Posts Tagged 'South Africa'

In the lap of luxury

The hotel where I have stayed nearly every time that I was here in the past is located on a small square surrounded by terraces of 5 restaurants and a Starbucks. All these places can also be accessed from inside a medium sized covered mall as well. The mall has, among other things, several large supermarkets, many small clothing boutiques, home stores, some phone stores, hair and nail spaces, banks and ATMs and a drugstore. 

I sat on one of those restaurant terraces for lunch while waiting for my room to be ready, with temperatures in the upper 70s enjoying a lovely lunch and, of course, a nice glass of cool South African Sauvignon Blanc.  Lunch was about 13 dollars (with tip). The prices here are low compared to the US,  especially the cost of a glass of wine. 

My room turned out to be a 2-room apartment. It has a large living room, with on one side a fully equipped kitchenette. I could cook and serve a meal for 4 people.  There is even a washer and a dryer that I don’t even have to operate myself. The cleaning lady runs it for me three days a week. The large bedroom has a king size bed and, like the living room, a very large TV, a bathroom with a shower and an enormous bathtub I wouldn’t dare to fill.

I was able to receive my mentor coach N. in style. She lives in Pretoria. I have known her (on a screen  only) since 2019. I had watched her coaching demos and decided I wanted to get this amazing woman better. She has since been my teacher in an Ubuntu coaching course and last fall I engaged her as my mentor coach. This was our one (and only) live session of six. We made a date for dinner.

I thought that the large apartment was a mistake. In the past I had stayed in a regular room with none of those luxuries, but comfortable nevertheless for a single person. It was as good as an upgrade to first class on an intercontinental flight (which never happens). But this had happened, and it wasn’t a mistake. Consultants who stay more than a week are given an apartment so that they don’t have to take all their meals in a restaurant. And so, I started my week in my bachelorette apartment. 

Transition

On Saturday evening I said goodbye to Sita and her family for their long trip home. I thought of them in their cramped economy class seats while I had an enormous king size bed all to myself – better than first class.

On the morning of my departure to Jo’burg I enjoyed a solitary breakfast that Saffi and Faro would have loved: a machine that made tiny pancakes by simply pushing an ‘OK’ button, a dish full of whipped cream that was constantly being refilled, a syrup dripper and all the other things that they like for breakfast.  

On the website the hotel did not look attractive so I had reserved an hotel at the Capetown waterfront, but the logistics of dropping off cars and getting ready for winter made an airport hotel a better choice. The hotel surpassed my expectations. The young gentleman at the reception desk, after I mentioned my web impression, said he would tell the marketing people, implying that they don’t do their job (“they are just walking around”). Maybe they should talk with their guests.

The hotel is super sustainable-economy conscious, even the salt and pepper shakers (made from 100% recycled plastics, refillable, and recyclable again). The toilets flush with grey water, the bathtub has a sign that says that filling a bath would deprive society of 320 glasses of water which made me wonder why they even bothered to put in a bathtub, you get points for using fewer pillows and towels.

Now the work begins. I turned my vacation setting off and started to prepare for the next 10 days of work that involve both individual coaching, team coaching and who knows what other surprises await me. It will also be a time to reconnect with old friends, people I haven’t seen since my last trip three and a half years ago, when I made three trips here in 2019, the last one in November 2019 with Axel.

I landed in Jo’burg early afternoon and got my first chance to use my new Chinese smartphone which I bought in a mall in Noordhoek for 50 USD. It is rather slow and I should probably have bought the 10 USD flip phone because I only want the phone for local calls so people don’t have to call the US to reach me.

Of course I hadn’t fixed the settings. I had to get re-adjusted to using an Android phone. The driver Larry was calling me and looking for me but I didn’t hear the call. When I finally managed to call him he was standing right in back of me.

Load shedding, the turning off of the power grid was bad enough in Capetown (stage 2, which means two hours of no electricity several times per 24 hours), but here in the Jo’burg and Pretoria area it is worse: stage 6, meaning no electricity for 6 hours on end.

I observed the drivers navigate traffic light not working for hours because of load shedding. Pretoria is a big city. It is amazing how people manage. They are polite to each other and let some lanes go first and then ease into traffic and others stop. I tried to imagine big cities in the US without traffic lights and wonder whether people would be this gentle with each other.

And all this load shedding in a country that has tons of natural energy resources: wind, sun and water. When I ask why these free resources are not used. People don’t want me to ask that question because it is all about fraud, people at high places skimming off monies from all the subsidies. There is an area here where most of the embassies and senior government officials live. It is heavily guarded and you have to pass through a gate. In this area, I am told, there is no load shedding. Go figure.

