Topic: Clarity

Have Patience

September 13th, 2010, 3:15 pm

“Have patience with everything that is unsolved in your heart and … try to cherish the questions themselves, like closed rooms and like books written in a very strange tongue. Do not search now for the answers which cannot be given you because could not live them. It is a matter of living everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will then gradually, without noticing it, one distant day live right into the answer. Perhaps indeed you carry within yourself the possibility of shaping and forming, as a particularly pure and blessed kind of life; train yourself for it – but take what comes in complete trust.” p. 21.

Rilke, Rainer Maria. (2008). Letters to a young poet. www.BNPublishing.net.

The Present Father™ – Joining

August 9th, 2010, 5:43 am

As fathers, if we are willing to hold presence ( The Present Father™ ), our children will find a way to receive what they need from us. Our presence and the consciousness we bring to our relationships with our children, becomes a context that defines our ability to father. So what does it mean to “hold presence?”

Another “tool” I would suggest I call; Joining. As fathers, when we hold presence for our children, we are both the container and the contained. We join our children in such a way that we are fully part of their play, their question, their experience of eating dinner; while at the same time we hold and contain their process. When we play with them we ensure their freedom and safety. When they ask us a question we respond in such a way as to keep the question alive while joining their wonderment and curiosity. When we have a family meal, we have set the context for them to receive nourishment and nurturance while we become part of what they consume.

“There is an ancient Chinese story of an old master potter who attempted to develop a new glaze for his porcelain vases. It became the central focus of his life. Every day he tended the flames of his kilns to a white heat, controlling the temperature to an exact degree. Every day he experimented with the chemistry of the glazes he applied, but still he could not achieve the beauty he desired and imagined was possible in the glaze. Finally, having tried everything, he decided his meaningful life was over and walked into the molten heat of a fully fired kiln. When his assistants opened up the kiln and took out the vases, they found the glaze on the vases the most exquisite they had ever encountered. The master himself had disappeared into his creations.” –David Whyte

Joining means we lose ourselves fully to the relational moment with our children. In order to do this, like the kiln, we must also hold that moment so that the beauty of who we are as fathers becomes part of the formation of our children in a safe and facilitated context. We hold our presence as we disappear into our relationship with our children to re-emerge as an integrated component of their creation.

The Present Father™ – Gifting Consciousness

August 8th, 2010, 9:22 am

As fathers, if we are willing to hold presence The Present Father™ , our children will find a way to receive what they need from us. Our presence and the consciousness we bring to our relationships with our children, becomes a context that defines our ability to father. So what does it mean to “hold presence?”

One of several “tools” I would suggest I call, Gifting Consciousness. When I am with my son, I attempt to place him at the center of my awareness and communicate to the best of my ability the life and vitality that is within me. I am aware of my ability to place this awareness into my relationship with him, while I am sorting through the distractions which diminish my attention.

The other day, while my son and I were visiting a friend and colleague, something occurred having to do with a project we were working on which made me realize how much more was required before we could deliver a proposal we had been developing. On the way home, distracted, my son asked me what I was thinking about. Sorting through my pre-occupation, I briefly shared my concerns. Then, with some effort, returned to our discussion of how we were going to continue to spend our day together. His prompting me to clarifying for him my distraction, allowed us to reconnect and continue to breathe life … together. If I am distracted, I communicate distraction. If I am dull, I communicate my dullness. If I am present, I communicate my presence and the life of our relationship finds us.

Be Free From Conditioning

May 3rd, 2010, 7:34 am

Being Free from Conditioning suggests that our life today is not completely a result of the life we lived yesterday. Conditioning, the interwoven patterns that preclude our ability to make new choice, is not a permanent state. By bringing consciousness to what is in front of you, it is possible to find your own particular way of letting go of those patterns that are problematic. This freedom allows you to greet each moment as though the possibility for new life rests within the choices you make.

