26 November 2012

The solutions are already available

Sure we face big problems and complex global challenges like dwindling natural resources, the end of cheep energy, over population, climate change and global warming, insane debt and financial instability, war and political ineptitude.

But the solution to these problems is already available to us. However it's either not what we want to hear, or the significant mindset shift, shift in values and behaviour, development of relevant skills and the political will required to make it happen pushes us way beyond our levels of comfort.

The truth seems to be that the 150-year old party is over. That the age of exponential economic growth which rode on the back of a seemingly never-ending supply of cheep energy and the American Dream as we have come to know it, is over. In fact the end began about 20-years ago, we just haven't yet gotten around to acknowledging it.

We now face the rather dreary task of cleaning up after the party and getting down to the business of constructing a culture that values and measures growth in new more integrated ways. And not just financial or the bottom line. And of finding ways to live within our ecological means using substantially less energy and with considerably less stuff.

What scares us, I think, are images of post-modern slums and sci-fi movies depicting the barren post apocalyptic landscape. 

But it really doesn't have to be like that, only if we believe the party can go on forever, which is just silly. Yes, life will be different and it is going to mean some dramatic changes in how we think, what we value and how we live. But on the other hand it could, if we cultivate the political will, mean greater equality, connection and human well-being.

A time of unparalleled creativity and innovation, which contrary to what we have been led to believe is not cultivated through pressure, stress, insanely long working hours, meaningless deadlines and fear.

Yip, it's going to mean that we carve out another definition of what it means to be successful, a more relevant and dare I say it... complex and mature one.

23 November 2012

Contradictory values aren't trustworthy

It's when we say we believe or value one thing, but our actions communicate something else entirely.

The friend who says he is excited about attending your book-club meetings probably believes he is. As does the company that says it believes in the value of team work, and the importance of client and staff [retention]. And the religious person who talks about 'love thy neighbour' wants to hold that value, but lacks the maturity to do so.

The problem is that how we behave and what we do is often [far more often than we would like to acknowledge] communicating something quite different to want we think or would like to think, we believe.

Contradictory values destroys trust without which there is a breakdown in relationship. This wrecks marriages, clients relationships, friendships and social integration. And forms an invisible barrier to authentic communication, cooperation and innovation.

We tell our partner and family we love them, but miss events and family functions. This communicates, we don't, that they are not a priority. And they see and understand this, even if they pretend they don't.

We go to great lengths to avoid exposing someone's contradictory values, because we won't be thanked for it, and probably more to the point... we don't them to expose ours. It's a silent social agreement designed to keep things functioning, albeit without any significant levels of trust.

Hence the need for regulations, lawyers and a ridiculously complex legal system.

But at a time when creativity, innovation and 'wicked' problems are too big for any one person, group or organisation to solve, trust becomes important.

22 November 2012

Values, it's easy to see why they seem unimportant

We tend to marginalise the importance of embracing values. Because everyday we're confronted with examples of people or organisations expressing them, and then acting or behaving in ways which clearly contradict.

So what's the point? Is it just for philosophers and armchair discussion?

You start a book-club and a friend although they continually say how excited they are to attend misses three out of four.

The company you work for claims to value team work and cooperation, but continually rewards individuals. Or claims the client is important, but cuts services to cut costs. Or claims you are important and consistently cuts staff increasing your workload.

A religious acquaintance talks about 'love thy neighbour', but at almost every corner offers either generalised, ignorant or derogatory comments about other groups or nationalities.

(Think adverts and advertising)

And so we conclude that there is little point to developing values. But we are misreading the situation.

It's not that values don't drive our actions, they do. Your friend who misses the book-club has other more valuable priorities. The business values individual talent over team work and profit over client or staff. The religious acquaintance values scorn over love.

Forget what they say. Their actions and behaviours are telling you everything you need to know about what it is that they truly believe. As yours is. 

It's a big leap in maturity when we begin to intentionally align what we really believe with what we're actually doing. Of course we become more authentically impactful and influential.

And don't expect others to thank you for saying... 'Well I can't attend the book-club meeting tonight because I value watching TV over attending, but thanks anyway'. And good luck drawing peoples and organisations attention to their contradictory values, without an invitation. You'll get a slap in the face.

20 November 2012

Your most valuable asset may just be your biggest liability

Given how much marketers, politicians, corporations and advertising companies are willing to pay to attract your attention, it must be important. If fact I would comfortably argue that your attention is your most valuable asset.

Well this is not exactly true. Your attention may be valuable to others, but it only becomes valuable (to you) when it's trained and obedient. Until then, if it bounces around like a hyperactive five year old, it's a serious liability.

I call obedient attention, concentration... The skill to place your attention where you want it and effortlessly hold it there for as long as you need to. The effortlessly part comes with lots of practice and begins with hours of grind. Just like starting gym or running.

Concentration can also be understood as exclusive attention on one object, or our ability to stay focused on the task at hand. It's the key to improved thinking, wellbeing and performance, and radically improves the speed with which we acquire new knowledge and skills. 

Given the role of concentration or trained attention to our success, it's important that we intentionally create a deliberate practice to develop and deepen it. Ahemmm!

It requires no muscle memory, no physical skill at all. So in this way it's a purely mental activity. That of course does not make it any less demanding, in fact in many ways it's more so.

There are two forms of concentration, one useful and the other very damaging. 

a/ Hard, focussed and exclusive concentration works on the principal of domination or denial. And although it may keep your attention focussed it destroys your quality of life. This is the easier of the two. Control always is.

b/ Soft, open, aware and yet focussed attention - both expansively aware + narrowly focussed. It's aware of everything but firmly holds only one thing as a point of interest, without denying anything else. This is much more difficult, but has much better all round results. And makes you a much nicer, healthier, happier person. Which weirdly enough contributes to success.

It helps to get guidance or a mentor at the beginning.

19 November 2012

If it's not better, why replace it?

Our patterns of behaviour be they personal or relationship and our systems be the commercial, political or economic are not real systems in that they're made from iron, steel or concrete. They are psychological, the intellectual product of our fears and aspirations of our thinking, assumptions, values, knowledge and beliefs.

I.e. money and money systems are not a real things. They are ideas supported by processes and systems... simply the product of more thinking.

It stands to reason that in working to change the status quo without first or at least simultaneously having transformed, evolved and developed the thinking that designed them, then the effort is destined to fail. Or in political terms the leader may change but the regime stays the same.

If our systems are creating more problems than they solve, which they are. If they're unsustainable, which they are and if they're inequitable, which they are. We can change them. 

But it's unreasonable to expect that those who have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo be the agents of that change. In much the same way that would be unreasonable to expect a monarch to be the instrument of his own reform, even demise.

This is neither good nor bad and in it I see no judgement. I'm not sure how interested I would be to change a behaviour or system within which I prosper, especially if I believed that I had worked hard to achieve my success and influence.

I guess I may be tempted to say, 'stop being a bad loser'.

But that's not the end game. What's better that we can offer. What are we bringing to the table. Just opposing something because we don't like it, even if it's defunct, is not the same as replacing it with something more intelligent that works even better.

18 November 2012

Actions speak louder (and truer) than words

"I love you unconditionally and I want nothing in return, no gifts, no goods or demonstrations of love... Just knowing that you love me too".

Wow, what a loaded sentence, given that communication is roughly 7% words, 28% intonation and 65% visual (give or take depending on the model you use). This means the bulk of what we are communicating to others is through our actions and behaviour, what they can see, and not through our words.

It's the movie Stardust and Yvaine is declaring her love to Tristan, who at that moment is a mouse. But before that tragic turn of events was on a mission to demonstrate his love to the girl he mistakenly believed he loved, Victoria.

"What I'm trying to say Tristan is that I think I love you. 

My heart feels like my chest can barely contain it, like it doesn't belong to me anymore,  it belongs to you. And if you wanted it I would want nothing in exchange, no gifts, no goods, no demonstrations of devotion. Nothing but knowing that you love me too. Just your heart in exchange for mine".


The tricky part however lies in the phrase "knowing that you love me too". That deep sense of knowing is build up over months, years and decades of consistent behaviour communicating a very simple and clear message... In this case, 'I love you!'

I'll leave it to you to translate and apply this to your marketing message, relationships and beliefs in sustainability and change.

It's not important for now to know what that behaviour may look like--you can't consistently fake it and neither is it an automation--although there are some common patterns and themes. But it is important to contemplate that when it comes to communicating what we feel and believe (our business vision and mission), there is simply no place to hide.

If your have eyes to see and ears to hear, which although we may not consciously be aware of, we do. We've been communicating a lot longer through behaviour than we have been thinking or stringing pretty words together... Think advertising!

