If There’s A Will, There’s A Chance
In hard moments of life, it’s hard to imagine that there will be a time when a sense of normalcy will be restored. As the world comes together, we're seeing what is called “emergent organizations.” The idea that people that existed to do one thing are now changing their work or adapting their work to respond to the emergency.
This isn’t the only time in history that we have seen this. In Alaska on March 27, 1964, the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in North America measuring 9.2 in magnitude, left behind a devastated frontier.
A journalist at KENI in Anchorage, and mother of three, became the voice of reason, sanity, and vital information at a time when Alaska felt as if it had been cut off from the rest of the planet.
Genie Chance brought a connection to Alaska through the only thing she had, radio. She stepped up because she understood that mass hysteria would lead to mayhem. She advised people to think of others as well as themselves.
And even in 2020, we don’t have that physical connection that we want but we're making our connections without it.
Genie seemed to be conceding the only force we have to survive a world like this is connection.
>>>Lexcie, @lexcie_lewis