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Four months later, I'm adding someone I want blog it forward to: my good friend and colleague ferenc.tabori. Even though Ferenc hasn't been very active on SCN so far, he is in fact very community-minded: He was a great help when tobias.trapp and I organized SAP Inside Track Bonn, he was great help with my silly 2009 SCN community profile video, and he has attended several instances of SAP Inside Track NL Eindhoven and even the Den Bosch InnoJam. (By the way, just for some geek fun, the hexadecimal color code I chose for the background of this box is "#ECC605", and the title bar is "#ABA731". What EhP are you on?) |
Today, I am doubly honored because not one but two people were so kind to blog it forward to me: tom.vandoorslaer and marilyn.pratt. This is not a time for “first come, first serve,” especially since Marilyn blogged it forward to me after I asked her if I may blog it forward to her, so I gladly accept both mentions. (By the way, because it would otherwise go waste, here is the brief introduction to Marilyn I wrote when I was planning to blog it forward to her: Marilyn is the soul of the SCN community. She has challenged and inspired me countless times and given me the chance to make my favorite and most mind-changing contribution, playing a supporting role in the Design Thinking and Inclusion Event at SAP TechEd 2011 in Madrid.)
If you aren’t familiar with it, here is the link that explains the “Blog It Forward Community Challenge”.
My name is thorstenster, and I am an SAP Mentor and long-time SAP technologist, occupying myself mostly with the software architecture and technology strategy of an industry solution for German health insurance companies. My main area of expertise is large-scale enterprise application development on top of SAP software, and I really love being a builder of software, a bit like Tom and Jack Builder in Ken Follett’s novel “The Pillars of the Earth,” which is about the lifelong dream to build a cathedral.
I am also passionate about teaching (and have been called professorial, usually by those who find my exclamations lengthy) and sharing knowledge. Thus, I have co-written two SAP Press books about ABAP development and engage frequently as a speaker at conferences such as SAP TechEd, SAP Inside Tracks, and SAP’s internal event DKOM (which I felt was a great honor).
I live in Bonn, Germany, where I was also born and raised. Bonn is a quiet little (population 300,000) university town that used to be the capital of Western Germany when the country was still divided into a Western and Eastern part and the cold war still raged between Washington and Moscow. Living in a small capital in the seventies and eighties was often exciting: State visits by such illustrious figures at Brezhnev, Gorbachev, and Reagan took place right in my stomping grounds, and one could meet well-known politicians in the street, or go to school with their children. Police cars circulated frequently in the better neighborhoods, and I remember the morning when a classmate reported that their politician neighbor had just been killed on his front lawn by terrorists.
Growing up, I was painfully aware that enough Warsaw Pact nuclear missiles were aimed at my home town to turn everything within a 100 km radius into a radioactive glass desert with five minutes’ notice, which is why the sound of sirens still terrifies me. (Later, I learned that NATO also had its missiles directed at us to stop a potential Russian invasion. Good missile coverage, we had.)
The previous section may or may not qualify for the “fun facts about your country” requirement for a Blog It Forward post. It’s a little macabre, but I find this aspect of my home town nevertheless interesting and worth sharing.
1. What's your favorite food?
Japanese cuisine, because it is so perfectly aesthetic, elegantly simple, purist, delicious and often exotic. Generally, I love discovering new and exotic foods, and like to challenge chefs from foreign countries to cook something they like but can’t usually offer because most people find it repulsive – think innards, raw stuff, slimy or gooey stuff. However, I stay away from insects and animal cruelty (although I don’t avoid industrially produced meat as consequently as I should).
2. Which 5 things do you absolutely want to achieve in life?
I don’t have a list, but there is in fact one super-corny thing I absolutely want to achieve. I believe that just as violence and terror are passed on from generation to generation, when you treat your children with love and respect, they will pass it on down the line, both to their own children and other people they encounter. In many years, when I’m long gone, I want there to be many people who treat themselves and their fellow people with the love and respect that I gave my kids and contemporaries during my lifetime. I want that to be my heritage.
