“DAT NOT Good So”.

“Dat good so” was the comment made by someone with whom I was working.  The comment resonated with me for days after because it aptly captured an attitude of our people.  The waitress in a restaurant gives you poor service and “Dat good so”.  The cleaner continues to mop with black water and “Dat good so”.  The hospital spends two hours searching for your file and “Dat good so”.  This comment occupied my mind to the extent that I began observing situations and thinking “Dat good so”.  So obsessed was I that I have concluded that the newest ailment afflicting our entire society is “Dat good so”.

What could be the possible causes of such an ailment?  Some people’s default position is the minimum effort.  For others, it is doing whatever they think they can get away with and  for many others, they simply do not care.  Whatever the motivation, leadership has a responsibility to communicate  a different refrain.  Leadership must communicate “Dat NOT good so”.
How do we begin to communicate “Dat NOT good so”?  Consequence Management is a good place to start and it is not limited to formal organizations.  Wherever we operate, it is necessary to communicate that there are consequences to our actions, both negative and positive and “Dat NOT good so”.
Alongside the implementation of consequences it is necessary to re-visit some basic standards of operations.  Say the word standard and a popular mental association is the painted stick which masqueraders carry on Carnival Days.  This frivolous mental image is supported by our ambiguous response to societal rules at all levels.
On a personal level, we all have to determine the standards by which we operate and hold fast to them.  It means making tough decisions, embracing the concept of delayed gratification while ensuring that standards are upheld or consequences felt.
On a societal level, leadership must communicate their dedication to the maintenance of standards.  It might be a simple act of honouring agreements. If our leaders cannot honour their agreements then the messages are clear – get away with whatever you can and we’ll wiggle out of it somehow.  There seems to be a high tolerance for creating “wiggle room”.  It is with little transgressions that we begin the slide into the “Dat good so” syndrome.
Citizens are looking out for the signals which communicate that we share some common values such as trust, good behaviour, fairness,  kindness, respect and a host of other adjectives.
The reality is that there is a feeling or sense that these principles have little currency in  today’s world.
Maybe the time has come to mount a public campaign to define these “grey” words and work through some common understandings.  What I’m suggesting is not sexy and will not provide any immediate returns.  It certainly is of little “vote getting” value but it will have a fundamental, lasting impact on future generations.
My mind goes back to my student days at UWI, St. Augustine and the following quote from French Sociologist Émile Durkheim:
“When mores are sufficient, laws are unnecessary; when mores are insufficient, laws are unenforceable.”
What we experience on a daily basis is the absence of mores.  Even worse, there is no attempt to figure out what those mores could be.  No one has communicated to me that these are the morally binding customs of the Trinidadian or these are the habits and manners expected across the board.
Instead we live with the legalistic interpretations about why a particular extradition attempt failed.  Or why the act of resignation has put an end to clarifying whether or not a person was guilty.  And there are scores of other situations where the standards of behaviour are grey.
The recent spate of road fatalities is an example of the extent to which our laws are  becoming unenforceable.  There is a collective lamentation about the extent to which the laws of the road are ignored and I see no sustained effort to ensure that the laws are upheld.  The person who broke the traffic light probably began by breaking the major road.
Communication is the engine of behaviour change and in order to counteract the attitude of “Dat good so”, there must be behaviours that communicate “Dat NOT good so”.

The Taxi Driver’s Communication Bible

When a person says: “I am travelling” you think of a world trip to exotic places.  Not so in T&T,  when “ah” Trini says travel, he means taking taxi, maxi, ph or bus.  If you are unaccustomed to the world of taxi travel, you need to learn the following communication actions.

1. Index finger pointing in the air with hand in a circular motion means “round de road”, translated to mean around the travel route for that taxi or bus.

2. Index finger and hand pointing to the ground means “short drop”.

3. Index finger and whole arm pointing vigorously to the right means where there is a Y in the road, you are going right and that might take you to Diego Martin as opposed to Carenage.

4. Index finger and whole arm pointing vigorously to the left means where there is a Y in the road, you are going left and that might take you to  Carenage as opposed to Diego Martin.

Remember that the taxi driver see any person standing at the side of the road in terms of the fare he can collect, so even if you are jogging he will try to pick you up.  Travelling around Trinidad can be fun if you have no deadlines and are dressed appropriately. That means little or no make up, hair gelled to perfection, a willingness to “small up” as the Jamaican’s say and an enthusiasm for rubbing up on the sweaty arm of someone you don’t know.