Victoria on the other hand desired only a trinket, a symbol of love, not love itself. Much easier to deliver on... Think what we expect from government, corporations and other people in general!

17 November 2012

Grab a beer, pull up a chair... Join the conversation, why don't you?

We talk about patterns of behaviour [and of changing them] for individuals and systems for collectives, or groups. But the systems we have chosen to create, be they political, economic, business or those we have developed to provide the energy which sustains our activities, are in essence mental frameworks providing for and rationalising collective behaviour.

But we didn't really choose them. They kinda haphazzardly evolved around us. The big difference between now and then, is that now for the first time in the history of humanity there are enough people who have enough connected and collective influence, know enough about intentionally designing systems or are prepared to experiment... To intentionally design better ones, which serve more people, in a more equitable way.

And of course acknowledge the real limitations of our natural non-renewable resources.

This group of people who are now working to develop new or emergent systems [for the benefit of eveyone] are not some secret privileged hi-powered group. But rather people like you and I who have chose to be part of the conversation.

They do what they do in spite of the fact that they too have families, mortgages and work obligations. But regardless they have chosen to study and learn what they can about sustainability, leadership, personal growth and spirituality. And have stepped forward to answer the call... If not you, then who?

Join the conversation, why don't you?

16 November 2012

Momentum is a hell of a thing.

As parents why do we spend so much of our time and precious resources in educating, teaching, training and explaining concepts to our children... Because we want them to have a better, happier life and future.

Why as parents do we try to protect our children, especially the younger ones... Because as parents we can see that the consequences of their actions are going to come back and bite them in the ass. They can't, we can.

As awake, aware and intelligent adults we can see further into the future. We can connect the dots. We can predict with better accuracy, the future. Because of this we make sometimes small and sometime larger course corrections. The point is that we don't have to actually meet the consequences to learn, we can simply predict, learn and adapt. This is the evolution of intelligence.

And so it is with the sustainability or social movement, not all of it, in fact just the leading edge. They can see and predict, they have connected the dots. And they can see that the consequences of our behaviour, now, are going to cause us progressively more pain and suffering, tomorrow. And they wish with all their heart to help us adapt.

They see this because they have rigorously investigated, they have done the math. And they get that exponential economic growth, production and consumption compounded by an exponentially growing population, exponentially rising debt and exponentially dwindling resources including the mother of all resources, cheep energy... Are all leading us to a very inevitable and absolutely predictable conclusion.

That life, our life, life on planet earth earth is going to fundamentally change.

But tomorrow is tomorrow, the next moment is ages away says the small boy hurtling toward a very predictable and inevitable collision with a plate glass window.

Momentum carriers us forward even when we stop doing whatever it is that we are doing. Ask the captain of any super-cargo ship. Momentum is a hell of a thing. When we take into account momentum, tomorrow is already here, it came yesterday.

Maybe we should start paying more attention to what those weird sustainability dudes are saying. Forget the right and wrong line of reasoning, rather look at the coherency and data supporting the arguments. It might just be that they care about us more than the industrial-financial complex. Which seems reasonable given that we know for a fact, it doesn't.

But hey, we have time... How much is gas now?

It's not that we need to freak out. Impending crisis or not, freaking out won't help. Rather study, learn, educate, empower ourselves and join the conversation. This is a relevant, intelligent and appropriate response.

And has delightful and unexpected rewards that benefit us now.

14 November 2012

Old man's philosophy... Let's get real.

So imagine you're teaching your children the value of sharing or of being polite and they respond. 'All this philosophy is nice, but let's talk about reality'... But this IS reality you answer.

Whenever we learn new values which shape and influence our behaviour  it initially sounds philosophical, but not to the person teaching. To them it is a reality. It is part of their DNA and informs their thinking, behaviour and the systems they develop. 

Of course with children we can't work directly on the level of values. So instead we model the behaviour the values shape, thus training the values indirectly. This of course is slow and time-consuming and invariably meets with loads of resistance. But with adults, because our thinking is more developed, because we are more mature and subtle, we can work directly on the values themselves. 

It's subtle, but a much faster and more sustainable way of aligning [and changing] behaviour

That's why organisations and businesses, at a certain point in their development if they committed to sticking around, start taking their mission and vision seriously. But to the young and uninformed, it just sounds like old man's philosophy.

13 November 2012

Hope is not the future

Hope is passive and a way to avoid dealing with the pains, trials and tribulations of the present [and the demands of getting there, wherever it is we're headed]. Rather it's vision and the creative process - the consistent effort to create especially when circumstances get difficult - that designs the future.

But the future emerges from the constraints of the present and not in spite of them. The future builds on what already is, less of course the extraneous or unnecessary. Knowing what physical and psychological realities to develop and what to abandon are always skills worth developing.

Vision is more than an intuitive peek into the future. It's your intention to create, forge or make a path from here to there.

Imagination, dream and hope don't rely on understanding the constraints of the present, which there always are. Whereas vision embraces and uses them to energise and guide the creative process.

But vision is demanding and requires skill - knowledge and the consistent application and experimentation of that knowledge. Mostly it's just easier to hope and leave it to someone else to fix.

12 November 2012

Innovation happens when creativity is constrained, as it always is.

We tend to think of creativity as a blank sheet, filled with unlimited potential, with the capacity to become anything. And this is true, however the artist's work is constrained by her skills as an artist, her courage to produce, the colors available, the size of the canvas, the amount of sleep she's had, her health, patience and prior emotional trauma and current maturity (plus an almost infinite array of other factors).

The painting we see, the creative act of making something from nothing ended up as the emergent result of pure potential filtered through the real, and in this case mostly unacknowledged, constraints and limitations. Not all limitations are the product of scarcity thinking.

And so it is with all innovation. Many constraints are personal, some cultural and others resources. But all shape and influence the final creative product, be it a report, book, painting, product or strategy.

Innovation depends on acknowledging and honoring the real, dissolving the artificial and transcending the relative. And wisdom I guess lies in working out which is which.

28 August 2012

Interested, excited and intrigued about the future

Look from almost every perspective the future looks grim and learning more about the reality and causes of that grimness makes it look even more overwhelming and grim.

We're mostly aware that things can't go on as they are and that change must come, or that we face a number of rather odious scenario based probabilities... No-one is quite sure of what's going to happen next or collapse first.

Not to mention that we still got our own personal stuff to deal with.

So in the midst of this, how do we stay positive, excited, relevant and interested in playing a role in this unfolding future?

And here's the thing, if we're not positive and excited about the future we're anxious, fearful, timid and reluctant. Not a good place for creative, innovative and productive efforts.

Mastery; insight or understanding and skill. There is no secret insomuch as we don't know how to do this, and no quick fix.

It took us eons to create the culture and the challenges we have and it's going to take us time to change paradigms, ways of thinking, create new human values and new systems.

It's a bit like the overweight person going to the doctor saying, 'doctor, how do I loose all this weight quickly?' The doctor replies, 'and how long did it take you to put it all on?'

Interested and excited though depends on deeper levels of autonomy and freedom especially from the garbage that normally occupies our intellectual bandwidth. It requires deeper levels of conversation, personal identity and purpose and a deeper connection to community, support and care.

It requires that we get and practice the traditionally spiritual art of surrender and action, of the transformation of suffering, of awareness and presence, because that's the only place we find real joy and autonomy.

And I believe it also means that we do all of this, knowing that whatever we do, may in fact be to late to change any of those rather grim probabilities.

This is why more than ever we need to learn the skill to moderate very intentionally and skillfully which thought, feeling, concept is allowed to grow in the garden of our awareness, and of increasing the scope and depth of that awareness.

Our greatest and first gift though should be mastery. And then from that place of deeper understanding and skill tackle the challenges we have according to our developed interests and passions... joyfully and skillfully.

26 August 2012

Engaging and grappling creates solutions

From the moment the first bucket of gold was extracted from the earth, or the first barrel of oil was pumped from a well, the end was in sight. It's naive to believe that a finite resource can last forever, especially when consumption doubles every set period.

On the upward slope of the bell curve, there is more than is needed (it's easy to get) and the cost to extract it is relatively inexpensive, but on the downward slope, every barrel, every bucket costs more to get.

Have you noticed prices going up?

Eventually a point is reached when a barrel out costs a barrel to get and the utility of the resource has come to an end.

On a local level we get it... on a global level we seem to think that the resource is inexhaustible, which it isn't, the same law of a finite resource applies.

A little blue ball hanging in the blackness of space, finite in dimensions and resources.

When multiple exponential curves collide; energy, debt (economy), environment, population, technology and complexity it's going to be time to rethink the very principles and values upon which our global culture is build.

It's going to be time to [re]ask, what it means to be human?