Vacation

I learned yet another perspective on the Trojan war, this time from Patroclus. He was the one disguised as Achilles and killed by Hector. Patroclus was Achilles’ lover. He watched Achilles tumble down from his elevated status, illustrating once more that pride comes before the fall. It is a story about hubris, and men with big egos. This story too is expertly told by by a ‘classica,’ Madeleine Miller (song of Achilles, who also wrote Circe). It’s a story of men again, though there are a few women in supporting roles, Helen, of course, Briseis, the Trojan captive who became a pawn in ego tussles between Agamemnon and Achilles, and Thetis, a minor goddess who bore Achilles after having been ravaged by his dad. More lust, more revenge, more (much more) bloodshed, prophecies and Gods who can override anything mortals think they can do.

I am done with the Greeks for now. I have adventured further east to learn about Salman Rushdie’s Victory City. There is more about hubris, ego, wise and not so wise men and women, magic, and the grand mystery of life. It is another vacation book that will hopefully see me through the long ride home two weeks from now.

I left for South Africa less than a week ago, with my son-in-law and two grandchildren.  It is their first African adventure. We are staying in a rather posh area that has little to do with most of the rest of Africa.  I hope there will be more, and different facets of the continent for them to explore later when they are older. 

Today they went to a private game reserve about 3 hours east of where we are staying.  I decided to stay home and take advantage of being in the Western Cape to see some old friends, two from my student years in Leiden and one from my early years at MSH.

The week went by fast. There is so much to see and to do that we made only one trip to Capetown for a day at the waterfront;  the aquarium for the kids and their parents and for me a day with friends and a visit to the Museum of Modern African Art. 

Tomorrow will be their last full day before they leave to return to winter on Saturday. I expect they will choose to spend that last summer day at one of the many gorgeous beaches down here.

Walking for me is becoming increasingly problematic; the left ankle with shooting pains that can last through the night, not to speak of the right knee. At least the latter can be replaced with a new one in a couple of months; the ankle cannot. 

Next week I will be in Pretoria for 10 days of paid work before heading home on the last day of the month.

Abundance

I don’t use Facebook much these days. I learned about all the devious ways that people with bad intentions ingratiate themselves with us first, so we share their posts and then the algorithms kick in. No more sharing or liking posts I don’t know the provenance of. I now mostly use FB to tell people where I am headed next in case someone I know is there too.

Such was the case during our South Africa trip. I was alerted by the daughter of good friends that her parents were in their South African home near Cape Town. A short side trip to Cape Town was already in our plans, after I finished my work, and this was even better. 

We were picked up at the airport and taken on a tour. First to a lovely restaurant built around trees with a wonderful view of pristine beaches and the ocean with it’s cold water coming all the way from the Antarctica.  We then drove the famous Chapman’s Peak road going north along the water’s edge and watching the Fynbos in all of its spring glory. At a pull-out overlooking HoutBay the second bottle of wine was brought out and we sipped a pink bubbly watching the bay and listening to stories about why it was called that way, and about Fynbos and about all sorts of other fascinating things to know about this part of the world.

Our friends know much about the history, fauna and flora of the Cape area which added a lot to the experience of driving northeast from Cape Town. We traversed the mountains through a tunnel and thought about the people with their covered wagons looking for a way over. The descent in the valley was our first peak at the ubiquitous vineyards, planted all these hundreds of years ago by people with a vision and a great tolerance for risk. Many of them my people (with Dutch DNA) as one of my colleagues said – stubborn like the Dutch, God-fearing and thumbing their noses at officialdom. 

We spent three days at our friends’ lovely house they built on the side of a hill overlooking, far in the distance, the vibrant green of vineyards in spring and the scraggly mountains behind and in front of them – giving them two amazing views a day of the sun coming up over and then setting behind the mountains in a burst of pink, rose, mauve, orange, and purple sunrises and sunsets.

And then there were always the best wines, which they know a lot about and are rather picky about. A cellar full of bottles for everyday and special occasions, a swimming pool to cool off in at the end of a warm and dusty day. Again, with wine: a glass of cool rosé, a rosé pool party, with a small drone taking pictures of us in our bliss.We are heading home for Thanksgiving in a day, spending our last night on the continent in a hipster Cape Town hotel. There is much to be grateful about.

created by dji camera

Travel for two

The ideas I read about in the plane to South Africa worked themselves nicely into a series of just-in-time agendas that came together, as I had asked the universe to do. We talked, we simulated, we extracted lessons during a variety of exercises that one can never do at work. I got to know people better, and they me; there is more trust now, which helps. People are more willing to make a trust fall alongside me.

While I was at work Axel explored Jo’burg, the art scene, musea and places to eat and have coffee. He had to figure out the transportation system and was warned many times (don’t go there by bus, don’t walk here, to get too close to the train station in an Uber, etc.). We are grateful that, back home, we are living in a place that does not require gates, razor wire, double locks, and so many warnings about safety.  

