"After 27 years in finance, it's time for new insights," says Jeroen Groothuis, taking a big bite of yogurt with blueberries from a black stone bowl. "That's why I'm here. If you don't keep learning new things, you slowly die inside."
Just down the road at the coffee bar stands Jeroen's colleague Bart Vrancken, Volksbank Director of Hub Risk and Compliance. "I have no expectations," he proclaims, as around him more and more people trickle into the softly lit room. "Solid Professionals always surprises me with the approach of the speakers. Something you don't think is applicable to your work can then offer reflection anyway." He looks at a photo of four women in Dutch costume on the beach. "And that Jimmy's work is hanging on the wall here in all its glory ... Very nice. It's going to be a very cool session, though." For a moment he falls silent. "Actually, I do have some expectations," he adds. He has to chuckle at this.
Time for the first speaker. The more than eighty guests make their way to the rows of black chairs, looking out at a screen, native masks and once again impressive photography. Some quickly grab a croissant, and the cheerful chatter dies down when our director Kathelijn Loos and head of talent management Lieke Galema take the floor. Kathelijn: "Today we are going to take a different approach. You won't get to see presentations about new laws and regulations, or developments in our industry. Instead, we want to invite you to dare to look at the world and leadership differently and with an open mind. Today we are exploring human wealth in a different way."
Pim van Koeveringe, working as an independent senior finance professional, is also amazed by Jitske's story. "That comes in, and makes you think. You do so much on autopilot." After a meeting, Jitske says you should call those involved to ask what it does to them, when they have or have not been listened to. "But I don't make those calls very often," Pim admits honestly. "We're more into pushing through. A feet-on-the-table session like that would be quite something."
It's Jimmy's turn, and he begins his story with a half-minute of silence. "Last week I heard my employees whining about the rain. It's just water falling on our heads here. I would like to reflect on the fact that in other places in the world very different things fall from the sky."
Over the next hour, the world-renowned photographer unfolds his story in a disarming, ultra-personal and emotional way. The audience is dead silent and hangs on his every word. No one looks at his phone and many a listener's eyes occasionally well up with tears. Jimmy talks about his abuse as a child, the loss of all his hair due to alopecia and the lockdown mode he shot into. At seventeen he had nothing left to lose and left for Tibet, from which he returned after three years with a regained love for man, the world and himself. But also with four photographs published in Britain's National Geographic.