It's possible but not probable that technology will solve the problem (immediately). It's possible but not probable that the next generation will suddenly develop the mastered complexity of thinking to solve the challenges, but are we willing to bet on possible over probable?

Although the solution depends on new and different ways to behave, how we behave depends on how we [on the leading edge] understand and think, and our thinking only changes when we engage and grapple deeply with the challenges.

And believing that a solution will miraculously present itself denies the opportunity of grappling, but also relieves us from the responsibility of making uncomfortable choices.

16 July 2012

Our talents, although important, is not purpose.

I think it's often assumed that purpose is something that is developed internally, and in part that's true ... it's our passions and interests. But it's the context, or what's happening on a global, national and community level that shapes it and makes it relevant.

There are many expressions of purpose that seem disconnected from a required level of complex understanding or connection with the change that appears to be unfolding, except personal anger and/or discomfort.

It may be useful therefore to create a distinction between
  • Talents, which are our developed abilities, skills and passions and 
  • Purpose which implies relevance and a grasp of the complexity [differentiation and integration] of context. 

For the independent professional and business owner committed to making a difference, the question may then be, how relevant is my business and business products? Or even more fundament, how relevant is the model of business I'm using?

Which is a tough question to ask.

And which is only a relevant question if the objective is to contribute to making a real difference and playing a role in the unfolding of our cultural evolution.

03 July 2012

We are the solution

This simple truth that the degree of mastery of mind or control of consciousness determines our quality of experience and capacity for creative thinking has been known for a long time; in fact, for as long as human records exist.

This is interesting because as life gets more complex and we learn more about our psychology and physiology, so new capacities (or levels) of control and mastery emerge.

In this complex fast moving world we need ever higher levels of mastery just to maintain the status-quo. But to create new solutions, we need to be pushing the envelope.

The way out is to believe in a preordained new age, the immanent collapse of current systems, a coming saviour, the end of the world or whatever other paradigm of thinking relieves us from the responsibility of learning about both the systems of the world, and the functioning of our minds.

When was the last time you read a well researched book on psychology or creative thinking, or attended a workshop that really challenged your current way of thinking by encouraging another?

Or are you waiting for the storm to pass?

30 June 2012

Well meaning doesn't make it right

I believe it's fare to say that all of us want happiness, most of us want success (in whatever field or area is real for us) and some of us want to make a difference.

Most of us see happiness as a consequence of success, which it isn't, and some as a consequence of making a difference, which it isn't.

And living a happy life, being happy, discovering the secret to happiness and well-being doesn't automatically deliver success or the ability to make a difference. It rarely does.

Happiness, success and making a difference are three completely different things, with success in one although possibly providing brief respite or momentary fulfilment, usually coming the cost of the others.

That is not to say we can't create happiness, achieve success and make a difference simultaneously. It means to do them together requires very specific information and very consciously developed strategies and tactics.

Loosing weight makes you thin not happy. Making money makes you rich at our expense, not happy. A successful business makes you a business man, not happy or socially responsible. Mastering happiness makes you neither successful nor socially responsible.

You won't find it in 99% of the self-help or achieve your goals, books. Mostly they are either deliberately or misguidedly appealing to your mistaken idea that achieving one means achieving the other. Not the reality that achieving one usually marginalises the other.

As one of an infinite number of examples and as well meaning as it may be, in today's money narrative your success comes at the expense of your community, our culture and the planet. It doesn't have to be this way, but it is, that's how the system is designed. So if awesome financial wealth and security is your goal, making a difference can't be. And if you never trained yourself to be happy before, you'll definitely be miserable (and angry) after.

The quest for happiness, success and making a difference... a powerful statement of the intent to develop high levels of personal mastery, wisdom and leadership.

28 June 2012

Anyone can risk money... but what about personal identity and social confirmation?

What do you do if you become aware of a truth so self-evident but so contradictory to every thing you've ever believed (but intuitively suspected) that it compels you to question the very basis of how you live, love, make money and grow your business?

Do you ignore it in the hope that it'll go away?
Do you wait for others to take the first step and confirm your theory?
Do you investigate it carefully, contemplate it deeply, and then do everything you can to help it manifest as strange new behaviour?

Can self-evident be ignored?
Can self-evident be stifled?
Can self-evident wait for others?
Will the manifestation of that self-evidence look exactly the same for everybody?
Will it make it any easier to sacrifice the little true joy, happiness and security you have, on the results other weird people might have achieved but which can't be proved to work for you (until you do it and prove it to yourself). Will that really make it easier?

And can the behaviour and results of new behaviour be accurately predicted, can we make it safe and known? I guess this is the paradox of transformation -- we feel isolated, stuck, trapped, frustrated and caught in a narrative we don't really believe in (to one extent or another), and yet we want the way out to be known, predictable, safe and understood by our parents, friends, partners, children, neighbours and the dog.

Revolution... sure. As long there's guaranteed benefit and I don't have to lay anything of real value on the line.

And what could be of more value than your own personal identity and philosophy. Your narrative of how things work, and why and how you (we) should go about doing what you (we) do.

But what if self-evident compelled you to question your most deeply held beliefs, and in-so-doing you suspect you might just come to acknowledge that they themselves are the cause of your suffering and the source of the little happiness, meaning and purpose you have.

Would you be prepared to wager even that for more? Can you risk the real threat of falling into oblivion?

27 June 2012

The solution is not always productivity

Increasing productivity and developing skills has it's uses, but if the systems themselves are the problem, then that simply makes you better at making a bigger problem.

26 June 2012

Cautious about abundance

I have been very cautious over the past few years to use the word abundance, I guess in part because of the initial relatively immature expression of this understanding -- It's all about wishful thinking and visualisation.

But upon a deeper reflection, I've not really found a better word.

Abundance is experienced on several levels:
As a expansive state of conciousness (a feeling)
As a logic of thinking
As logic of behavior
As a logic of strategies and systems, especially those of our business.

A state of consciousness is always the easiest and usually the first expressions, but translating that into consistent personal and business behaviour gets progressively more complex. Especially since the world is governed by the laws and systems of scarcity. There's also the question of translating the language of abundance into that of scarcity, let alone the impossible task of communicating the underlying principals coherently -- it's so contradictory to everything scarcity comprehends.

And we experience abundance:
Personally
As a community and culture
As a society and nation
As culture and humanity

It's easiest on a personal level and again gets more complex as we include more people in the narrative and dialogue. One of the biggest challenges being that there is no consistent or right expression of abundance, we are literally working it out as we go along. This is one of the reasons it's so difficult to get a handle on the #OWS movement, especially by the mass media. They are heavily invested in the narrative of scarcity.

What we are getting considerably more clear about is that there is a change, and that this change is in response to the deep appreciation that the rules and patterns which got us here, can't get us there.

25 June 2012

Does our future look grim, and should I be insuring myself against it?

A friend send me this question in response to the post, 'what happened to the promise of leisure (and pleasure)?

A few years ago I heard someone claim that people were insuring against the future. I think they meant that people were believing that the future was going to be worse than the present or past. I'm wondering how might we live in the belief that the best days are ahead of us while also being aware of what is real? Holding an optimistic perspective despite the signs of breakdown all around. Is this emergent thinking?

Thanks, and I believe this question to be so relevant I want to reply to it as an open blog post.

Underpinning our culture and way of life is what we call our socio-economic mode of production. It's what keeps us busy, the lights on, the roofs over our heads and the food in our stomachs, and it's typically what we use to define our progress.

So the question may well be.
  1. Is our current socio-economic mode of production on the verge of collapse, which from what I'm hearing, seems like a real possibility?
  2. And how can or should I protect myself from the fall out of such a collapse, if it happens, while keeping a positive mental attitude?

I'm uncomfortable with hyperbole which principally seeks to induce a contraction provoking a predictable response. For example, 'Click here to save the word', or 'Do you want to earn $500 per hour, working 1 hour per day from home with no previous experience?'

I'm also uncomfortable with simplistic yes, no answers (in this context), which minimises or even negates the need to explore and understand, but rather seeks only tacit agreement or disagreement. And where to from there?

I would therefore prefer to frame the first question thus.

Is our socio-economic mode of production in the process of (more or less radical) transformation? Now this raises a few more interesting questions. For example, transforming from what to what? What are the indicators, or what is the supporting evidence to corroborate such a theory? What is the depth of the transformation, in other words is it a profound core, or a superficial surface transformation. What's the best guess estimate on the timeline. How may I best participate or oppose, which is in a way asking how to best protect myself from the worst of the fallout, or even benefit through and on the other side of, this process of transformation.

And the questions framed as transformation also helps us better understand how we might go about insuring ourselves from the worst consequences of such a transformation, if such a thing is possible. Because insurance requires we bet on how things are going to be in the future, be it options, stocks even attitudes. If we make the wrong guess we lose, if we make an accurate guess, we benefit. So in order to make the right guess we need to be as informed as possible about what's really going on.

