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January 2005
Synchronicity contains many rich and compelling
views about ‘being’ a leader. I have quoted directly from the book
and highlighted some of the essential ideas. Enjoy!
Synchronicity:
the inner path of leadership
by Joseph Jaworski
Three fundamental shifts of mind necessary for
creative leadership:
- a fundamental shift in the way we think
about the world
- a fundamental shift in our understanding
of relationship
- a shift in the nature of our commitment
As Campbell pointed out, the hero’s journey is
the journey of any of us who elect to search for our true destiny.
It reflects the inevitable passages we encounter as we discover
how to create the future. We hardly have the language to describe
the fundamental shift of mind that permits us to participate in
this unfolding creative order.
Robert Greenleaf (Servant Leadership) invites
people to consider a domain of leadership grounded in a state of
being, not doing, He says that the first and most important choice
a leader makes is the choice to serve, without which one’s capacity
to lead is profoundly limited. That choice is not an action in the
normal sense - it’s not something you do, but an expression of your
being. For Greenleaf, being a leader has to do with the relationship
between the leader and the led.
When things become desperate, we can easily find
ourselves waiting for a great leader to rescue us. Through all of
this, we totally miss the bigger question: “What are we, collectively,
able to create?”
Leadership is about creating a domain in which
human beings continually deepen their understanding of reality and
become more capable of participating in the unfolding of the world.
Ultimately, leadership is about creating new realities.
One of the great mysteries of our current state
of consciousness is how we can live in a world where absolutely
nothing is fixed, and yet perceive a world of ‘fixedness’. When
this fundamental shift of mind occurs, our sense of identity shifts,
too, and we begin to accept each other as legitimate human beings.
In our traditional image of commitment, things
get done by hard work. We have to sacrifice. If everything starts
to fall apart, we try harder, or we tell ourselves that we’re not
good enough, or that we don’t care enough to be that committed.
So we vacillate between two states of being, one a form of self-manipulation,
wherein we get things done by telling ourselves that if we don’t
work harder, it won’t get done; and the other a state of guilt,
wherein we say we’re not good enough. Neither of these states has
anything to do with the deeper nature of commitment.
When we operate in the state of mind in which
we realize we are part of the unfolding, we can’t not be committed.
It’s actually impossible not to be committed. Nothing ever happens
by accident. Every single thing is part of what needs to happen
right now. We only make the mistakes that we have to make to learn
what we’re here to learn right now. This is a commitment of being,
not a commitment of doing. We discover that our being is inherently
in a state of commitment as part of the unfolding process. I actualize
my commitment by listening, out of which my doing arises. Sometimes
the greatest acts of commitment involve doing nothing but sitting
and waiting until I just know what to do next.
I began to understand another, deeper aspect
of commitment. This kind of commitment begins not with will, but
with willingness. We begin to listen to the inner voice that helps
guide us as our journey unfolds. The underlying component of this
kind of commitment is our trust in the playing out of our destiny.
We have the integrity to stand in a state of surrender knowing that
whatever we need at the moment to meet our destiny will be available
to us. It is at this point that we alter our relationship with the
future.
When this new type of commitment starts to operate,
there is a flow around us. Things just seem to happen. A flow of
meaning begins to operate around us, as if we were part of a larger
conversation. This is the ancient meaning of dialogue: flow of meaning.
People gather around you, and a larger conversation
begins to form. When you are in this state of surrender, this state
of wonder, you exert an enormous attractiveness, not because you
are special, but because people are attracted to authentic presence
and to the unfolding of a future that is full of possibilities.
When we start to operate in this new state of
mind, grounded in this different commitment, something starts to
operate around us. We could call it ‘attraction’ - the attractiveness
of people in a state of surrender. Lastly, when we are in a state
of commitment and surrender, we begin to experience what is sometimes
called ‘synchronicity’. In other words, synchronicity is a result.
I have discovered that people are not really
afraid of dying; they’re afraid of not ever having lived, nor ever
having deeply considered their life’s purpose, and not ever having
stepped into that purpose and at least tried to make a difference
in this world.
I learned that our deepest need is to overcome
our aloneness and our separateness. The ultimate escape from our
separateness is through interpersonal union.