I think of the following story when I reflect on the conditioning of our minds, behaviors, and the burdens we carry that limit our freedom:

“A young monk who was seeking “freedom” searched far and wide throughout all of Asia.  He traveled from India, to Burma, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam in search of the one who was free.  In every country, he would ask the villagers if they knew of this being. Alas, many had heard of him, but none were sure of where to find him. Finally, near the end of his journey the young monk heard of an old man who lived up on the mountain who might be the one he was seeking.  So with what energy he had left he started his trek up the slope.  Nearly half way up he noticed, as though in a dream, an old man walking toward him with an enormous bundle slung over his shoulder.  As he approached the man he asked, “excuse me, but are you the enlightened one?”  The old man replied, “I don’t think so.”  “Then are you the one who is free, free of all suffering?” he queried.  “No, I don’t believe that I am.”  “Then are you the Buddha?” he demanded.  “No,” replied the old man.  “Then what are you?” the young monk pleaded.  With this question the old man dropped his burden and replied; “I am awake.” As the younger man stood watching, the old man picked up his enormous bundle and continued down the mountain.” -As told by Timothy Dukes, September 2004

Clarity of Purpose

April 30th, 2010, 8:35 am

Are you skillful at running your organization? Are you able to be clear about your intended purpose? If so, then you draw from the best resources you have – yours and your employees’ years of experience. However, do you exercise clarity of purpose in your application of these resources?

Clarity of Purpose can be thought of as prudence, as defined by David Brooks in his article questioning the leadership capacity of Sarah Palin: “It is the ability to grasp the unique pattern of a specific situation. It is the ability to absorb the vast flow of information and still discern the essential current of events – the things that go together and the things that will never go together. It is the ability to engage in complex deliberations and feel which arguments have the most weight. How is prudence acquired? Through experience. The prudent leader possesses a repertoire of events, through personal involvement or the study of history, and can apply those models to current circumstances to judge what is important and what is not, who can be persuaded and who can’t, what has worked and what hasn’t.”

Clarity of Purpose, from this perspective, is not simply based on your personal intention. It emerges from a dynamic involvement with your years of experience and the reciprocal understanding that evolves from the experience of the people you trust and work with.

Recognize Your Worth

April 27th, 2010, 12:17 pm

“Some people go through life with [an] unerring sense of direction. . . . When we meet people like this, we say they are grounded. They know who they are and where they’re going. We feel secure around them. . . . What all of these role models have in common is an exquisite sense of who they are, which translates into perfect pitch about how they come across to others.” (Goldsmith, 2007, p. 3)

One of the best ways to recognize your worth is to have a clear understanding of how your behaviors come across to other people; your employees, colleagues, clients or friends and family. – I am just off the phone with a friend of mine. She consults with individuals and companies to help them understand who they are, what they do, and how to take this understanding into their personal and professional lives. I consistently find that when I am speaking with her, I clearly recognize myself as she formulates and expresses how she perceives me and my work. She becomes a mirror and steadies our connection so that I can see myself in her understanding of me. I recognize the value, not so much because I see and accept myself, but because of how she expresses her experience of how she perceives me.

This relationally activated recognition of self and worth, refreshes and supports my experience to such a degree that I literally recover a deeper – felt sense of who I am and of how I am being perceived. It is as though my “worth” is market driven; it is based on how value is determined by those who are invested in having a relationship with me.

Recognition of self and worth becomes the currency with which we learn to more deeply value who we are. And it has value to the degree that we value our relationships with one another. Take a look at one of your relationships today and greet with curiosity that person you are as perceived by that person you are with.

Ref: Goldsmith, Marshall. 2007. What got you here won’t get you there. New York: Hyperion 

Attain Clear Understanding

September 26th, 2008, 6:46 am

“In order to attain clear understanding, it is necessary to live mindfully, making direct contact with life in the present moment, truly seeing what is taking place within and outside of oneself. Practicing mindfulness strengthens the ability to look deeply, and when we look deeply into the heart of anything, it will reveal itself.” (Thich Nhat Hanh, 1991, p. 120-121)

Thich Nhat Hanh. (1991). Old path white clouds: Walking in the footsteps of the Buddha. Berkeley, CA: Parallax.