Collapse also implies a shocking end with nothing, or little of value and beauty to follow, whereas transformation implies continuity from past to present to future, a change to something higher and better. And this would help us in keeping a positive mental attitude through the process of transformation, which can be both destructive (yes collapse of the old) and traumatic. The degree of destruction really depends upon the degree to which we cling to that which is dead (or dying), inhibiting the natural process of transformation.

And the evidence is just pouring in. Global warming and climate change, over production and consumption, mental dis-ease, financial turmoil and, and this is important, incredible break through's in thinking, intelligence, science, spiritual awareness and cognitive insight.

Of all the indicators, simple maths is the best. Constant global growth be it at 3% or 10% per annum is impossible given that we live in a finite context (planet earth). At an average of 4.9% growth the world consumes double what it consumed and produced in the entire history of the world before that, every 14 years.

This is significant.

Every 14 years, based on average global growth of 4.9%, the world produces and consumes double the amount it has in total ever consumed and produced through-out its history until that point. This means we are currently consuming and producing double the amount ever produced and consumed, for the entire history of the world prior to 1998.

And we can't stop growing because then we go bankrupt. We need to grow at that speed, or even faster if we are to stay ahead of global debt payments and the interest due on that debt.

Quite simply, we can't stop growing (we go bankrupt) and we can't go on growing (we run out of raw materials).

Constant growth is a myth because
  1. We will run out of materials, be they natural resources or intellectual property, to commercialise
  2. We simply don't need all the stuff we are forced to make to sustain constant growth. Most of it moves rapidly from factory to garbage dump, hence the need for the throw-away culture.
  3. We will alter the biosphere to such an extent as to make in inhospitable to humanity
  4. We will go bankrupt if we slow growth beyond a point allowing us to service the debt.
  5. And it's all escalating at an exponential rate, 2x2, x2, x2, x2 at a constant rate, like seconds ticking away on a clock.

Even now the only way we are staying ahead of the game is through monetising and commercialising every dimension of our human cultural commons (which belongs to us all), exploiting every natural resource (which also belongs to us all), whilst exporting the real cost of that production into the future. This is a trick companies like Enron used, except they got caught, but we just do it in smarter ways. Well not so smart, it's just called global denial.

And this all happens while the money system, as it is and because of cultural design, pools profits into smaller and smaller points of collection, meaning the disparity between have's and have not's also grows exponentially.

The data conclusively shows, the system as it is will break down (whether we lynch culprits or not). It is inevitable and it will happen quickly when it does, in much the same way a business recognises its bankruptcy, quickly. This does not mean is goes bankrupt quickly, just that it refuses to recognise the signs until it's forced to acknowledge it's real financial position. Until that point the directors live in the powerful elixir of false profit, hope and denial.

And bankruptcy seems like the point we will get to first, although this is not certain. In bankruptcy, all commercial activity stops. There is simply no money available to facilitate the exchange of goods and services. Willing sellers and buyers have no medium of exchange, except for the few who may have access to precious metals, but this would be a very interim solution, since the have's already control it (and it's another scarce resource, which doesn't really solve the problem of scarcity).

Of course the old system (transformation always implies the death of the old) does not have to end so traumatically, if we recognise early enough and respond to the data. The longer we delay, the more inevitable the traumatic collapse of the 'scarcity' based system will be.

And I can hear you whisper. Sure sounds like collapse to me, and it would be if something new wasn't already emerging.

What we are witnessing in the world today is a global shift, at the leading edge, from scarcity to abundance consciousness. This in itself is simply a necessary precursor to a new way of thinking and the development of a 'revolutionary / evolutionary' new economic mode(s) of production. And it's important to point out that the current model got us from wandering the plains in search of our next meal, to here. It was necessary, in that this was how it happened.

Scarcity and the age of growth are not bad. It played a crucial role in our human evolution. It just can't take us from here to there. Everything is useful to a point, ceases to be useful anymore and then deteriorates into a problem. If not attended to it shifts from a problem to pathological pattern, ending its life in psychotic self-destruction. Our current system appears to be in the final stages of psychosis. And even now, there is lots of money to be made. There is incredible profit in destruction and many merchants who are happy to profit while 'Rome Is Burning'.

It's important to recognise that abundance is not the opposite of scarcity, that's simply the antithesis and a negation of the principals of scarcity, a subtle confirmation of those very principals. Abundance is the step after scarcity, after the benefits which flowed from that level of consciousness, have run their course.

It may be easier to picture this as the most significant step in human evolution is over 50,000 years. As the emergence of a new species, playing by different rules, rules beyond the comprehension of scarcity mankind. There is simply nothing I can say to scarcity man that will help him understand abundance, in much the same way that it would be possible to explain to Neanderthal man, the rules of modern commerce.

Suffice it to say, that we will witness and are witnessing the transformation of the financial systems, of our understanding of 'what money is and what it does'. From a thing holding independent value, to knowledge (an idea), signifying a level and degree of contribution.

At the heart of a new socio-economic mode of production is going to lie a new story of why we are here, what we are supposed to do. Growth will not be measured by economic activity, but rather by community, wholehearted participation and care.

We will no longer be driven by the need to earn a living so that maybe at some point we can get around to doing what it is that we really want to do. It will be the revolutionary shift to a steady state economy, where the gifts of our planet and cultural heritage are recognised as the human commons and our real wealth.

And the best insurance policy. Personal transformation. Your shift, the shift you bring to your family, community, society, culture and together we bring to the world. Your reconnection with community (scarcity and the age of growth came at the price of isolation and separation), because when the money system as it is fails, which it will, it's the community who will support each other.

There is no free meal; this is not a change external to the very essence of who you are. It is not a cognitive, dry intellectualising. It's a metamorphosis of being, becoming and participating. It runs so deep and alters our world so profoundly that the impulse to deny it is overpowering.

So of all things, I would suggest the biggest insurance policy would be, knowledge, verifying and learning. Is what I have written here the delusions of the insane? Just wrapping your brain around the fragility of our financial system and economic mode of production causes incredible angst and tension. It causes us to contract, deny and dig further into the very system which mathematically cannot continue.

This will create anger, even rage and this is healthy. In any relationship that is dying, there is pain upon the recognition of its passing. However, we don't want to use that pain and projected anger to force us to take the next step. Pain, anger and suffering simply can't comprehend the systems of abundance, let alone participate in developing them.

23 June 2012

What happened to the promise of leisure (and pleasure)?

The promise of technology and industrialisation was... more time and convenience for culture and the individual. So what went wrong, because we now have less time, more pressure and more debt?

We are in every respect just like the dog chasing its tail. The faster we run, the more dizzy we get and our tail, the anticipation of leisure and reward, remains just as far away as it's always been, if not further -- If we apply the quantum theory that the faster we go the smaller we get, resulting in the distance from nose to end of tail growing.

Back on track. The problem is twofold, mindset and systems.

Mindset
The mindset of growth converts every opportunity [of more time] not into the opportunity for greater leisure, but rather the opportunity to do even more, so we can make more, buy more, have more. The false promise that more is somehow better, even when most of the more is completely and utterly unnecessary, and adds nothing to our quality of life, cultural development or physical comfort.

In fact it could easily be argued that it's hurting us now and mortgaging the future.

Systems
The other is the systems of which the money or financial systems is the biggest culprit. The vast bulk of our money is created through the mechanism of debt creation (home, business and government loans), and attached to debt is interest. The interest however, is never created. And so trapped in this false scarcity, we are compelled to produce more to firstly stay ahead of the debt payments, and secondly to service the interest on that debt (which was never created)

The only solution to this quandary is constant economic growth. And even a child can reason that constant growth within a finite context is destined to fail.

So even if there was a sudden planetary mindset shift from the idea that exponential growth equals progress, which it may have been many decades ago, but now is actually counter progress, to a steady state equals progress. We would still find ourselves trapped in the traditional money narrative of chasing debt and the interest [never created] on debt.

It's a bit like using one credit card to pay another. It's an ill conceived plan ultimately destined to fail.

And as complex as it may seem, and it can get a little tricky, both mindset and human systems can be changed. Mindset can be mastered and moulded, the ideas and narratives which govern our behaviour and the systems can be transformed. And we can change the narratives of the existing systems, the values and principles on which they are build.

The point here is that money and the systems governing is creation, distribution and final dissolution (required in a debt based system) are all the creations of our minds and mindsets. We can change them. Money is not a real thing like trees and tractor tyres. It's an idea of how we should go about exchanging value (our gifts) and keeping score.

It is as illusionary as Celsius or meters.