Fromm writes that mature love is union under
the condition of preserving one’s integrity and individuality. The
paradox: two beings become one and yet remain two. Giving is the
highest expression of potency. Fromm sets forth the elements of
love: care, which is the active concern for the life and growth
of the one we love; responsibility, which is caring for one’s physical
needs as well as one’s higher needs; and respect, which is allowing
others to grow as they need to on their own terms. To learn to love
is not easy. It requires discipline in one’s whole life. It requires
concentration, aloneness, thought, knowledge of oneself, listening,
living in the present, patience. Above all, to love must be your
supreme concern.
When we are in the state of being where we are
open to life and all its possibilities, willing to take the next
step as it is presented to us, then we meet the most remarkable
people who are important contributors to our life. The organizing
principle of the universe is “relatedness,” and this is more fundamental
than “thingness”....this new understanding is what’s missing in
how we think about leadership...the being aspect of leadership.
Fromm explains that Being is a fundamental mode
of existence or orientation to the world, one of aliveness and authentic
relatedness. It has to do with our character, our total orientation
to life; it is a state of inner activity. For the first time in
history, he argues, the physical survival of the human race depends
on a radical change of the human heart. This is a call to service
that will take great courage – to leave what we have and move out,
not without fear, but without succumbing to that fear. It is a call
to redefine what is possible, to see a vision of a new world and
be willing to undertake, step-by-step, what is necessary in concrete
terms to achieve that vision.
The essence of leadership, says Greenleaf, is
the desire to serve one another and to serve something beyond ourselves,
a higher purpose. In that orientation, servant leadership seems
like a very potent and natural way to think about leadership.
Leadership is all about the release of human
possibilities. Just being able to be there for others and to listen
to them is one of the most important capacities a leader can have.
It calls forth the best in people by allowing them to express what
is within them.
The mind has powers that allows us to go beyond
our normal or habitual way of being, and beyond what we think is
possible. When people join together and go beyond their habitual
way of being as a group, even more possibilities open up.
At the heart of effective societal leadership
is a sense of purposefulness; that there is extraordinary power
in a group committed to a common vision; that successful leadership
depends upon a fundamental shift of being, including a deep commitment
to the dream and a passion for serving versus being driven by the
pursuit of status and power.
To Bohm it was clear that humans have an innate
capacity for collective intelligence. They can learn and think together,
and this collaborative thought can lead to coordinated action. We
are all connected and operate within living fields of thought and
perception.
In dialogue, you’re not building anything, you’re
allowing the whole that exists to become manifest. It’s a deep shift
in consciousness away from the notion that parts are primary. People
always say “We have to step back and see the big picture here,”
as if we have to go from seeing the parts to constructing a whole.
But the whole already exists; it’s just that we’re locked into a
frame of reference that keeps us from perceiving it. In dialogue,
the whole shows up and is manifested by individuals later as they
take action.
Robert Frost once said “All great things are
done for their own sake.” When we see our visions and our dreams
in this way, it’s a subtle but most profound shift. And it’s under
these circumstances that the “hidden hands” phenomenon begins to
occur, and doors open of us that are beyond our imagination.
The key to overcoming the trap of overactivity
is in doing the inner, reflective work, individually and collectively
necessary to regain our balance.
This is the true joy in life, the being used
for a purpose recognized by yourself as a mighty one...the being
a force of nature instead of a feverish, selfish little clod of
ailments and grievances complaining that the world will not devote
itself to making you happy. – George Bernard Shaw
A central purpose of writing this book is to
propose an alternative; if individuals and organizations operate
from the generative orientation, from possibility rather than resignation,
we can create the future into which we are living, as opposed to
merely reacting to it when we get there. One of the most important
roles we can ply individually and collectively is to create an opening,
or to listen to the implicate order unfolding, and then to create
dreams, visions, and stories that we sense at our center want to
happen.
The conventional view of leadership emphasizes
positional power and conspicuous accomplishment. But true leadership
is about creating a domain in which we continually learn and become
more capable of participating in our unfolding future. A true leader
thus sets the stage on which predictable miracles, synchronistic
in nature, can and do occur. The capacity to discover and participate
in our unfolding future has more to do with our being, our total
orientation of character and consciousness, than with what we do.
Leadership is about creating, day by day, a
domain in which we and those around us continually deepen our understanding
of reality and are able to participate in shaping the future. This,
then, is the deeper territory of leadership, collectively listening
to what is wanting to emerge in the world, and then having the courage
to do what is required.
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