Needed – A Strategy for Sports

Athletic prowess on display … a rhythm section vibrating and people cheering, paying tribute to talented young men and women who continue to test their bodies and minds in their quest for Olympic glory. For the majority of the athletes at the Hasely Crawford Stadium, this weekend was their moment of glory. Their athletic careers will wind down while for a few and I mean a few, it marked the start of a heady road to the 30th Olympiad – London 2012. Congratulations in advance to our qualifiers.
Throughout the world several Olympic qualifying meets were held over this past week-end. I followed the US and T&T’s. Congratulations to the NAAA’s for a well organized activity at the Hasely Crawford Stadium. The hype was increased by BP’s global campaign and template approach to advertising. Great stuff but it can’t end with the London 2012.
Trinidad and Tobago needs a plan which will nurture and encourage Athletic talent.
We continue to do well particularly in track and field because of the single handed dedication of a “hand full” of persons who seem to thrive on the physic rewards they enjoy from giving. These men and women continue to earn my total respect.

Over the years several different plans have been developed for sport in our country but with each new administration comes the abandonment of the previous plan. We seem to have forgotten that in a population of just over one million the talent pool is small so it is not wise to try to re-invent the wheel simply because the face of the Minister of Sport has changed. Nothing has happened in the past two years to give me the confidence that sport is on a serious radar. Some officials are anxiously awaiting London 2012 for a moment of glory but if we do well, it will simply be a moment of glory and no thanks to officials. Sustained good performance will continue to elude us until we engage in serious planning and make sport the weapon of choice of our youth.

Sport must become the weapon of choice for our youth

If a nation does something for 100 years, they will get it right. Jamaica’s “Champs” has been staged for 100 years. So when Usain Bolt burst onto the scene it was not by accident. Jamaican athletes have worn their yellow and green in front of thousands of cheering supporters for 100 years. When Bolt’s coach said that there is a line of top performing athletes just waiting to dominate the world’s track and field stage, he is not joking. The world is literally flocking to Jamaica to train with the best and absorb whatever is on offer.
As Chair of the cancelled Caribbean Games 2009, I attended the 100th Anniversary of Jamaica’s premier track-and-field event. This activity is indelibly seared onto my consciousness and feels like yesterday. The invitation was extended for me to attend “the premier track-and-field event of its kind in the world”. That’s how it is positioned and “Champs” as it is fondly known had humble beginnings before becoming the “Inter-Secondary Schools Sports Association Boys and Girls’ Athletics Championships”.
Apart from having consistent sponsorship “Champs” represents the Athlete’s moment of glory on a home stage. Imagine the impact on a young athlete of running in front of a packed to capacity stadium (more than 25,000 persons). When that Athlete makes it on the world’s stage he/she has confidence because he/she has performed at home and drunk of the energy of his/her own people.
In addition, “Champs” is a grass root activity for which the average Joe Jamaican will find an old school tie or socks or t-shirt or undersized shorts and proudly strut their stuff at the games rooting for their secondary school and re-living long lost memories. When an activity assumes the cultural significance of “Champs”, it is an easy sell. But “Champs” is more than the expression of sport and culture, it is the culmination of years of hard work.
In a recent interview with Larry Romany, President of TTOC (the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee) he alluded to the Jamaican model for the development of athletes and said: “Jamaica puts a physical education teacher, a qualified physical teacher into every school, but more than that, each physical education teacher in Jamaica is actually qualified in track and field so they are a coach as well as a phys-ed teacher and they go into the system, and that is why Jamaica has had such success because there is a focussed attempt, a strategic intent on creating track and field stars”.
What is so difficult about implementing such a model in Trinidad and Tobago? We need to recognize that our only resource is our people and there must be significant investment in their development but lest that sounds hollow, I’ll quickly add that the investment is really finding a way to ignite the fire of patriotism which is now dormant.
During my Caribbean Games experience, my mantra was “Sport must become the weapon of choice for our youth”. I still believe in the potential and possibility of this statement but it will only become a reality when we devote the time and effort to craft the strategy for the sport industry. Of course, this has been done before but our leaders choose not to build on previously laid foundations but to smash any bases that exist. As blood fertilizes our land and our people flounder it is urgent that we put a strategic plan in place to capture the imagination of our youth and fire up our people’s passion for sport. Whatever we do, there is the grim recognition that it may be another generation before we reap the rewards. But if action is taken now, my generation may pass-on confident in the knowledge that our future sports persons will thrive in a nurturing, passionate environment.