The challenge comes in when we try to change the systems without first having changed our mindset. The money system is a product of mindset and it has been a powerful instrument in human development, but now the cause of looming catastrophe and untold misery. But to change it, we need to master a new level of enlightened mindset, with which to design and experiment with other more relevant narratives and systems of money.

It we simply tear it down, we can only ever replace it with another variation of the system which we have just gotten rid of.

Mindset mastery or transformation alone is not enough, but playing and redesigning systems from within the very mindset (values and beliefs) which originally developed them, is... well pointless.

21 June 2012

Consistent winning, in a finite context, is just another way to lose

As our recognition of the inter-dependantness of all things deepens, so too does the absurdity of the psychology of sustainable winning (growth) in a finite environment become more apparent.

Let’s use the game of monopoly as an example. The game has a finite number of players, money, resources and properties -- just like planet earth. Inevitably, and in a relatively short time one player through chance or skill emerges the winner. But at that point the game breaks down and comes to an end. And when the game comes to an end the winning itself turns to loss, because the game has ended, even winning itself.

And when the game ends all lose, and the only winning is the memory of winning.

It's worthwhile noticing that the strategy of development and growth is initially useful as properties are purchased and developed. But at some critical point in the game when development has run its course, when everything that can be commercialised, has been, for the game to continue the rules need to radically change.

From growth to consistency, from private ownership to communal use and from competition to care. In that space the game now has a chance to evolve and bring forth new potentials unrecognised and not needed during its phase of growth.

In our human evolution, we have come to that point. The rules of the game are changing as we recognise the inevitability of loss, the inter-connectedness of all things and the finiteness and fragility of this small planet we call home.

Waiting for the old game to end so we can start a new one is not the option we want to be shooting for.

19 June 2012

Adolescence is always painful, not least for the rest of us

It's a mistake to believe that abundance is the opposite of scarcity and therefore plays by exactly the opposite rules. It's more useful and certainly more technically accurate to think of abundance as the next step in our human [psychological] evolution, which finally integrates the core learning points of both unconsciousness and scarcity consciousness.

From Unconsciousness to Scarcity to Abundance... to Relevance.

In the 1960's we witnessed necessary, but rather crude expressions of World Consciousness and the Woman's Liberation Movement. Over the past 50 years these expressions have developed and matured, are infinitely more sophisticated, complex and beautiful.

So to with Abundance Consciousness. Its earlier expressions held in stark contrast to the heaviness and pain of scarcity, and with it some mystical magical power to achieve all we want through wishful thinking and visualisation -- Usually corroborated by a few pointed anecdotes.

Abundance is not the opposite of scarcity, not is it prior to scarcity, not is it equal to scarcity. The age of [leisure] abundance lies after scarcity, because it's more complex, sophisticated and paradoxical, and depends on us as a culture transitioning through scarcity. It plays by new upside-down rules, redefining the realities of limit.

It only happens when we make the invisible [unconscious] rules now governing our world of progress visible. When visible, we have the opportunity to de-construct the ones no longer necessary and are keeping us trapped, transform the ones which have meaning but are still relatively immature, and create new ones.

It's by design.

We live in a world of finite resources and limitations. These do not go away because of a shift in consciousness; we just begin to experience, relate to and use them differently. We see abundance in deeper more subtle levels of reality, while respecting and working with the limitations of the finite more apparent world.

Scarcity is not limitation, and abundance is not without limit. Scarcity is a state of consciousness, a governing feeling, an experience and interpretation of life from which all strategies [even corporate] emanate. Limit is limit; constraints in any finite environment, exist.

More than anything, abundance is the adolescent human, growing up.

16 June 2012

3 methods for change

1/ Spend your time burdened and victimised. Insist on finding the culprit. Want change, but resist all attempts to change. The systems are corrupt and inequitable, unless you can figure out how they can work for you.

Effortlessness means doing nothing new.

2/ Search for inner peace and serenity, but do nothing to threaten your sense of identity, nest egg and investment portfolio.

Effortlessness means detachment.

3/ Transform the way you perceive, experience, think and act and then go out into the world and live your personal philosophy. Cooperate, build synergies and where necessary bring accountability. Be psychologically prepared to risk everything for a better future, while working in new ways within old systems, to build your business and develop your career.

Effortlessness means doing everything (relevant to you) in a new way and with a new mindset.

14 June 2012

Ending badly is a bad ending

All relationships end, but they don't have to end badly.

They end badly because we play them out passed the time they could or should have ended, naturally.
They end badly because we avoid the short discomfort of confronting that end, and instead fearfully wait for them to spiral into pain and anger, where we are forced to acknowledge that end.
They end badly because we are scared of a unknown future.

We are in relationship with people, business, money, govenmental and cultural systems. And it will end badly if we don't confront our fears, and talk about why they are not working and what to replace them with.

It may still end badly, because we can't control the responses of others, our partners. But ignoring the problem guarantees it ends badly, and confronting the problems only means it may end badly. The more caring, intelligent and skilful we are in confronting the problem, the less probable it is that it ends badly.

We are in relationship with a way of thinking, in exactly the same way we where in relationship with our ex-partner, with the same fears and doubts about a new way of thinking that lies beyond.

Don't be fearfull, this is how our evolution feels from the inside. It's a messy process full of false starts and abandoned projects.

Mastery, the new frontier

Complexity, diminishing natural resources, population, technology, information.

Our world is doubling in complexity, consistently and relentlessly. We are exposed to more information in one day than the average person was exposed to in an entire lifetime a little over a hundred years ago. And that continues to double consistently and relentlessly --- multiply 2 by 2 once per minute for an hour, and you will experience for yourself the consequences of consistent doubling.

And we adapt.

Our brains develop, re-wire, our psyches expand connecting more dots... getting more complex, creating more complexity. Complexity driving complexity, doubling consistently and relentlessly.

Is it going to stop, will the train finally arrive at the station. Will the bubble pop. Will life return to the sedentary pace of the 1920's. Is it reasonable to assume it will. Can progress be stopped?

In part the solution lies in new cultural systems, technologies and patterns of behaviour, but it's the human psyche which designs, executes and administers such systems.

New ways of thinking, new motives for engaging, new skills and talents all depending on new levels of personal 'psychological' mastery.

The inner personal psychological world is the new frontier.

13 June 2012

Reading behaviour

My colleague says she cares about me, but consistently digs into my stuff and forgets to return them.
My partner says she loves me, but consistently bullies [ignores] me when I don't do what she wants.
My boss says he values my input, but consistently cuts me off in mid-sentence.
My children say they love me, but consistently argue with me.
My bank says it cares about me, but when in financial trouble my assets are ruthlessly seized.
My parents say they love me, but they consistently make asinine corrections.
I say I love my wife, but I consistently talk over her.
I say I love my children, but I consistently get impatient when they make mistakes.
I say I value my family more than anything, but I consistently work extremely long hours and over weekends.
I say I want to learn Chinese, but I have not even tried.
I say I want the world to change, but I don't consistently work to change myself or the world.
I say I want to get fit, but I never go to the gym.

We can say anything, but it's our behaviour and the systems we develop that are really communicating what we believe and what we want. Listen to the words, but learn to read the consistent behaviour.

In the case of conflict between words and consistent (not once off) behaviour, it's the behaviour that is communicating the truth.

If you care, consistently find ways to show that care. Or else you don’t… care.

12 June 2012

The systems we have

The political, financial, banking, judicial, industrial, commercial ...

The systems aren't wrong, just old -- reflective of a more traditional, contracted and hierarchical way of thinking.
They where once new and innovative.
They got us here but can't get us there.
Much and many are invested in these older systems--there is fear of the new, fear the loss (CISAP).
They are strong but vulnerable.
All systems end their days as self-destructive, even the biggest one of all, the universe.
Even self-destructive systems cling to survival, as irrational as it may seem (see Syria).
Systems sensing attack, contract into more archaic and fundamental beliefs (USA fundamentalism).
It's impossible to predict the degree of conflict, or future depth and degree of systemic collapse.
A random sequence of apparently unconnected events could cascade as an unfolding in any direction.
Our existing systems evolved mostly out of relative unconsciousness, now there's the prospect of intentional design.
Human systems didn't develop and don't exist independently from natural systems, each influences the other (global warming & climate change).

11 June 2012

Where one step is light years away

In this article: In over twelve years of mindset coaching in one form or another, there is one question which has consistently tripped me up. How to illustrate, not even prove, the relationship between mindset and the results we experience, and mindset and our psychological well-being -- by that I mean the quality of our inner experience of life.

I don't know a person who doesn't know this, and yet I know only a handful who actually get it ... 'as I believe, so I think and experience the world. As I think and experience the world so I behave, and as I behave so I influence and am responsible for crafting (in part) the results I (and all of us) experience'.

