prepared for less

i'm with buzz

“I am impatient to break loose into the universe.”*

Frank Laubach, expressing this adventurous sentiment, wondered whether ‘this entire universe is a desperate attempt by love to incarnate itself.’*

When all is well, we must perceive what is not there to bring it into being.  We have to be divergent and imaginative in our thinking.

When our way is blocked – and often it will be because the brighter future will not come easily or cheaply – we must not be divergent but converge on the truth and reality of what is before us.

‘[Samurai] Musashi understood the observing eye sees simply what is there.  The perceiving eye sees more than what is there.’**

Marcus Aurelius practised observation by describing things in a non-ornamental way – ‘roasted meat is a dead animal, and vintage wine is old fermented grapes.’**

Some people seem to see few ways of moving forward whilst their imaginations work overtime when it comes to the obstacle.

Use divergent thinking to see the ways forward and convergent thinking to accurately know the obstacle, but don’t get these the other way around.

I thought to add these words from Isabel Guerrero, formerly of the World Bank, but finding herself on a journey to help the poor and celebrate their beauty: ‘Don’t get afraid of the pain.  Don’t get afraid of the unknown.  Step out of your comfort zone so you can continue growing.  And this is a lifelong thing.  It’s not just when you’re younger.  It continues.  That’s the beauty.’

(*From Frank Laubach’s Letters From by a Modern Mystic.)
(**From Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle is the Way.)

 

 

preparedness

prepare

The closed mind will struggle to find the resources it requires.

The open mind is better prepared to find more possibilities.

The unprepared mind is more prone to panic.  Astronauts will repeatedly walk through all the elements of a space mission, from the journey to the craft to everything their time in space will include, so when things go wrong – and things will always go wrong – they will not panic.  Gravity is well worth a viewing.

Astronauts are trained to focus on the specific problems or obstacles they must address when something goes wrong.  Panic blurs everything with emotion and they would not be able to see what they must do.

I know this is something I must keep learning.  When I face obstacles, I know I can panic and I fail to see what I can do.

When I live the daily discipline of opening my mind, to see and understand more, I am providing myself with more options.

Here, then, are three preparations:

Determine not to give up too soon, or stop at the first option or solution.

Make it simple: to identify and focus on the important things rather than everything – an ability emerging from training our minds.

Go natural, be intuitive – trust yourself.  You are discovering the places in yourself you can act from.

 

accuracy

knowing me

I may call this thing an obstacle but it isn’t.

It is much more.  Sorry.  It’s a complicated, and maybe complex system of people and connections and skills and issues and needs.  When I call it an “obstacle,” making it almost invulnerable, it’s likely because of I’m panicking or fearful.

The more accurately I can describe what I really face the more chance I have of seeing where potential opportunities lie within it.

There’s one more element to the “obstacle.”

Me.  I have to know myself accurately.  Only then I may bring the full me to bear on what I must overcome.

The best way of knowing who I am arises from knowing who others are, who may become the people who bring help in the form of skills and abilities I do not possess.

iterate, iterate, iterate

push it

Every moment is an opportunity to explore and become something new.

Some of the most difficult moments offer us the best opportunities.

I mentioned I’m on a trip in which I’m exploring how to overcome obstacles, so this is something which is real for me.

I am seeing how it depends upon how I see and then act upon the obstacles which stand before me.

I can react with panic and anxiety, and end up paralysed.

I can respond positively and remove the obstacle to be able to continue – which is better.

Or, I can initiate and use the obstacle as an opportunity – which is best.

Having a goal is important.  To keep focusing on the goal is not so important.  What is really important is the process, meaning I can see the steps and enjoy the daily process rather than waiting for the goal to happen – which, without the process, the goal appears an insurmountable whole.*

Allied to this, along the way, it’s important to prototype, to iterate: ‘What gets you there is fast iteration, and fast failing.’**  This tackles the element within the obstacle which is perfectionism.  (I’ve been in an organisation for more than thirty years which does not allow for fast iteration and fast failing and it’s killing it.)

Those who have overcome their obstacles and delivered their art will have failed many, many times.

