Molotov cocktails, jelly babies, onions, and handfuls of sand - how people I work with really see me...
Adrian Ashton
an untypical enterprise consultant, helping people and organisations deal with uncertainty - sometimes a tiger striped chaise lounge with a flamingo cushion.
As part of my ongoing CPD*,?I commit to an adapted360-degree feedback process on myself every couple of years. But instead of sending out questionnaires or survey forms, I ask people 1 question?– this year, that question was
People offered a wide range of accessories, but all seem to relate to two themes:
* My playful nature, and encouragement that we should all try to find more moments of enjoyment in what we do;
* My desire to encourage and support others in their journeys and roles.
This seems to be aptly illustrated by the most commonly referenced items being?a fez, and?my book on imposter syndrome.
However, there was also a wide of other creative ideas, and I felt it only proper to share these on, to see if people feel these might also be fitting decorations to a form of me:
- a?business award
- Post it notes
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- sand (because it represents my being able to hold lots of tiny details which most others can’t retain)
- a light sabre
- jelly babies
- a cup of water (because its essential, life affirming, and bountiful –?although personally I’d prefer it to have been a glass of whiskey…)
- weird glasses (to convey my ‘quirkiness’)
- a rubicks cube (which co-incidentally I have a lego version of one)
- a Molotov cocktail (because I make very policy-based subjects incredibly entertaining and, drawing comparison with the revolutionary symbol of the Molotov, I’ve been unafraid to do this by myself for almost 20 years.
- a fedora (don’t worry?Tony Robinson, you’ll always be the king of the fedora for me!)
- a sealed envelope with all the answers inside (not for me to give to you, but to encourage you that there are answers that are right for you, and I’ll help you work through things to get to yours in the end)
- someone else’s hand (to illustrate my helping other people)
- an onion (because it has many layers, it has a heart, it has a tough skin, it is essential to most recipes, it represents the coming together of good food and good people, it is versatile, it is important to all sectors of society)
But one person’s response described a vista, that’s making me think that I should be considering a portrait, rather than a statute:
"If there was ever a statue to be made of the coolest consultant in town, I would imagine it would resemble the eternal image I have etched into my hippocampus of Adrian, it would be one of a man wearing a red fez hat standing proudly on top of a really complicated looking but easily assembled lego structure holding a magnifying glass as he examines a thin green book!!....an eccentric who finds solutions to the most complicated of conundrums with supernatural attention to detail, the man the myth the legend that is Adrian Ashton"
And the idea of a portrait might also help resolve another conundrum about my being ‘statue-d’ I’d not considered: someone asked what it would be cast in:?gilt, marble, iron or papier?maché; and if it would be life size or larger than life?
Housing Project Manager HUG2 (Climate Emergency)
2 年Box of lego
Graphic Recorder; Cartoonist; Bespoke Workshop Designer and Facilitator
2 年Fezes are cool.
Social Enterprise Specialist
2 年Perhaps the statue already has a prototype?
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2 年I'm laughing, but the sentiment behind those suggestions is great - kudos. (Also going to have to 'borrow' your Q!)