With Christmas coming up (preceded by Black Friday, successfully copied here), people need lots of money. We got scammed at the ATM which allowed the scammer to buy something at Gadgets for 700 USD, probably a drone. Luckily my bank in the US is reimbursing me for the loss. Bad luck for me (at least at the moment, being scammed is a very unpleasant experience as I felt so stupid) and good luck for the guy who is now bringing back something amazing to his family. Although grateful that, in the end, the loss is not mine. When I came for my new bank card, the ATM folks at the bank told me that they were amazed this was only the first time for me, as they know about my travels (which I call in before each trip to alert them). 

Coming home to our apartment at the end of the day, Axel directed us to yet another great restaurant and selected our wine. I am used to come to my hotel room tired and hungry and either ordering room service or sit by myself in a nearby restaurant, and maybe ordering one glass of wine. This was so much better. I think I can get used to hin traveling with me, at least to places like South Africa.

Journeys

This is probably the last trip of the year, unless I decide to accompany Sita and Axel to Paris early December for a meeting of the Valueweb that both are members of. Or I go to Holland to visit my Irish twin brother who has been fighting multiple staph infections in a hospital in Holland. Or I go to India to visit my team in Gujarat to play and work a little, and keep pushing the string that is our proposal for working with the department of urban development in UP.  All sorts of possibilities!

Yesterday (today? Last night?) we arrived in Jo’burg after the now familiar long flight from Atlanta. Aside from a few minor zigzags halfway through the trip, smack in the middle of the vast Atlantic ocean due to string headwinds, the flight was smooth. I had requested an upgrade to B-class but didn’t get it and so I folded myself in Delta Comfort seat 33D, next to a nice young man from Virginia who sets up call centers in South Africa (yes, he had seen ‘Outsource’). We chatted for a couple of hundred miles and then he fell asleep and I did not.

Axel sat 6 rows behind me on the other side of the plane and lucked out – an empty seat between him and a young man by the window who slept the whole way huddled over his tray table.

I read one book and then listened to another by the same author who I had just gotten to know trough a webinar on Thursday. Her approach (Cy Wakeman’s reality-based leadership), smashed a good part of my collection of taken-for-granted management and leadership beliefs. I loved her challenges to conventional wisdom, especially since they are backed up by research and resonated with my experiences, especially my recent facilitation experience in South Africa. It was a timely discovery as my proposed design got kind of thrown out the window and I found myself traveling to South Africa with empty hands/head as to what I was going to do. 

I am slated to facilitate 5 retreats this week, three half day retreats and two whole days. The first one is on Monday and will be more of a design conversation as there is no agenda – only a list of topics. Searching for some way to turn the list of topics into a coherent agenda, the universe came to my rescue and put Cy Wakeman on my path. I will propose her ideas and see where we go from there. It’s a journey. I may propose a road trip as the central metaphor for all of the retreats this week.

We landed in summer (85F), 7 hours ahead of the wintry cold day of departure. In the olden days this would have been a change of enormous proportions (imagine a 6 week voyage over stormy seas and no land in sight for weeks on end). But now it’s a cinch and we take it all in stride. It’s an important perspective to hold as we will be talking a lot about change this week (but not about change management, as that is one of the concepts that I have now jettisoned).

We are lodged in a low rise apartment complex that is around the corner of a number of restaurants, their terraces filled with people enjoying wine and good food. Axel is in heaven: good wine and a nice steak with Malagasy pepper sauce. I was also in heaven with a well prepared steak tartare and a nice glass of South African Sauvignon blanc, something we rarely get in the US where New Zealand dominates that Sauvignon. Although very tired (and alcohol not usually a good idea), we ordered the most expensive bottle of red wine (US$20), thinking we would each have a glass and then take the bottle home.  We ended up drinking the whole thing, managed to walk in a straight line to our apartment, just meters away.  And then I collapsed, to wake up in the middle of the night and write.

Attunement

A trip to South Africa took 7 days, nearly half of which was in transit. It’s one of those endless flights (from Atlanta to Johannesburg), where you have to remind yourself that the flight will eventually end. I tried to get myself upgraded on the way out there (failed), but succeeded on the wat home. The return flight was nearly 16 hours, two hours longer than the outbound one. Still, even in B-class the flight seemed endless.

I worked for just over a day with a dis-attuned team. I like the word dis-attuned better than all the other labels (dysfunctional disarrayed, problematic, toxic), because there is the promise of music in the word. Dis-attuned suggests that the team is not in harmony, each playing their own tune. During interviews with each before my trip I explored what music they were trying to make, what was on the sheet music in front of them. Once I knew, I could understand the dis-attunement. They were playing altogether different tunes. No wonder the melody didn’t come through.

