Monday, October 31, 2016

The Blue Sweater

The Blue Sweater: Chapters 1-8
The Blue Sweater is  Jacqueline Novogratz's, founder of the Acumen Fund,  personal story of how she wanted to change the world. The first half of the book covers her experiences starting from post-grad life trying to find a job to working with the Rockefeller foundation and creating philanthropist workshops to educate them on the best ways of handling problems.

Jacqueline's journey began with her job as an international banker at Chase Manhattan Bank. When she visited Brazil she realized that there was extreme poverty and suggested that Chase should create loans for the poor to enable them to start projects. When her proposition was rejected she moved on the African Development Bank in which she worked  as a ambassador for women. Jacqueline moves on from this job to others that allow her to work with women to empower them and give them tools and knowledge to become self-sufficient. By the end of the first half of the book , Jacqueline returns home to get her MBA from the Stanford School of Business and ends up meeting Professor Emeritus John Gardner who becomes her mentor and encourages her to take a fellowship with the Rockefeller Foundation.

I admire Jacqueline's persistence throughout her journey so far because addressing poverty and the income distribution gap are perhaps the most difficult tasks to take on. Micro finance institutions, like the one she tried setting up in Rwanda, are usually used in developing countries to provide the poor with small, low-interest loans but few models have been successful in their business models. Jacqueline is trying to solve this problem, as well as address others, by incorporating a bottom up approach (citizen based) to design micro finance models that will benefit the citizens as well as the banks. As she tries to create better development programs for the poor, she also learns from her failures what doesn't work to continually readjust her models. She also perseveres even when faced by blatant disdain from the women she is trying to help. The women were resistant to the idea of accepting help from her because they perceive her help as a Western intrusion. To address this problem, Jacqueline finds that it is important to listen to the local women and their needs to build assistance programs that help them and are not dominated entirely by Western models of growth. She puts in so much effort to try and make the lives of the world's poor better and is trying to truly change the world, even if it is one step at a time.


Thursday, October 6, 2016

Lately, I have been thinking about my upcoming graduation. At the same time, I am also avoiding thinking about it because I have no idea what I am going to do after I graduate. I am so scared that I think I might even add a minor just so I can stay in school longer. I think I was very comfortable with the time I had to decide what I wanted to do after graduation that I kept putting actually after university planning aside. But now the time has come and I have a short amount of time to decide everything. Time really is fleeting and even this semester feels like it just started and we are almost done. At the moment, I am going with the flow and I hope that this strategy works out. I have learned to be accepting of what life throws my way and try to make things work out for the better.  I also believe that everything will eventually work itself out.

In times of uncertainty, like these, I often think of one of my heroes, Oprah Winfrey. Oprah had a rough start, but eventually she was able to successfully build an empire through all of her hard work, setting an example that anything is really possible, even if you don’t get the best start. Maybe I’ll decide to go to graduate school or even travel for a bit until I decide what to do next, but things have a way of happening that makes the journey worthwhile.  Even though things seem scary now, I am excited for things to come.