Showing posts with label leo babauta. Show all posts
This is the another post in my Zen and the Art of Teaching series. Check out them all here.
This can apply to a variety of
businesses. Maybe you'll notice how similar what I'm about to
describe fits the office where you work. Let me assure you, schools
have mastered the art of the soul-sucking meeting.
You know the one. It drags on and on.
You're not even sure why you came in the first place. What's going on? Is this
important? Whoever is in front speaking sure seems
to think so. In fact, they believe this is the most important meeting
on the face of the earth. As if the Lord Almighty commanded this
meeting be brought forth from oblivion to bring the idle masses to
salvation.
It's about toner cartridges.
Or teaching strategies. Or a particular
student. Or tardies, fire drills, rallies, football boosters, school
elections, math club, being too disengaged with students, being too
engaged with students, not teaching enough, teaching too much, and on
and on and on. Eons pass and ice ages come and go in the time it
takes to get through some meetings.
The worst part is that we could be
working. We could be finding our way into the Element. Creating
lessons that will actively involve our students and actually teach
them something. Perhaps, if we are lucky, inspire them to create
something of their own.
Schools (and maybe your business) need
to discover what meetings are for. They are not for hanging out,
catching up, checking in, seeing how things are going or progress
reports. There is no need to have a meeting every day, probably
unnecessary to have one every week.
What a meeting should be is a place
where individuals can gather to collaborate and share ideas. You
should go to a meeting, get something wonderful out of it that will
help you create something of your own. Regurgitation of a process is
simple. Every animal species can walk in a line. Humans are so
advanced we invented email. If all a manager wants done is for his
drones to follow an order- send an email.
Here are my rules for meetings, when I
am in charge.
1. Cancel it. Honestly, is this meeting necessary? Will every single individual get something out of it that will improve their lives and their students lives? If the answer is no, cancel the meeting. If the answer is yes, move on.
2. Never longer than a half an hour. Ever hear someone say, "Kids attention spans are so short nowadays." It's not nowadays and it's not kids. The absolutely maximum a mind can stay focused on a single task is 45-50 minutes. But that takes a lot of interesting things, active involvement and communication. Most likely, a mind can handle closer to 15 minutes. Fifteen minutes is the perfect length of a meeting. Assemble the troops, hand out papers, expect them to read the papers another time (don't go over information twice), say something inspiring and let them do the job you hired them for.
3. Inspire. Make it so meetings aren't necessary. The best manager should make themselves obsolete. The best teachers should fade into the background. People want to work and think and create all on their own. Inspire them to do that.
Here are my rules for meetings when I
am in attendance.
1. Don't go. It's a waste of your time. Inform your superiors beforehand. Make it clear to them you don't do meetings. They are a drain on your energy, your time and they prevent you from reaching the Element.
2. Seriously. Read number one.
3. If you must go, do your best to be open to inspiration. Chances are it won't happen. Whoever is in charge is probably wasting everyone's time with idle chatter. However, you can at least, for a moment, attempt to be open. If you can't make it through three hours of being open to inspiration then try small segments. But seriously, read number one.
Send emails, use IMs, set up a Skype
account. You know what all of those things have in common? You can
turn them off whenever you want. You have a choice about when you are
going to work individually or collaboratively. Unlike when meetings
are forced upon you, choice is present. Companies/schools that block
websites to improve worker productivity are stupid. Let your
employees go on Facebook and Twitter. Let them search the web for
Gnostic Christianity and sites on Anarchy. They may be inspired to
create something wonderful for your company. Or teach a child
something that will change his/her life.
Block meetings though. I'm all for
blocking meetings.
*With inspiration from Leo Babauta.
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We are all searching for something.
Often in life we feel lost or scared or confused, but what we are is
directionless. We've stopped searching. As we stop searching we begin
to feel confined, isolated and afraid. We are out-of-sorts, and we
continuously wonder why.
It is because we are not in our
Element. It is because we have not remembered our Authentic Swing. It
is because who we are in actuality is not who we are pretending to be
in reality.
These are all topics I've hit on
before. Topics I've hinted at and mentioned. My posts on Zen and the Art of Teaching are all about this, in the broadest sense. Yet, I've
never tackled the issue head on. Partly, because it is still
undefined in my own mind. Partly, because I know that my ideas are a
collection of Ken Robinson's and Leo Babauta's and Kevin Smith's and
Steven Pressfield's and Joe Rogan's and John Green's.
The names I mentioned are just the tip
of the iceberg. Each of those individuals were inspired by others
stretching back through time. Rogan loves Graham Hancock and Hunter
S. Thompson. Kevin Smith is motivated by Wayne Gretzky and his own
Catholicism. Pressfield studied Indian cultures and religions.
Everyone is a collection of other people's ideas. It may be that
there is no originality whatsoever, only the ether. Only the Element
where all possibilities exist simultaneously and continuously. Where
our Authentic Swings can be remembered.
I am mixing different terms which may
be confusing to those trying to pay attention. Let me be clear:
There is something beyond our own
internal bodies. Something outside the clicking clock that operates
our organs. It goes by many names; heaven, yin and yang, the Field,
the Element, the Middle Path, Nirvana, consciousness, the ether,
Alpha and Omega. Arriving at a name is problematic because it has a
tendency to alienate those unfamiliar with this new name. Or it
causes suffering because of preconceived notions and biases.
I realize these problems exist. Help me
circumvent them. I am calling this consciousness outside ourselves
The Element. It is what drives us in our searching. It is both the
destination and the path. The Element is where we all wish to reside.
We have been there before. When we are
playing sports and get into the zone our bodies seem to become
extensions of our minds, reacting at our slightest will, and
sometimes, without our will at all. Almost on pure instinct. When we
are writing and the words seem to flow from our fingertips. The pen
flies across the paper, our fingers dance across the keyboard and
beauty emerges. We are in our Element when we are in love and when we
are at play. I know we have all been there before. The key is how do
we remain there.
How can we be in The Element at all
times? That depends on who you are. Are you an athlete, a warrior, a
writer, a lover, a singer or a saint? To put it another way, what is
your Authentic Swing? The path you will take is not identical, in
fact it can not be identical, to someone else's. Your path is based
on who you are and the experiences you have. It is individual and
personal. Yet, it is still The Element.
The Element is universal. It is calling
to all of us, and we are searching for it. The more we realize this,
the more we become aware of the cues. We begin to see what leads in
the right direction and what leads us astray. Awareness is the first
step towards The Element. You must open your eyes before anything
else can take place. Yes, the light is bright, but we must embrace
it. We lose our way not because The Element has shifted the path, but
because we choose to shield ourselves from the light.
Take the first step. Open your eyes.
- Comments Off • Category: Authentic Swing, create, joe rogan, john green, ken robsinon, Kevin Smith, leo babauta, philosophy, Spirituality, steven pressfield, The Element, the Field
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