(*One of the things running has taught me is to respect the steps, the miles.)
(**From Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle is the Way.)

 

 

 

deserving

securedownload-1

Some think because of who they are and what they’ve done, they deserve an invitation.  When they receive it, they can turn it down.  They’re in control.

Some never receive an invitation and are shocked when they do.  They wonder what they can bring, hardly realising humility and gratitude are powerful forces for creativity.

We’ve all been invited.  Here’s how you can check.  Find a mirror.  Breathe on it.  If the glass mists, you’re definitely invited.

There are things which get in the way, of course.  Ryan Holiday suggests these are fuel for fire-making.  This resonates with me, so, as I travel to be part of a futures mentoring community for the best part of a week, I’m going to be exploring how I can do this.  Holiday offers this from Marcus Aurelius:

‘The impediment to action advances action.  What stands in the way becomes the way.’*

What we each get a chance to do now is to extend this invitation to others.  This will be couched in a way which connects with our playful curiosity and creativity.

For me it would sound something like this: Every person has a dream within them made up of skills and passions and experiences; I can help identify and develop these.  You’ll say it in a different way and the uniqueness of this will be important to someone.

Then create an experience to go with the invitation.

Have fun always.

(*Quoted in Ryan Holiday’s The Obstacle is the Way.)

neoteny

31 albert's

George Bailey only discovers what a wonderful life he’s lived when he’s offered a unique perspective of the town he can’t escape without him.

‘Wonder is a beautiful style of perception; when you wonder at something, your mind voyages deep into its possibility and nature.  You linger among its presences.*

George had thought it those who’d escaped Bedford Falls who lived the wonderful life, but his was the life of wonder.

It may be a movie, but the wonderful life is the reality we each possess.  When we allow for the wonder we are able to move deeper into the truth of this.

Warren Berger identifies how we’re more ignorant than ever because there’s so much more information and data today relative to what we know.  I’d add information about ourselves in this, so whilst we there’s so much more we can identify and measure in our lives, we hold back.

To live in this more complex world we’ll need to leave behind the notion of early-years learning and embrace life-long learning.  Here’s where wonder comes into its own, with Berger encouraging, ‘we must try to maintain or rekindle the curiosity, sense of wonder, inclination to try new things, and ability to adapt and absorb that served us so well in childhood.’**  Neoteny is the ability to retain childlike attributes in adulthood.

These childlike qualities promise to help us grow up to be more Human.  From simply reacting to the world, beyond positively responding to what we’re discovering, to be people initiating new possibilities.

George didn’t know it at the time, but all the hard energy and sheer slog he put in produced something astonishing.

Real life is even more impressive.

(*From John O’Donohue’s Eternal Echoes.)
(**From Warren Berger’s A More Beautiful Question.)

time to stir the oxygen tanks

30 presence

It was the action which led to the Apollo 13 crisis.  The spacecraft’s cryotanks needed stirring to prevent pockets in the contents where density and temperature varied, and to aid measurement.*

In the fire triad I’ve been writing about – fuel, oxygen, and heat – oxygen represents meaning and purpose, and it’s time to stir up the oxygen tanks.

This morning I heard physicist Brian Cox mention how questions are being asked about whether the universe existed before the Big Bang – perhaps for ever – which set me off on a train of thought.

When it comes to the universe and meaning, many argue there is no purpose and meaning is something Humans give to their existence.  I found myself wondering whether, as accidental Humans,** we’re enabling the universe to answer the question it silently asks: What is my purpose?  After all, we are an expression or output of this same universe. 

We have a mighty long way to go.  We’ve come so far and have hardly started.  This is the business, the story, the conversation we’re in together:

‘Perhaps such certainty about the meaninglessness of it all is premature.^

Seth Godin shares a little feedback from someone who didn’t like his book Linchpin, this person writing how they’d “thrown in the towel on this book 80 pages into it.”  I was curious as to what they missed after putting the book down.  I pulled my copy of Linchpin off the bookshelf and checked out my margin notes after page 80.^^

Page 83: ‘An artist is someone who uses bravery, insight, creativity, and boldness to challenge the status quo.  And an artist takes it personally.’

