spirits are revived! But, and that's a big question, will I ever be able to write something great, will I ever become a journalist or a writer? I hope so, oh, I hope so very much, because writing allows me to record everything, all my thoughts, ideals and fantasies.
"I haven't worked on Cady's Life for ages. In my mind I've worked out exactly what happens next, but the story doesn't seem to be coming along very well. I might never finish it, and it'll wind up in the wastepaper basket or the stove. That's a horrible thought, but then I say to myself, "At the age of 14 and with so little experience, you can't write about philosophy.' So onward and upward, with renewed spirits. It'll all work out, because I'm determined to write! Yours, Anne M. Frank
For those of you interested in reading some of Anne Frank's first stories and essays, including a version of Cady's Life, see Tales From the Secret Annex (Doubleday, 1996). Next: Reviewing and revising your writing
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