I Am An Activist – Tribute to Anita Roddick
April 21, 2008
I am a big fan and sometimes apologist for Anita Roddick. I am also an activist.
I have grown up with Anita’s strong voice and heart, strong actions, in my life. She is like an inspiring, very sympatico Aunty, always there, always putting the fire in my belly.
The day she died was a day I remember well. It was a shock that hit me in the guts. I had no idea Anita was even sick. I happened to be joining with Sarah James, a fellow activist, to begin a new initiative. We dedicated our meeting to her memory.
I dedicate large chunks of what I know and am to Anita.
I only met her once. She came to talk at a Business School I was teaching at in Australia. I hate allocated seating and, like my young daughter, usually sit right at the front if I can. I know it’s rude, I know it’s not fair. But as a kid, the older I got, the more I knew what I wanted to know. The more passionate I was about finding out about it. If (and I mean if) I went to class, I sat at the front. I worked hard. I listened.
So when Anita came to talk, I sat right next to her… where no-one else dared sit.
I wanted to see her hands. That’s what really mattered at the time. I thought I could see inside her soul and find out if she was true, and real and worthy of my sometimes teenage adoration, if I could only see her hands. At the risk of sounding like a tosser, I have to say – they were beautiful. They were the hands of a worker, but still somewhat refined. They had balance. I’m not saying she was perfect, or a saint by any means. She made tough decisions, was perceived to be in control of stuff that was way outside her control, but she did her best. She got under people’s skin, one way or another. The way she fanned her own fire sparked countless 1000s more to ignite. She made things happen. Good things.
When she died, I realised I would not be working with her – as I had planned . We moved to Brighton in 2005, birthplace of Body Shop store No. 1 and close to Anita.’s new base and mother. A place for activists. When friends asked “why are you moving back to the UK, to Brighton. What will you do?” I said casually, “Oh, I think I’m going to be working with Anita Roddick. Now she’s out of The Body Shop, I think she’ld be great fun to work with. She’s got doing loads of good stuff and someone’s bound to introduce us to each other. It’s destiny.” I was only partly tongue in cheek. Stranger things have happened, and she did live just down the road – and we do have friends in common.
Alas, it was not to be. In one sense. In another, we are all working together – towards similar goals, wherever we are. Social justice, sustainability of life on earth, human and animal rights. The work needs doing, so we unite to do it. With or without Anita, her spiritual forebears or descendants. We are one point in the continuum, all linked going through time and space. We are not alone. There is bamboo.
Here are some tributes given during the I Am An Activist event on 23 October 2007, when “thousands of thinkers, artists, activists, and other heroic saboteurs of the status quo gathered to celebrate the remarkable life and legacy of Dame Anita Roddick.”
“[Anita was] the human equivalent of a flag, a claxon, a torch, a flare, an alarm clock. … Uncompromising, inspiring and visionary, an active world citizen, but still funny, sexy, and overflowing.”
Alan Rickman, actor and activist
“Beethoven said, ‘If it comes from the heart, it goes to the heart.’ That quote speaks volumes about my mum. I believe it is the reason my mum touched so many people. Whether you agreed with her or not, or whether you liked her or not, the one thing that is really non-negotiable, the one thing that is not up for discussion, is that all she did as a parent or as an activist, it really all did come from the heart.”
Justine Roddick
My mother treated life like each day was her last, and this gave her the permission for incredible bravery. … Tonight I am personally pledging that I Am An Activist, and within that, I also will have a lot of fun, and I also will be silly. I will not be polite and I will never, ever, ask for permission.
Sam Roddick
“Many have the resources Anita had, but few have the moral fortitude to use those resources to achieve the only truly important goal of social and environmental sustainability.”
Herman Wallace, member of the Angola 3 Louisiana State Penitentiary, Angola
“She was, in my opinion, one of the world’s greatest communicators.”
Adrian Bellamy, Chairman of The Body Shop
“Watch and listen to figures from Amnesty International, Greenpeace, Reprieve, The Body Shop, as well as family and close friends, as they laugh and cry and ultimately take to the streets to launch a new movement in activism inspired by the one and only Anita Roddick.”
DVD of the I Am An Activist event available here at, what was, Anita’s blog.
