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My 29th Lunch with Mike

Posted by Mike Donahue on October 21, 2009 in Mike's Musings

I had lunch with my friend Mike last Friday. We’ve been doing this once a quarter on a Friday afternoon since the fall of 2002. All 29 of our quarterly lunch meetings have been at R bistro (http://www.rbistro.com/), chef Regina Mehallick’s great eatery on Mass Ave in Indianapolis’ arts district.

I met Mike in 1999; the #1 thing we have in common (other than the same first name) is being members of what Fast Company Magazine calls free lance nation. When I first met Mike, I’d been self-employed for three years and was just starting to experience real success. By then, he had already celebrated a decade as a successful consultant. I admired him as much for his work-life balance as I did for building a successful gig.

We made our first lunch date with the twin goals of getting to know each other better and sharing ideas for growing our businesses. Over lunch, we discussed how fortunate we were that our work styles allowed us to finish the work week with a unhurried lunch over a nice bottle of wine and good conversation. When we finished that first lunch, we resolved to continue the tradition by meeting quarterly for a Friday afternoon lunch.

On a snowy Friday in 2005, we mentioned the purpose for our lunches to a member of the wait staff at R bistro and word passed through the staff to Chef Regina. Since then, when we arrive, we’re greeted as friends and escorted to our “regular” table along the inside wall, near the back of the L-shaped dining room. Lunch always begins with a toast to the work styles we’ve created that allow us to have a guilt-free two hour lunch – with a nice bottle of wine. Tradition requires us to finish our lunch with dessert (my favorite is sticky toffee pudding) and weapons-grade dark roast coffee served in a French press. We have an unwritten rule that lunch ends the work week; we schedule no meetings after lunch. In seven years, neither of us has violated the rule more than once.

Over the course of our 29 lunches, Mike and I have spent more than 60 hours in conversation that’s covered hundreds of topics. Two topics consistently pop up every quarter. The first is the pride we share in our ability to build practices that are strong enough to sustain themselves through good and bad economic times. The second is the sense of accomplishment we feel from having the freedom to enjoy these long, leisurely lunches.

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