This is mindset. The sum total of all we believe and assume to be the truth. Thousands if not millions of tiny and big fixed ideas / beliefs clumping together, in loose and dynamic alliance, to form narratives about not only the possibilities of the next moment, but also rationalising the past and interpreting the present.

Some of these beliefs are individual in nature, some cultural. Some are created by fear and ignorance and others through experience, education and occasionally trauma. Some are the consequences of our psychological level of maturity [world-view], some by our state of consciousness and others formed by our temperament and personality.

An introvert lives in a very different world to an extrovert. They have different assumptions and beliefs about what is right and wrong, how one should behave and treat others. For example, extroverts thrive in a competitive environment... they perceive competitors as warmly as collaborators. Whereas introverts thrive on cooperation and are turned off and even repulsed by competitive behaviour.

Think for a moment how this would affect the problem solving potentials of colleagues, managers and couples. One perceiving the other as disengaged and fragile while the other seeing anger, dominance and intolerance. Where neither is in fact true.

Mindset is the lens through which we see and understand not only the world, but our partners, children, staff and clients ... ourselves. And it's this perception which guides our response and the logic of those responses. And it's our mindset that determines what systems and structures we create.

But mindset is one step removed from working directly on the thing itself, and it's that one single step that might as well make it light-years away.

09 June 2012

Relaxing into our discomfort

In this article: What do we do when circumstances turn toxic or the environment hostile?

Our first priority when facing any complex, overwhelming or threatening context, is to clam down. The more psychologically contracted or flooded with emotions we are, the less clear, more fundamental and less rational our thinking and behaviour becomes.

Many of us use those feelings of discomfort and the heightened emotional states to drive participation, but the quality of that participation is then compromised, even to the point of being self-destructive.

But calmness alone is not enough to solve the problem or create a solution representative of a more noble purpose. What we need is purpose, intelligence, more proven research and less myth, new skills and the least amount of toxic psychological baggage possible -- Specific strategies and tactics with the ability to execute.

The thing with strategies and tactics though, is that they are not independent of the psychological and personality processes and logic that developed them.

Before anything... lies our developed capacity to deeply relax into and not contract away from, the source of our discomfort and anxiety. It is the heart of personal mastery.

08 June 2012

Even good assumptions can be bad

Every action, every system or way of doing things, has at it's core an assumption or set of assumptions and beliefs.

If I eat food, the assumption is that food will satisfy my hunger or some psychological discomfort -- we don't eat just because we're hungry.

If my life is obsessively geared toward making money, there is the assumption that some physical or psychological discomfort will be relieved, or some benefit created, through that effort.

Assumptions themselves are neither good not bad. Many are false and the rest are just more or less mature, intelligent and rational.

The ability to clearly identify and evaluate these assumptions and de-construct false ones, transform less intelligent ones, and create completely new ones, changes not only how we understand the world, but how we act in and how we feel about, ourselves, others and the world.

Consistently questioning and querying our assumptions (especially when they're working for us - precisely because they're working for us) and exposing and contemplating new foreign assumptions and narratives are the keys to psychological development.

07 June 2012

Challenging the status-quo

In this article: Typically we understand challenging the status-quo to mean resisting and confronting.

But this invariably creates conflict and almost certainly more deeply entrenches the very mindset assumptions being resisted, and the status-quo itself. It makes change laborious, expensive and time consuming.

Rather challenging the status-quo means making the effort to more deeply understand and expose the less-rational mindset assumptions upon which systems are built. Of educating ourselves and those who insist on defending and maintaining them. And of experimenting with new systems based on new more refined and coherent theories and beliefs.

We cling to old ideas and systems because we have vested interest, stand to gain or are paralysed by the prospect of change, and the loss of personal and cultural identity that would mean.

We cling because we are afraid of loss.

But once a system has been established simply transforming the underlying assumptions, will probably not be enough to change the system itself.

And tearing down systems without transforming and changing the underlying cultural mindset assumptions are almost certainly going to result in... Just more of the same. Surface change with regime continuity.

Effectively challenging the status-quo requires the aligned, purposeful and focussed endeavours of demolition experts, philosophers, teachers, architects (professionals), artisans, builders, and soldiers.

06 June 2012

Life, moral or amoral?

You may have a belief that life is inherently good and supportive of your endeavours (moral). Or you have a belief that life is neutral and is neither for nor against your success (amoral), i.e. does not care.

Both are useful, but which best empowers you when circumstances get decidedly difficult?

05 June 2012

One way to get it right, an infinite number of ways to get it wrong

In this article: We complete activities faster, with less error and with significantly less stress after we've developed the ability to consciously and intentionally direct our focussed stream of attention.

Although there are innumerable parallel sub-conscious processes happening within the mind / body complex all the time, we have only one conscious stream of attention. Every shift in that conscious stream of attention is an interruption, and interruption is the single biggest barrier to creativity and productivity -- and the biggest contributor to frustration, stress and illness.

Learning new skills and concepts although necessary are not as important as learning to hold our attention on what we're doing despite externalities and internal impulses -- but it is subtle. In essence personal or mindset mastery begins with stabilising and mastering our ability to hold that stream of conscious attention and direct it at will.

For example I could sit down to learn some new technology. And I could despite intense external interruption (from my kids or colleagues), but I will learn it quicker, more accurately and with less frustration without interruption (the myth of multi-tasking) -- at least for the time I have allocated to that activity.

But there are different qualities or methods of 'controlled' or focussed attention. And just like pharmaceuticals there are side effects or contra-indications to each method. Get the method wrong and the contra-indications escalate to the point where the benefits of a focussed stream of attention are dramatically outweighed by the negative consequences.

There are is only one way to get it right, and an infinite number of ways to get it wrong.

Good teachers of meditation, and there are few, are really worth their weight in gold, especially if we add up the significant cost of a life time of lost creativity, productivity and frustration [stress].

One of the principal benefits of meditation lies in the process of discovering and developing that right way. In meditation we work directly on that focussed stream of conscious attention without the added complexity of working on something else while working on attention. One by itself is difficult enough.

What is learned in meditation is almost immediately applied into the real world of work and relationships. The benefits, initial big wins, prove the process and the proof drives practice.

It's another process to apply the understanding, again with many ways to get it wrong and only one way to get it right.

There are many other and in my opinion more significant benefits to meditation, but without the developed ability to intentionally apply [and hold] a very specific type of focussed attention, all endeavour thereafter takes significantly longer, with a significantly higher error rate and increasing levels of frustration and stress.

04 June 2012

Attention

As long as we allow ourselves to be provoked and shocked into action, those who want to hi-jack our attention and direct our efforts will find ever more manipulate ways to so so. Even in the name and for the sake of, 'a more noble purpose'.

It stops when learn to focus and hold our attention, and give it to only those causes and products which attract and inspire us, and aligns with our personal philosophy.

With that we determine which ideas, organisations and institutions flourish and which whither -- we shape our cultural landscape. We free ourselves from manipulation and demand evidence and proof of care.

03 June 2012

Discover you purpose ... NOW!

In this article: Is it reasonable to assume the purpose can be discovered or created... now? As if it's an act of will devoid of the need for personal mastery, and a reasonably sophisticated level of knowledge about the social context and systems at play.

The message that is pumped through repetitively and consistently, particularly from the US, is instant. Instant understanding, instant success, the instant formula. The reasoning is simple. It's the lizard brain that's making all the decisions, so let’s make sure that we're marketing to the lizard brain which seeks principally... immediate gratification.

The logic runs something like this -- Our message is good, so what if the method is a little manipulative, it's the goal that's important, not the method. This mindset assumption is not only false, but has been proved to be false every time. Because the way and the goal are not separate, the way is the goal and the goal is the way.

The thing is, your purpose is not all about you... self-indulgence is.

It's about your cooperation [with others] in shaping our future external shared reality. The one we call community, culture and the world.

And the less we understand of the context the less relevant our participation becomes. And I don't believe relevance can be separated from purpose. In fact I would argue that relevance is purpose.

Relevance: Our capacity to specifically (using our developed talents), collaboratively (in cooperation with others) and appropriately respond (meeting the real needs of the external context) to what is both important and required.

Because without relevance what's left is self-indulgence, and without personal identity, only chaos.

02 June 2012

It's not what we [want to] believe it is

In this article: Examining a few of the corporate, management and coaching mindset myths believed to increase productivity, innovation and creative thinking, but really do the opposite while increasing staff turnover, illness and hostility.

Multitasking
We have a single stream of conscious attention which although can jump quickly from activity to activity, can only focus on one at a time. So what looks like multitasking is really a constant interruption of the stream of attention reducing productivity and increasing our mistakes by up to 50%.