Reposted from the community blog at Authentic Blogging’s online network. All activists welcome to join.
I think, you think, we create (better) together
“We’re here to make a positive difference through blogging – and other social media – for ourselves, for our organisations, for others.”
New dates for Fresh Writing (plus spring tips)
March 28, 2008
Spring has come and it’s time for even fresher writing!
Here are the dates for the next series of our Fresh Writing Classes at The Werks.
Tuesdays 10.30 – 12.30
1 April
CANCELLED DUE TO NEAR DEATH EXPERIENCE
22 April
6 May
20 May
Put them in your diaries now if you have a positive intention to come and learn / create / express / play.
More information about the classes here.
To celebrate the fresh new season – three top tips for improving your writing & blogging… and expanding your mind…
1. Watch your verbs
Verbs are (remember!?) “doing words”. They are the action of your sentences. If you want your writing to jump from the page, give it legs. Think about your verbs. Use new ones. Take risks, combine them in new ways with your nouns (”naming words”). Experiment. Wake people up. Surprise them.
Here is a list to play with, inspired by Spring…
Sow
Melt
Hatch
Thaw
Grow
Radiate
Tweet
Explode
Shoot
Create
Use them in unlikely ways and surprise yourself. Thaw those frozen fingers. Explode onto the page. Or just tweet a little.
2. Stay alert with new ideas
The wonders of modern tech. Register a Google Alert for a key word expression that relates to your work / passion / writing / life. One of mine is “authentic blogging”. I get sent blog posts from all around the world that use these two key words together. I am forever finding relevant, inspiring new material to write/blog about.
Give it a try. Register here and follow the prompts.
It’s easier than you think.
3. You Think, I Think, We Think (Better) Together
Last thing is… you just gotta watch this clip… if you are remotely interested in creativity and innovation. Yum.
http://authenticblogging.com/2008/03/26/you-think-i-think-we-think-better-together/
Better still, buy the book. “We Think” by Charles Leadbetter.
Reap what you sow.
Hope to see you some Tuesday.
Libby
PS – Happy to come into organisations and do affordable bespoke sessions.
Please forward to anyone interested, with many thanks
More posts on writing to help get your words flowing…
You Think, I Think, We Think (Better) Together
March 26, 2008
Been reading reviews about Charles Leadbetter’s book We Think all over the place. Got to get my hands on a copy sooon (come on Rosie, hand it over).
If anyone is trying to get their heads around Web 2.0, social media, new paradigm thinking and all that claptrap – get a look at this. Lovely simple animation. I’m going to use it at the beginning of all my courses. Free event coming up soon to give people a taste of it all. Watch this space.
Guardian review here (including Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations by Clay Shirky) which also looks reeal good.
Shame The Big Issue review isn’t available online. A different and very valid take on things.
No wonder most journalist’s I meet are annoyed with blogging and What’s Going On with we-think.
No wonder I am compelled to work in and support this space.
So glad Rosie Sherry is in it with me (thanks for the video).
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qiP79vYsfbo&hl=en]
Newbies Guide to Blogging
February 26, 2008
Nice simple, practical guide to getting you blogging right from Dustin Wax at the very useful lifehack.org. Mainly for individuals but the principles are the same for enterprises and others.
Follow the links to explore your own context and see the list at the end to extend your learning.
Highly recommended!
Feedback from Fresh Writing classes
February 14, 2008
Thanks again to folk from our Fresh Writing classes for bloggers and non-bloggers alike. But watch out, we might have you all blogging soon. In the meantime, it’s an honour to be helping you get your words and ideas flowing. Really impressed with what you are all coming up with and the impact this is having in your lives.
Games, exercises, tips to make writing easier and more fun, strategic thinking on audience and the writers/bloggers life. Even nice biscuits and a game you’ll all love called Two Bob (or a Pebble) Up Your ‘Ort Sport. (No photos taken fortunately… you had to be there).
More about the writing classes here…
“Fun, interesting and worthwhile – personally and professionally. I’m glad I took time out of a lousy schedule to do this class. Now I can rite reel good.”
“It’s been easier to write. I’m jotting down ideas again and having more of them. It’s the creative convalescence, soon I’ll be back at full strength.”
