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Posts from ‘March, 2009’

Hope – the tormentor of man?

I’m delighted to say that today I’m not here, but over at Juliet’s ‘Life Made Great‘ writing a joint post with the very wise, intelligent and extremely beautiful Juliet.

She even trusted me to give some thoughts on ‘hope’ ‘the torments of man’ and Nietzsche!

Why am I delighted not to be here?

First, because I can’t think of many better places to be than Juliet’s blog.  And second, because it’s the first time I’ve guested anywhere, which is probably why it’s a joint post rather than a full, 100% guest article.

I wouldn’t want to overdo it on my first venture onto someone else’s blog.

Comments are closed here, but please do drop by at Life Made Great and comment over there. Or just hang out over there as it’s a great place to hang out!

And if you can’t quite tear yourself away just yet then you might check out these two posts I was really happy with but no-one read (we all have some of those!).

Borrowing a bicycle

Me, you and us

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10 reasons why lists suck

1   It’s often a cynical attempt to lure readers into thinking they they might get a nice shopping list of things that will make their life wonderful. Still you need to go out and actually buy the stuff on the list (and make sure you remember to take it with you in the first place)

2   Everyone else is doing it so it’s just not original

3   The number on the list is usually rounded to make it nice and neat. Life’s not neat like that. Who decided there are only 10 reasons? Me in this case, and what do I know?

4   Lists are linear and that’s not how the brain works

5   In trying to fill up space, lists pad out with unhelpful, really obvious or throw away items

6   The same item is often repeated in the hope no-one notices

7   My niche area doesn’t really lend itself to lists so I’m jealous (and that sucks)

8   The same item is often repeated in the hope no-one notices (I know!!! That was a really CHEAP joke!)

9   Once you reach your randomly allocated, nice neat number, you stop. Thinking stops. Creativity stops

10 Sometimes number 9 happens before you even reach the final number and then you just look stupid.

Of course you may have thoughtful, creative readers who add extra items in the comments section …

Then lists might not suck so much.

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Garbage dump of natural beauty

Whenever I’m faced with the actions of others I don’t like, I always strive to understand what lies behind that behaviour. I don’t always find it easy and sometimes I struggle to touch that understanding. I had such a case this last weekend on a short trip to the mountains in a remote part of Romania. Before I go any further, I want to be clear I don’t consider this unique to Romania and I suspect there are many places in the world where I would be confronted with something similar.

A river of trash

I took this picture on our return journey where the road followed a fast flowing river at the bottom of a deep winding gorge. The river starts in a National Park of quite outstanding beauty. Except for the litter!  We’d travelled up in the dark and I’d already noticed the huge number of  discarded soda bottles and cans by the roadside up into the mining area on the edge of the park.  The region has suffered from decades of neglect and under-funding with many people living in housing D. H. Lawrence would have been quite familiar with.

It was the drive back that horrified me. Everywhere I looked there were plastic wrappers, bottles, cans, old clothes and packaging of every possible description. It was discarded by the side of the road and adorned the trees and bushes lining the river. Where the river slowed down, seas of bottles had accumulated and in some places I couldn’t see the branches for plastic wrapping and old clothes. Kilometre after kilometre of trash.

I was mesmerised and just couldn’t take my eyes away and at some places felt sick in my stomach. The three people I was travelling with, all Romanian, were equally appalled. Maybe more so, because this is their country.

I don’t know for sure, but I guess the roadside litter was thrown from the windows of passing cars and the rest of the garbage thrown directly into the river. I have no idea who put it there, the local inhabitants, visitors, or both. What I’m sure about is this amount of waste was not from a small number of people, but thousands and thousands.

The world is my home

That rubbish will stay there until it’s picked up by someone or decomposes. A plastic bottle takes up to 1,000 years to decompose and one made of glass up to 4,000 years. If I throw away my empty bottle by the side of a path, each person following that path will be faced with my garbage possibly until the year 6009.

I share this world with each and every one of you. If I don’t care about the world I live in, indirectly I demonstrate my lack of care for you. The only conclusion I can form is the thousands of people who left their rubbish in this place simply didn’t care about their home – or about me or you.

And that’s a hard conclusion to swallow.

My optimistic side tells me this disregard stems from ignorance and rarely from wilful vandalism or a vindictive attempt to damage the countryside and the plants and creatures living there.

Winding down the window and dumping this stuff, I’m guessing they didn’t ask themselves:

  • how long will this bottle stay there?
  • where will this bottle go?
  • who will clean it up?
  • how many other people will see this litter?

I really hope this is the result of plain ignorance and just not thinking about the impact of their actions.

What to do about it?

The streets in Warsaw where I live are immaculate as they’re cleaned of litter daily. But I don’t need to go far, into the courtyards, the hidden and less obvious places, to find litter.

