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WiFi Madness

By helen@bannigan.com • April 9, 2014 • Hong Kong
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Life without WiFi?

Inconceivable!

How could anyone possibly live without WiFi?!

You may have heard of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, which is a handy tool to use during cultural training sessions to explore what motivates us and to depict the complexities of moving to a new country.

Love this twist of adding WiFi as a fundamental need and motivator!

Maslows theory revisted

Very briefly, Maslow felt like there were certain basic needs that we have to have met before we can even think about other needs.

On the bottom are physiological needs like food and water – the survival mode necessities to keep us alive. The second level is safety; then comes family and love; then self-esteem; and the top level is self-actualization. This is where we create and do things because it’s what we want to do.

But some humorous soul (humor, incidentally, being a key factor in enjoying success during our international assignments) – decided to add WiFi to the basic survival necessity. Sometimes it really does feel that way, doesn’t it?

got_wifi_coffee_mugs-r814b26f443e14844b4acaadefd7240ab_x7j1z_8byvr_512

Now in our 7th month in Hong Kong – out in the “suburbs” of Sai Kung – we STILL don’t have internet hooked up. We’re making do with cell phone hotspots, a USB broadband device, and dismal, spotty connection.

As I work from home (when I’m not on the road traveling), this is clearly not ideal.

he has wifi

But while we still hold out hopes that PCCW will connect us one fine day, I’m finding the whole experience to be an exercise in patience and letting go. When the internet goes down, I take a 15-minute walk. If I’m up against deadlines, I go to the local cafe and get it done. Last week when I had to do that, I sat next to a neighbor I had never met — and she is now a client of mine!

After 7 months I’m mostly thriving in Maslow’s self-actualization mode (though I hasten to note previous moves took substantially longer to get there and I still roam up and down the scale.)

Some days I feel like the WiFi IS one of the basic survival needs, as clients in multiple time zones scream for attention and presentation deadlines loom.

But then I take a deep breath, get creative to produce what’s required, and appreciate that occasional life – and work – without WiFi is not only do-able but even desirable to be effective, productive, and fulfilled.


stressfree

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About the Author

helen@bannigan.com

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    WELCOME HOME.

    WELCOME HOME.
    Seven countries. Forty-odd years of packing boxes, learning new currencies and languages, getting things gloriously wrong, and figuring it out anyway. After all that, I've come to believe that home isn't a place — it's a feeling you learn to carry with you, and occasionally stumble into somewhere unexpected. Consider this one of those places. This blog is where I think out loud about culture, identity, leadership, and the endlessly entertaining business of being human across borders. Pull up a chair. Put your feet up. Disagree with me. Share what resonates. That's the whole point. And if somewhere along the way you find yourself wondering whether I might be useful to you — whether that's helping your team actually work across cultures rather than just survive them, speaking at your next leadership event, or joining us for something altogether different at our 17th-century palazzo in the Sabine Hills of Italy — the door is open. It usually is. No hard sell. Just a warm welcome. And perhaps a cup of tea. Come find me: helen@bannigan.com · bannigan.com Curious what Executive Cultural Coaching actually means in practice? Scroll down — I promise it's more interesting than it sounds.
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