Description
The piece you might be missing as you try to build new things and all your efforts for making change, might actually be deliberately blowing things up.
Hey, it’s Andrew, and this is Safety on Tap.
Since you're listening in, you must be a leader wanting to grow yourself and drastically improve health and safety along the way. Welcome to you, you're in the right place. If this is your first time listening in, thanks for joining us and well done for trying something different to improve! And of course welcome back to all of you wonderful regular listeners.
"Closing time, open all the doors and let you out into the world"
The song Closing Time by Semisonic is one of those classic tunes of my transition into adulthood.
"Closing time, one last call for alcohol
So, finish your whiskey or beer
Closing time, you don't have to go home
But you can't stay here"
After it was released in 1998 it was pretty common that this song was the very last song played in the bar or pub before the lights got turned back on and everyone had to leave.
"So gather up your jackets, move into the exits,
I hope you have found your friends
Closing time, every new beginning
comes from some other beginnings end"
It turns out that this anthem of the very late night party people had nothing to do with going out of drinking, or even going home.
The whole song is a metaphor for the birth of a child. Lead singer Dan Wilson was soon to become a father as he was writing this song, and the literal meaning of the last song in fact came to be a much deeper insight into the realities of getting bounced from the womb into the world.
Are we doing enough? Is the fundamental question of H&S governance. And the answer, it seems at least in New Zealand, is largely not one given with confidence. And beyond NZ, the answer sometimes seems vague, unclear, or uncertain. Governance arguably is the lynchpin around which all health...
Published 07/31/24
This is a conversation about a really important mission to improve health and safety. It's also about extreme difficulty, persistence, and how being professional might actually mean straying far outside your one specific professional domain.
Hey, it’s Andrew, and this is Safety on Tap.
...
Published 05/30/24