3. Can you tell us something about your hobby?
I’m a fan of Scottish single malts, but today I should mention something else that has occupied me in the past five months. After putting on weight constantly for many years and, recently, moving from overweight to seriously overweight, this March I drew the line and, from one day to the next, made it my number one priority to lose a lot of weight.
I went to a gym and started doing daily intense workouts, mixing cardio and strength exercises. A few days later, I also began to diet very consequently and reduce my calories intake drastically. Currently, my routine is to jog for one hour (about 10 km) every single day, if time allows add some optional other workout elements, and end each day with a negative balance between 1,000 and 2,000 calories.
So far, I have lost 28 kg (62 lbs) and it really shows. A lot of people congratulate me and tell me how much better I look, but that is nothing compared to how much better I feel: It’s a whole new life! It’s also very nice that a lot of people tell me that my example inspires them to also tackle their excess weight.
I know the value of inspiration through example because I owe my success to Thomas Jung and Stephen Johannes, two fellow SCN Community Members and SAP Mentors who lost a lot of weight and showed me that it’s possible, and that being overweight is not a verdict I have to accept: Except in some cases, it simply requires a certain amount of energy, invested over a certain period of time, to burn the fat.
• You put in effort X and get weight reduction Y.
• If Y is too small, increase X.
• Even if Y is very small: Keep at it long enough and you can lose any amount of weight.
It speaks volumes about how selectively humans apply their cognitive abilities that it took me so long to figure that out.
1. What was your dream job as a kid?
As a child, I wanted to be an inventor and comic artist. I was constantly drawing designs for machines (which I never built for lack of mechanical skills and inclination) and funny sketches. Later, I dreamed of being an entrepreneur, Freudian psychoanalyst, philosopher, musician, and scientific researcher. I can’t draw a line between my dream job as a kid and my current dream job – many elements of those childhood and adolescence dream jobs are realized in my current position and will be in whatever comes next.
2. What is your favorite place in the world?
Definitely: idea space, preferably on a discovery tour with a good friend such as Marilyn.
3. Describe an instance when empathy in a project, development, collaboration, work experience, or community interaction turned a situation around (or should have).
It always does, doesn’t it? Isn’t that question like asking: Describe an instance when oxygen was conducive to (aerobic) life? Okay, okay, I don’t expect to get away with that, so here is a concrete example. Sorry for touting my own horn - the best example I can currently think of is one in which I turned a situation around by being empathetic.
At TechEd 2011 in Las Vegas, I gave a presentation about my experiences with SAP River. Ten minutes into the presentation, a lot of people were giving me blank stares. I understood that they couldn’t digest what I was explaining because it was too abstract and they needed a more tangible foundation for the high-level content.
I asked the audience: “I’m seeing a lot blank stares, would you like me to make this more tangible, perhaps with a live demo?” Everybody liked that suggestion, so I improvised a long live demo during which I showed how to build a small application while interactively gathering requirements, entering sample data provided by the audience, and even refactoring the application to incorporate new ideas from the audience. The audience participated very actively and the demo was accompanied by a good discussion. Somehow, I made it work well together with my slide deck and concluded the session on time. The session was a success and received good feedback.
I think the session was a success because I had a good antenna for the audience: By paying close attention to my audience, I was able to sense what they needed, and I was not afraid to deviate from my plan to give it to them. By spontaneously allowing for a highly interactive session style, I made everybody feel like they co-owned the session, which yielded valuable input from the participants. Thankfully, I have a knack for improvisation so the unplanned elements worked smoothly together with the original plan.
As a contrast, some of the worst sessions I have ever experienced where ones in which I felt that the speaker was not responding to signals from the audience telling them how to make it relevant, or in which they were otherwise apathetic against the audience’s needs or feelings. The same goes for all group and leadership situations, whether you’re working with five, fifty, or five thousand people: You have to pay attention to your opposite’s needs and feelings, recognize and respect them, because otherwise you’ll waste their time and, in the worst case, offend them.
I blog it forward to tobias.trapp, moya.watson, stephen.johannes, and ferenc.tabori:
I would like to ask them the following questions:
Please follow the Blog It Forward Chain in order to be updated when Tobias, Moya, Stephen, Ferenc, and other members of the community blog it forward. Also, please join the fun (see the original blog on how to do it)!
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