Groupthink and brainstorming
Over forty years of research shows that if efficiency and creativity is the priority we should be left to work alone, because we produce more and higher quality ideas alone than in a group. And to make matters worse, that performance drops as the group size increases.

Collaboration
That passive forms of collaboration like email, instant messaging, cloud documents and online chat tools work more effectively than active forms of collaboration like meetings and group activities.

Open plan offices
Personal space and freedom from peer pressure, even the types of pressure created in team building and groupthink environments, are essential for creativity and productivity.
Open plan offices impair memory, increase staff turnover, and make people sick, hostile, unmotivated and insecure.
Open plan workers are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure, elevated levels of stress, susceptibility to illness especially flu, and argue more with colleagues.

In short the single biggest barrier to creativity and productivity is interruption.

I would argue that groupthink; brainstorming and collective action plays more to the organiser’s desire for control than to the real objective of forging new ideas and of finding innovative ways to apply them. There are benefits to social interaction like the introduction of new narratives, attachment, the creation of a social glue and a sense of shared purpose, but productivity and creativity aren't amongst them.


31 May 2012

The ozone hole affects us whether we believe in it or not

A sensual person has a naturally heightened awareness of the pleasures and joys of sensation.

An emotional person, sensitive to and often swept away by the power of their emotions.

And a sensitive (feeling) person, a naturally heightened awareness of their feelings ... i.e. their state of mind or consciousness.

This does not mean that an emotional person is unaffected by sensations or feelings, just that they are less aware of the presence and impact of them. All three systems are active and influential in all people, in much the same way we are affected by the hole in the ozone layer, whether we know of its existence or not.

In mastery lies our capacity to become aware of and utilise sensation, emotion and feeling in a healthy way that contributes toward the fulfilment of our purpose.

30 May 2012

The problem with using the words bicycle and aeroplane interchangeably

In this article: Planes and bicycles are both forms of transport but they are different. Cats and dogs are different although they are both pets. Sensations, emotions and feelings are different -- they are the consequences of the activities of different systems, do different things and we go about mastering them differently. And getting them all mixed up causes problems and stunts our psychological development.

Sensation is a product of our central nervous system. If it's pleasant we want more and if not, we physically contract away from the cause. If that's not possible, like meditating in an Indian temple at 5:30am in summer -- breakfast time for mosquitoes -- then we simply need to find a way to surrender to the sensation of hundreds of mosquitoes feeding on us. The more ones resists the more disturbing the sensation becomes.

Emotions are a chemical reaction, at a cellular level, and a product of the limbic and endocrinal systems. By the time we become aware of an emotion, the chemical reaction has already taken place and it's impossible to reverse. The best we can do is sit it out, because no decision taken from within either a pleasant or unpleasant drug induced state (a strong emotional state) is ever going to be a well informed or particularly intelligent.

But the wait isn't a long one because an emotion only lasts between eight to twelve seconds, unless we reintroduce the thought stream which provoked the emotional to begin with. This continues until we cease thinking about whatever it is that provoked the limbic and endocrinal response. Hint: count to ten or ten deep breathes.

Emotional mastery means letting the emotion pass without getting provoked into action and then, if necessary of altering the stream of thoughts.

So what is a feeling and how is it different to an emotion?

A feeling is how we experience, or the experiential consequence of a state of consciousness, or a state of mind. It's how we experience the subtle pattern of our electromagnetic radiation … and more subtle levels. Different patterns have different feelings. Although there are many variations of feelings, they all fall into one of three categories;

Contracted, like fear, anxiety or frustration.
Neutral or relaxed like serene, tranquil even joy.
Expansive like interested, excited or intrigued.

Unlike emotions, feelings can change in a milli-second and stick around for years. Feelings because they translate into the physical experience of limit, tranquillity and intrigue form the foundation upon which all other mindset assumptions are layered. Mastering feelings is mastering our state of mind or consciousness.

It's not that it's difficult to do, it's more that mastering states of consciousness requires a different technique to emotions (let them pass) and sensations (surrender to). Contracted feelings need to be relaxed and relaxed feelings need to be focused through inquiry, purpose and interest.

More importantly though is the effect that feelings have on both the qualitative and qualitative dimensions of our relationships and systems. It's hard to believe that such a almost insignificant thing can end up being so important ...

29 May 2012

My favourite writing productivity tools

In this article: As an independent  professional who spends a lot of time writing (and journalling) these are my favourite writing productivity tools. They are not a replacement for either an ease of mind or clarity of purpose, they are simply there to help me keep focus and assist with personal management.

And I would recommend visiting The Publication Coach and signing up for Daphne's newsletter.
If you love what you do:
Start a blog and blog every single day, you just have to write something every single day about your work and why it's interesting, and if you can't come up with a reason that your work is interesting, find different work.
~ Seth Godin

Write of Die
Write or Die kills Writer's Block ... Write or Die is a new kind of writing productivity application that forces you to write by providing consequences for distraction and procrastination. It's actually quite a lot of fun.

Penzu Journal
Penzu is a free online diary and personal journal focused on privacy. Easily keep a secret diary or a private journal of notes and ideas securely on the web. It's great because it also has a word count.

** The Pomodoro Technique (This is an awesome time management tool)
The Pomodoro Technique® is a way to get the most out of time management. Turn time into a valuable ally to accomplish what we want to do and chart continuous improvement in the way we do it.

LucidChart  - Great for Mind Mapping
We have rethought and redesigned the entire diagramming process to make it as easy as possible. Draw flow charts, wireframes, mind maps, org charts, UML diagrams, and more with just a few clicks

AwesomeNotes
Finally, combine notes with to-dos in one app! Organize your life today with Awesome Note, and start making every second count!

Dropbox
Dropbox is a free service that lets you bring your photos, docs, and videos anywhere and share them easily. Never email yourself a file again! I use DropBox to share confidential files and audio's with my clients.

All of these programs have apps to go along with them.

28 May 2012

Sacred economics

"Sacred Economics traces the history of money from ancient gift economies to modern capitalism, revealing how the money system has contributed to alienation, competition, and scarcity, destroyed community, and necessitated endless growth.

Today, these trends have reached their extreme - but in the wake of their collapse, we may find great opportunity to transition to a more connected, ecological, and sustainable way of being".
 ~ Charles Eisenstein

Loving your work

It doesn't matter how far you started from your purpose, or how much you dislike your present job, the goal like a trout swimming upstream, is to make your way toward Loving Your Work.

The process can be a little traumatic, with some relationships falling away and new ones emerging. It's very difficult to predict how such a journey will play out. But what's important is that you don't give up hope. A quiet persistence is required.

27 May 2012

If competition is killing you, you're probably nondescript

In the article: The realisation that you are struggling against the competition is a calling to take the next step in working out who you are, who you serve, why you do what you do and how to make a bigger difference.

If you are a nondescript coach solving nondescript problems for a nondescript group of people using an undefined process, you are going to be in competition with every other nondescript coach solving the same nondescript problems.

If you are an independent pharmacy selling cosmetics, what-not's and prescription drugs to the community at large, you are in competition with the wholesalers doing bulk and cheaper.

Competition is not the problem, a lack of identity, uniqueness, purpose and most probably business systems, is.

And uniqueness requires ... new levels of care and self-awareness.
  • To care for a specific community, and/or with specific needs, and/or using a specific processes, and systems that makes sense and shows you care. 
  • To care for the growth and development of staff and vendors 
  • To bring yourself, all of yourself, to the party exposing your passions and yourself to probable rejection and failure. You may well be rejected by some, but you will be loved by others. 

Failure on the other hand is an inherent part of the trial and error, success formula.

If you care and you're passionate about what you are doing, you will find a way to be unique. And unique cannot be in competition.

This does not mean your business will be unaffected by community, national and global financial contractions, it just means you will not have those problems on top of the problems of fierce competition.

Unique discovers new innovative ways to cooperate with other unique people and businesses that at first glance may be doing something similar, but in their own unique way.

When most of our energy is absorbed with struggling and pushing back against the competition, there not much left to devote to learning, growth and development, which is always the answer to 'stalled, frustrated and stuck'.

26 May 2012

Freedom is freedom from what?

In this article: The new way offers a radically new and more innovative way to wholeheartedly cooperate in, and contribute toward building a better shared reality, which we call the world.

But
Wholehearted cooperation depends on maturity and autonomy
And autonomy on purpose
And purpose on identity
And identity on mastery
And mastery on freedom

But freedom from what?

Freedom from fear and adversarial logic. The experience and consequences of the psychological contraction and all it builds.

The Buddhists call it suffering and Christians, hell.

Fear can never wholeheartedly cooperate, but without maturity, autonomy, purpose, identity, mastery and freedom, it's all we have to motivate participation, albeit reluctant.

