10 a.m. – Waiting for TEDx to start, in basement auditorium at Knight Theater, looking at psychedelic floral video displays in darkened auditorium. Architect Tom Low of the Charlotte Duany Plater–Zyberk Audience and founder of Civic by Design is pacing up front along with Manoj Kesavan, another local architect who’s one of the TEDx Charlotte organizers. We’re supposed to be learning about and experiencing innovative ideas, I think.
I should probably have read the material better. But this has been a week of 11- and 12-hour workdays. This morning before heading here I had to set out sprinklers for our newly re-seeded lawn, clean up last night’s dirty kitchen, make breakfast, fix a torn hem on my slacks, emails a friend who’s about to be unreachable, to set up the time and place for a lunch date, etc. etc. It reminds me of something I read recently, attributed to Jane Jacobs: An efficient city can’t be an innovative city. I conclude this applies to personal lives, too. Too many tasks, duties and to-do-list work eats away at the time your brain needs to float free.
So I wonder: Have the past decades of workplace pressure for increased “productivity” – which means fewer workers, more work, faster work, longer workweeks, constant availability to the office – has all that had an effect on U.S. innovation?