Is it just in Eastern Europe, or is it everywhere?

I know I take for granted the streets will be kept clean but it’s really not the city government’s responsibility. It’s mine – and yours. It’s up to me to care for the world I live in, to make sure, as far as I can, that I’m not polluting  it and to educate my children to treat the whole world as their home.

I can make a difference myself by picking up other people’s litter and putting it in the trash. I shouldn’t have to, but the other option is to complain about it and not do anything. I’m not going to use all my free time scouring the countryside collecting litter, but I can walk over to the discarded paper bag in my courtyard rather than wait for someone else to pick it up, or moan about the people who left it there.

My mother is a great example of someone who does this. Whenever she sees litter she picks it up and puts it in the bin, calmly and without complaining.

If the majority were to do the same then the litter would eventually stop. It may take many generations, but we have until 6009 to do something about it.

If we all start to treat the world we live in as an extension of our home, those of us who value tidiness will keep it tidy. And I believe those who litter and pollute the world will eventually change.

Because deep, deep down we all know in our hearts that we share this planet with 6 billion others and we owe it to our children and grandchildren to take good care of the world.

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The point of self development

On my first forays into the blogging world about 6 months ago, I quickly noticed the large number of sites devoted to self development. I’ve found many great writers producing useful and insightful material among the masses of obvious and superficial. I’m guessing the honour for largest representation goes to ‘Make Easy Money’ sites, but self development still has a huge following.

This is good news for me as I’ve been ‘into’ self development pretty much my whole adult life. At the risk of blowing my own trumpet, I consider myself a ‘professional’ in self development. I spent several years as country head of Learning and Development for a multinational and, apart from a few years as an accountant (of all things!) I’ve worked as a trainer, coach and consultant all my career. Now I’ve turned my hand to writing in my quest to help myself and others improve. I have an idea I know a bit about the field, and I’m humble enough to admit I’ve barely scratched the surface of what’s available.

I love to evolve, grow, learn new things about myself and the world I’m in. I’ve always worked under the assumption that self development is a ‘good’ thing and a lot of it is better than a little, and a little is better than none. I’m a little embarrassed to admit this, but yesterday I asked myself for the very first time, ‘What’s the point of self development?”

If you’ve delved into this site beyond the front page then you’ll have noticed my main passion is for an approach called Nonviolent Communication (NVC). If you haven’t delved, now would be a good time to do so! Anyway, I was in conversation yesterday with Petra, a trainer-friend of mine, and we were talking about all kinds of stuff. One part of the conversation really got my brain in a whirl and I’ll give you a short extract:

Petra      “These things we use, like NVC, are all for self development, aren’t they?”

Me           “Well yes and no. I mean it is about self development but that’s not the purpose.

Petra       “Uh?”

Me            (Trying to explain) “The purpose of NVC is something else. You know, world peace and all that. But it does it through self development. Like all these different approaches we love, all help us develop. Development’s just a means to the end”

Petra        “But isn’t self development an end in itself?”

Me             “There’s no point to self development if it doesn’t do something else. If it doesn’t make a difference in the world it’s a waste of time and effort, isn’t it?”

Petra          “I guess so, yes. Change starts at home. If I change myself then the world starts to change with me.”

Me               “Exactly!”

My brain hurt after that.

I care about you, dear reader, but, to be brutally honest, I don’t care one bit about your self development, your journey through life or helping solve your problems. I’m not much interested in these things for myself either. It’s fine with me if you want to stay where you are and stop learning, if you lose your curiousity and love for life or if you don’t reach your potential and chose to get stuck in the challenges of living. I’m delighted if I do inspire people to learn and change but that’s not what I care about. It’s not the reason I run workshops or write articles.

I aim to change the world.

My purpose is to reduce violence in our world. My goal is that conflicts get resolved peacefully, and every single person on this planet is valued for the unique individual they are.

Self development is what I know best and it’s my chosen path for fulfilling my purpose in this life. But I really don’t care about self development, unless it brings us a few steps closer to a peaceful world.

What’s your own purpose in self development?

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Stop making me angry!

When I feel really angry I have an impression my body is too small to hold it and I might burst. I don’t enjoy the sensation but I can’t deny it’s a very real and powerful experience. Anger can so easily lead to violence if, instead of using it effectively, I allow it to use me.

Learning how to harness my anger is a skill I’m learning and, I believe, important for a nonviolent lifestyle.

We all develop our own ways to manage the adrenalin and stirred up passion that comes as part of the anger package. I was raised to believe that ‘nice people don’t get angry’ so my approach, for many years, was to suppress it whenever anger reared its head.  The problem, of course, is that we all feel anger sometimes and internalising it turns the violence in on myself and stores up all manner of health and psychological problems.