25 May 2012

The end of fear

Fear is a feeling ...

It is the experience of a mental contraction. It does not belong to anything but that inner psychological contraction. It is not a fear of something. It is rather an experience triggered by the mental prospect or reality of something.

To end fear all we need do is physically and psychologically relax [the contraction], despite the prospect or reality of that thing. And with relaxation we dissolve fear.

We now find ourselves free [from fear] to get involved if we're interested, or not, with that thing which provoked it. Or maybe it's long since passed, perhaps a memory.

Fear and ease can not co-exist.

24 May 2012

Living in two worlds

In this article: It's subtle to notice that we each live in two worlds and not in one, but when noticed it has the tendency to change everything.

There is the shared real concrete world of events, systems and the stuff we can touch and see. And then there is the inner personal psychological world that explains, gives meaning and a narrative to that real concrete one. And a different narrative provokes a different response which leads to different results, which of course reinforces the original narrative

In the outer world we have to one extent or another a temporary waxing and waning influence. But in the inner psychological world we have, depending on our level of personal mastery, a greater and more consistent one.

There is often the assumption that we all live in the same world, but this is not true. If we acknowledge that we each live in a synthesis of inner personal psychological and outer real shared world, then there must also be the acknowledgement that we each live in different worlds ... because no two inner psychological worlds are identical.

Struggle, tension, anxiety and conflict come about when we mistakenly believe that the path to determining our own inner personal reality lies through shaping (controlling) that outer shared one.

The truth is somewhat different and a whole lot easier. Master the inner and cooperate in shaping the outer. This is exciting because it means that we don't actually know or can ever know what the outer cultural world is ever really going to look like, because it's the consequence of a shared activity. And fulfilling because no matter what it ends up looking like, we participated simply because it was a lot of fun and deeply meaningful to do so.

Paradoxically, when we do that, we end up exerting a greater influence on that outer shared reality, than when we attacked it directly.

22 May 2012

Adversarial thinking gets draining as we get older

In this article: Adversarial thinking is initially easier, but creates problems later. Cooperative thinking is much more difficult earlier, but ultimately delivers better results for everyone.

Most of our thinking is done using an adversarial logic, and this works well, because it uses the events, people and circumstances around it as fuel to push against and move forward. It's a great logic when there's limited personal identity and purpose, because that is gained through the struggle.

However it becomes challenging as we get older, because adversarial logic is for young people with lots of energy.

Cooperation then becomes preferable. But cooperation requires a new level of clarity of identity and purpose, and the ability to connect, listen, respect, hold boundaries and develop trust. It creates very different strategies, tactics and systems.

To make the shift, not only do we need to completely re-think how and why we do what we do, but we also need to remember that we live in a world where adversarial logic dominates. And in many communities, esteemed.

21 May 2012

Often it's the cart before the horse

In this article: Which to master first, mindset or productivity technologies and business strategies and skills.

Acquiring knowledge, using productivity technologies, developing strategies and employing tactics and sharpening our business skills, is crucial.

Mindset mastery, relaxing the self-contraction, shifting from fear to passion, from 'have to' to 'want to' is essential.

But either by itself is going to get stuck.

An ease of mind is the bed rock of innovation, creativity, spontaneity and purpose, but they need to be shaped and guided in expression by technologies, strategies, tactics and skills.

A Chinese marital artist I met in a Taiwanese tea shop many years back had just finished a tour of South Africa with his young students. He told me they had won every competition, and when I asked him why, he answered. 'Because from day one we focus on both skill and mindset, not one before the other, and neither more important than the other. They both form part of an integral practice.'

But more than that, fear based technologies, strategies and skills differ considerably [in logic and outcomes] from those developed from a place of relaxed passion.

It's true they are both two sides of the same coin, and in children I would agree, teach both simultaneously. But for adults making the shift, I would argue that mindset is more important to master first, precisely because it changes the logic and nature of the productivity technologies, strategies, tactics and skills.

Ease of mind and consistent inquiry eventually results in clarity of purpose. And it's that raw purpose which is shaped and moulded and given strategic commercial expression.

20 May 2012

Reflection

In this article: There have been seven great influences in my life; support, acceptance, purpose, integration, precision, communication and learning.

Different people have taught and offered those influences, and I accepted. It's not important that you to know who they are, only that you come to recognise and value them in your own life.

And I now find myself morally obliged and personally committed to share what has been shared. To give back what has been given.

Accepting them had it's challenges. Offering and sharing them in a way that supports my life, more so.

And for those seven great influences and to those who gave so freely of their wisdom, regardless of whether it was in return for payment or for my committed attention ... thank you.

19 May 2012

Yes we do

In this article: Is it true, do we have multiple intelligences and personalities?

It would be immeasurably easier to manage ourselves and set and achieve objectives, and relate to others, and for other to relate and connect to us, if this were not the case. If we thought, felt, responded and behaved in exactly the same way through all circumstances and at all times.

But unfortunately it's just not true.

Given a brutally demanding context, like existence in the wilderness where all ones energy goes into physically surviving, these more subtle shifts in personality and intelligence go unnoticed.

Because there are bigger fish to fry … like staying alive.

And although the world may seem to be in chaos, we have never in the history of humanity had it so easy and so good. And since our physical survival [especially in the more developed countries] is rarely in question, we come to notice these more subtle variations in how we think and react from situation to situation and context to context.

And subtle does not mean unimportant. Subtle changes in less threatening environments, where fundamental physical survival issues are not on the table, make for big changes in behaviour and for vastly differing outcomes.

Our psychology is sophisticated and complex and made more so because these [sub] internal psychological systems interact and influence each other, and the systems of others. Much like sub systems within the planetary echo system affecting and influencing each other -- tornadoes, floods, tsunamis are all consequences of systems affecting and influencing each other.

Our overall intelligence is actually made up of multiple strands or lines of intelligence including, cognitive (IQ), emotional (EQ), spiritual (SQ), moral (MQ), feelings, values, needs, psycho-sexual and kinaesthetic (to name a few), each developing through very distinct stages and expressing themselves through one of two core logics, the masculine and feminine.

Personalities and sub personalities are woven around core and often conflicting assertions, assumptions, beliefs, values and prior psychological traumas -- just like our bones and skin scars as a result of trauma, so too does our psyche.

It can initially seem overwhelming, in much the same way that the challenges of climate change and global warming, political instability, terrorism, financial, money and banking systems can be overwhelming in their complexity and inter-relatedness.

But I would assert, if I had to make a choice, that our personal psychological development and mastery is more important. Because it's that level of mastery that will ultimately determine our ability to successfully negotiate our individual, cultural and global ability to move forward and resolve challenges.

It also fundamentally affects and enables [or disables] our ability to live, love, earn a buck and make a difference in a changing world.

18 May 2012

Something more interesting than nothing

In this article: The fear of surrendering struggle, resistance and push-back as a motive to take action and get things done, is that without it we may find ourselves doing nothing at all.

And it's true, we wouldn't.

Unless of course we really wanted to ... do something.

Something we found more interesting and rewarding than lying back and doing nothing.

But to get there we must surrender the struggle and face the fear -- of possibly not doing anything at all.

17 May 2012

The game changer

In this article: The heart of mindset transformation lies in the shift from 'reluctant' to 'interested' participation, and here's why.

The opposite of interest isn't disinterest, it's reluctant. And it's reluctant action [participation] that asks, 'what's the least I need to do in order to get the most in return'.

It's reluctant that's attracted to 'instant success', 'get rich quick' and 'viral'.

It's reluctant that binds itself in productivity and time management tools in order to force and manipulate compliance.

It's reluctant that seeks success in 'wonder' strategies and tactics that for the most part are designed and executed by, and only deepen reluctance.

It's reluctant that loses focus and clarity, gets frustrated when things don't work out as planned or hits obstacles.

It's reluctance that gets stressed, suffers and feels entitled.

Reluctant is adversarial, interest cooperative.

And reluctant, no matter how many clock hours it works, is never going to produce the quality or quantity of outcome, interest is.

Reluctant has synonyms like afraid, averse, backward, calculating, cautious, chary, circumspect, demurring, diffident, discouraged, disheartened, disinclined, grudging, hanging back, hesitant, disheartened, disinclined, hesitating, indisposed, involuntary, laggard, loath, opposes, queasy, recalcitrant, remiss, shy, slack, slow, squeamish, tardy, uncertain, uneager and wary.

The great mindset transformation lies not in changing specific cognitive thoughts and beliefs, although this must be done as well, but rather in shifting action from reluctant participation to that of independently sustainable interest based participation.

And this is such a game changer that for a while you may not even be able to recognise yourself.