“Did first workshop on the Tuesday. Signed up as a co-worker at The Werks to give me a place to go write. Wrote a 10 minute play that Thursday & Friday & submitted it to a competition on the Monday. First thing I’ld written in years. All good.”
“I’ve been flying since the first session. A real release.”
Flexible, affordable, easy transport, what’s stopping you? We all need to express ourselves better in life… and be seen and heard.
Register on Upcoming and see who else is watching/coming, get in touch with Libby if you want to know anything, or just turn up on the day.
Look forward to sharing the magic of your words with you. The techniques we use are so immediate and such fun that you will surprise even yourself with what you are capable of, and how this can translate into your daily life and work expression.
No need to be afraid. Everyone is equal in these sessions and you do not have to read what you have written unless you want to. The inner critic or ferocious editor (find out more in the e-book here) takes a break during most sessions, infact, it is only welcome when being constructive. If none of this makes sense or you are in any doubt, call for a gentle chat with me. It is a very natural thing to have some fear about writing. It is wonderful to overcome it.
Bestest – Libby
More posts on writing to help get your words flowing…
Case Studies & Styles of Blogs
November 20, 2007
Here is a helpful take by a PR agency on the 25 main styles of blog. Each style has a case study to check out too.
What they don’t say is that, you can of course use a combination of styles and there are many new forms emerging all the time. Take it to the edge. Be you. That’s all I want to say right now. And as Shel Israel dropped into say on a previous post:
“In Naked Conversations, as I recall, we emphasized that short blogs were more popular and that bloggers who posted brief articles and then posted often, would score well in rankings. We certainly did not intend to say what blogs were MEANT to be. They are meant to be whatever the author chooses them to be.”
Every blog has it’s upside and downside, it’s pros and cons. Each one is unique, hopefully, as it’s creator/s. There’s no magic formula, despite the way these PR folk are trying to package it.
You’ve just got to blog, surf, listen and engage with the blogosphere – and let it all emerge. It’s as simple and as difficult as that. You’ve got to listen to yourself. Hmm, I think I’ve said that before somewhere… ;-)
[slideshare id=37589&doc=the-25-basic-styles-of-blogging-and-when-to-use-each-one-14243&w=425]
Finding your place in the blogosphere
November 6, 2007
I love the way everyone finds their niche, their home, their place in the blogosphere.
Today’s example of a person finding themself with blogging, and maybe even making a business out of it. Very American and challenging for me in some ways, but passionate and doing it.
I like the idea of a Week of Positive Blogging. Maybe it should be balanced with a good week’s worth of whinging too?
Libby
Free E-Book on the Essence of Authentic Blogging
October 13, 2007
Here’s a living document I prepared for our first three groups of budding bloggers. I feel a collaborative book coming on.
Not sure I see myself in the same light as the company I am keeping in this collection, but some wonderful people to be gaining inspiration from all the same. David Bohm, Carl Rogers, Carl Jung, Natalie Goldberg, Julia Cameron, The Cluetrain folk, Scoble, Meerman Scott (in some order of importance).
We see this as essential reading for anyone on a quest for personal and professional growth through blogging, but it is a very first draft. Stay tuned for more…
Have a read and let me know which quotes resonate most for you…
FREE E-BOOK on the Essence of Authentic Blogging
More posts on writing to help get your words flowing…
Baby / family blogs
September 28, 2007
In about 1997 we started working on Global Friends Websites. Way before it’s time. Will post more about that as an anecdote soon. For now, just know that one of the markets for the £10 websites was new parents wanting to share baby photos etc. In so many ways we were anticipating what has since happening. But it’s so often about timing isn’t it. Anyway, here we have the latest addition in our family. Kirby James Gargett… growing up live, in Perth and online. We can share his adventures here. Very interesting to see where things have gone. There are a zillion different examples of baby blogs out there, so we’ll just keep it close to home for now…
Age no barrier to blogging
September 26, 2007
A quick note about this very special lady (95 years old and going strong) and the grandson that empowered her. What a team! We would love to see older people blogging, capturing and sharing their wisdom for the ages, for the world, combating isolation, making new connections, feeling valued.
The same things apply at any age don’t they?




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