Another  approach is to give full and violent expression to my anger. Losing my temper in this way has happened to me (that’s how it feels anyway!) a few times in my life  and many people say they feel just great after this. Well, a build-up of pressure feels uncomfortable and release feels good, like having a full bladder! My problem is this kind of carthartic explosion tends to damage those around me and I feel terrible about it afterwards.

How can I use anger peacefully and effectively?

Step 1    Stop! and read the signs

“Seeing red with anger”

  • Pause
  • Acknowledge anger as a friend
  • Own my anger

Being emotionally intelligent includes being skilled at recognising and accurately reading emotional signs and not allowing them to blind me. Usually a deep breath or two gives me the pause I need to welcome anger.

Anger, as all emotions, is a friend and a signal that something’s up and requires attention. Usually anger warns me an external event is not in harmony with my values and it gives me an energy boost to allow action. Chances are I have a few seconds, maybe longer, to decide what to do about the situation.

A common misreading of the signal is to believe someone is at fault and is making me angry. No-one makes me angry. No-one has the power to force any emotional state or sensation onto me. It is as much about my own values as it is about the actions or inactions of someone else.

2   Open up my brain

“Blinded by anger”

  • Examine my thinking

When I’m angry my thinking is chaotic, cloudy and exaggerated. Have you ever felt furious on reading an unpleasant  mail only to come back to it the next day and wonder why you were so riled up?

When I stop for a few seconds and have a quick review of the words jumbling around in my head, I find many such as ‘Should not’, “Can’t”, “Wrong”, “Bad” all directed at the object of my anger. My own judgemental thoughts are fuelling, maybe even triggering, my fury and pointing it at a person or even an inanimate object. The actions of others are not always innocent or well intentioned, but my anger tends to add that particular veneer, even when it’s not there. The less I see the human being in the other, the more likely I react violently.

I’m not trying to change my thinking, just straighten out the confused mess. By observing my thoughts for a moment, they stop controlling me and I take back control. In doing so, I notice the intensity of the anger softening a little and I create more space for peaceful action.

3   Identify what’s REALLY going on

“How much more grievous are the consequences of anger than the causes of it.” Marcus Aurelius

  • What are the external, unfiltered facts?
  • Which values of mine are crying out?
  • What possibilities do I have for immediate action?

Before responding to my anger’s call for action I find it sensible to make sure I know what’s really going on – externally and internally.

I find the following questions helpful:

a)  What would a video camera record if it was filming the situation I’m immersed in?

b)  How would an observer, with no interest in the matter, describe what’s going on?

c)  What values or deep principles of mine are being violated – expressed in single words or short phrases (security? peace? respect? understanding? freedom? etc.)?

d)  What values or principles of the other person might be being violated?

e)  What do I want to happen (ideally at least 3 different options)?

As I ask myself these questions I often find the anger transforms into something else such as fear, disappointment, frustration or confusion. These are less intense and easier to harness but I can still keep the passion.

4   Communicate my intentions peacefully!

Speak when you are angry–and you will make the best speech you’ll ever regret.Laurence J. Peter

  • Check my intention
  • Choose my action carefully
  • Communicate what I want to happen or protect myself (or others)

Nothing requires me to say or do anything, although the energy of anger can be pretty irresistible. First I check that my intention is peaceful. If there is any desire to hurt the other, I go back to the previous steps until the desire has gone and give it the time it needs.

Once I’m clear about my peaceful intention I then decide whether to protect (using force or escape) and what to say.

I want to choose my words carefully to avoid judgement, criticism or any form of attack (I’ll probably get the same back) and clearly request what I want to happen. A request NOT to do something leaves room for interpretation about what I do want, so I avoid that. Also a wish for the future lacks immediacy, so I put the request in the present moment.

My anger gives my message a kick so that it’s much more likely I’m going to be taken seriously.

5    Developing the new habit

  • Reflect regularly

At the risk of stating the blindingly obvious, a change requires doing something differently.My response to anger comes from a habit that’s developed through my whole life and I’ve not yet found a way to change overnight. An ingrained habit such as my anger strategy probably requires a bit of patient poking – like trying to remove a deeply embedded splinter.

If you choose to follow some or all of the steps above I advise patience!

As a first step you might use the approach to analyse and pull apart a recent situation where you felt angry. Make a commitment that every time you feel angry, over the next two weeks, you’ll pick that apart too – once you’ve calmed down. The more frequently you look the easier you’ll find it t0o see.

After a few situations you’ll notice the cool off period gets shorter until eventually you don’t need a cool off period at all. You’ll find you are catching the anger early and dealing with it as it arises. With practice you’ve befriended your anger and it’s stopped controlling you.

Now you are in control of it and have a powerful tool in your hands.

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