The retreat was partially about the team getting its work done and partically about its leadership, collectively and individually. I have simplified my definition of leadership – a leader is simply an aware human being. Being aware applies as much to myself as to the other. It means that we can catch ourselves when our intent and impact don’t match. Being aware means that we recognize when we are sabotaging ourselves, when our egos get in the way. Being aware also means that we see the humanity in the other, behind the labels, judgments, professional persona, representative of this or that class/tribe/organization/culture, etc.  

Working on all this is how we spent the day and a quarter. When I left to fly home, on the interminable long flight to Atlanta, then Boston, the team was at least able to hear the tunes the others were playing, not quite attuned, but a little bit closer.

Good intentions

Saturday was another workday, our last, but it kept us busy in meetings until it was time to go to the airport to catch my flight to Johannesburg. I kept telling myself that once I landed I would have time to finish my notes, turning my scribbles in the training handbooks into notes usable for the session authors. But once there I realized that transcribing scribbles into notes is tedious and detail work I didn’t have the energy for. I postponed the task once more with the intention of finishing the job in Madagascar before my next assignment would start on Monday.

The flight from Johannesburg to Antananarivo is only a short 3 hours but between getting up at 7:30AM and arriving at 6PM at my hotel in Tana (5PM South African time), I took me an entire day.

The quiet Sunday afternoon I had imagined myself sitting on a terrace with a cup of tea, finishing my work, didn’t materialize because a glitch in Kenya Airways baggage handling left me waiting for a colleague for two hours. I took the taxi I could have taken 2 hours earlier and arrived in the dark.

To my great surprise I arrived at the same time as two ICRC staff members with whom I have shared many weeks of training in Addis, Lomé, Bangkok and Dar es Salaam. Quelle coincidence! We had a nice dinner together, longer than if I would have eaten alone, and thus the final slug to complete my assignments from Capetown made for yet another late night, hopefully my last.

Testing – round 2

I joined the rest of my team in sunny Stellenbosch on Sunday morning and reviewed the materials for the second pilot of the training of trainers of the WHO Wheelchair Service Training packages.  Participants began to trickle in from Tanzania, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Malawi, Burkina, Jordan, Canada and the US; twelve participants to learn how to train managers of rehabilitation services to either start, improve and/or expand wheelchair services.  Another group of nine learned to become trainers of intermediate wheelchair services (those that are for people whose bodies need to be supported in a wheelchair).

I joined my co-observer, the same as in Nairobi a few months ago, to see whether the improvements we had made after the first pilot, some months ago, were indeed improvements. We had two new trainers to deliver the package as per our instructions and it was them we were observing; one trainer from South Africa and another from Zimbabwe. It was a fabulous team of trainers and, by and large, of participants.

The training took place at the Western Cape Rehabilitation Centre, requiring a daily 45 minute shuttle between Stellenbosch and the center. Since it is located at the edge of Capetown in an area where one should not drive after dark, we were under considerable pressure to end the packed days in time so that we could debrief with the trainers and observers and share our learnings. We never managed to get out before dark.

As a result our days were very long, often arriving back at the hotel at 8PM or sometimes even later, having left the hotel in the morning at 7AM . After the two days of core training participants were given assignments to try out sessions from the management training to get a taste for the material and demonstrate the concepts taught the first two days.

They were quite anxious about the practice sessions. We offered to be available after hours, which sometimes meant till 10:30PM. Then there was the requirement, for us observers, to write our daily observation notes about each of the sessions every evening. I was always too tired, pushing the task ahead of me. And so the intense and long days from the previous week continued. When I filled in my timesheet for the two weeks (New York and Capetown) I had clocked 170 hours in a two week period that demands only 80 hours.

Imperfections

The honeymoon suite turns out to have a few flaws. Nothing is perfect for long – the divorce rates are testimony to this. The beautiful bathroom stinks. It smells like sewage but I suppose it could be the zebra poops outside my window. The smell hangs thickly and sickly in the air. The espresso machine runs until the reservoir is empty and then some. This means my cup flows over with thin diluted coffee that is not worth drinking. The only way I can stop the machine is to turn it off. All these are of course small things that don’t take away the joy of being with a great group of people in a great place.

Last night the corporate teambuilders organized a game show kind of event that got everyone pumped up. The expectations aboout bonding and integrating from the participants are being realized. I watched and marveled at the energy that our teambuilders created.

Over dinner we reviewed our progress and the plans for the next day; we made some small changes, reviewed the time budget and relaxed.

While I was asleep dreaming about going into the coal mines (undoubtedly brought on by the gumboot dancing), the rest of my family exchanged pictures of their artistic creations and are learning, I am sure, about imperfections in a more joyful way. Axel is learning how to paint on silk, Tessa has made her first ring in a jewelry making class and Sita is learning how to be a potter. I am also creating something but it is less tangible. After a while I also need the more tangible kind ,and am looking forward to pick up my knitting needles in a month.


December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  

Categories

Blog Stats

  • 136,980 hits

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 76 other subscribers