An artist is someone who stirs up the oxygen tanks.

(*The mission controller who gave the command, Sy Liebergot, later reflected it was lucky the ensuing explosion happened when it did – earlier or later in the mission and the astronauts may not have made it home.)
(**In the same radio interview, Brian Cox also mentioned Homo Sapiens have Neanderthal DNA in our makeup, meaning we bred with other hominids, turning out to be the people we are today.  Accidental stuff, but here we are, asking questions about meaning and purpose.)
(^From Alex McManus’s Makers of Fire.)
(^^From Seth Godin’s It’s Your Turn.  Godin’s reason for sharing this story is to illustrate how one bad or negative remark can play on us far more heavily than all the positive ones we receive.)

of the earth

29 no repeats

The meaning of humility (humus).

I’ve shared elsewhere how humility is having a true perspective and understanding of oneself – not some depreciating opinion.

Connecting us to the soil – which receives and grows many things – John O’Donohue offers us a great description of humility:

‘Now, like the silent earth, the cradle of all growth, you too can watch the stirring of a new springtime in the clay of your heart. You gain more courage.  You become surer about what you are and you no longer need to force either image or identity.  When you come into rhythm with your nature, things happen of themselves.’*

My dream is for people to awaken to who they are and what they can do.  Not to hesitate and step back from this, or to try and be someone they’re not.  Lives lived in this direction become a cradle for new growth, welcoming and hospitable to others, to the life of the earth, and to their future Self.

In this, each person finds their genius, the stand out contribution they have to make: unrepeatable.

Scarcity worldviews are cynical to the suggestion everyone has a standout contribution to make.  Abundance world views know, however, there will be a right situation or context for everyone to bring their creative dissonant, edgy voice.

Have fun growing things.

(*From John O’Donohue’s Eternal Echoes.)

awe

28 all that28 all that glitters

There is so much of life we can’t see when we are in the flow of it.  But when we read or hear a story, or watch a film, we sense something more and feel it deeply.

Robert McKee holds this is the power of story, allowing us to reflect on the action of our lives we otherwise find so difficult because we’re caught up in all the movement.

Long before we could pick up a book or see a story played out on a screen, people paused, reflected, meditated, stilled themselves, or prayed – attempts ‘to enter into harmony with the deeper rhythms of life.’*

These are all threshold practices, allowing us to connect this life – the number of years gifted to us by and within the universe – with Human spirit and soul, meaning and purpose.

The poet Muriel Rukeser puts this well when she declares, “The universe is made of stories, not of atoms.”**  She has crossed a threshold from life to spirit.

To take time to observe ourselves observing, is to enter into what my friend Alex McManus would call a blue moment, a hyperlink, taking us to previously unseen realities.**

The world is full of blue spaces and people and objects.  Ultimately, these allow us to cross thresholds of increasing intensity: into greater knowing, into greater  connecting, and into greater activity.

Of course, we can come upon these blue spaces by accident, but we can come upon more through intention.

And then, we will be filled with awe.

(*From John O’Donohue’s Eternal Echoes.)
(Quoted in Alex McManus’s Makers of Fire.)

a land i do not know

27 faith and hope and

Our imaginations thrive in the dissonance between how things are and how they can be.  But to imagine is not to dream delusionally.

The imagining person seeks to understand and know more about here and now -relentlessly defining reality – whilst also listening for weak signals (of what might be) from the future.  She constantly scans and interacts with stories and people.  And she does this through the highest personal understanding  of her skills, passions, and experiences.

It’s a crazy thing.  The future she imagines does not exist.  It is a land she does not know.

The land she does know is full of things and people and finance, full of roles and titles – tangible things.  This journey into the future will require she lets go of many of the things she cannot and should not take with her.*

Yet, through her future-sensing abilities of faith and hope, she will brings all she is and all she to bear on forming the future possibilities: she will “make the path by walking.”*

It has always been so, and now it’s your turn.

(*Alex McManus suggests she will have to let go of truth to take hold of trust, let go of  doctrine for direction, cultural power for spirit, and certainty for faith.  The quoting of Antonio Machadoalso appears in Alex’s Makers of Fire.)