Thursday, 2 February 2017

Finding a Moment




In her film, Heart of a Dog, Laurie Anderson responds to the passing of her pet dog and her partner Lou Reed through music and words that identify death as the ‘release of love’. It’s a touching film about powerful moments where our concept of life becomes clearer through death.  As Anderson describes it, she ‘expected to feel sad and lost. But I felt the opposite (…) How to open yourself to the world. And really appreciate it.” (http://www.waldemar.tv/, May 2016)

I felt a little of the same after the passing of my mother at the end of November last year.  I was working with organisations in Australia at the time, and found myself returning home with a different set of eyes.  The latest news from the charity sector and beyond left me with a sense of detachment, as though the things I cared for were suddenly disassociated from their meaning. I thought it was just because I was sad and lost too. But I wasn’t. I was starting to see from a stronger perspective.

‘Opened to the world,’ I experienced a shift in what had value. The ‘laws of the universe’ became more relevant to me than knowing the latest funding campaign or innovation programme.  Death sharpened my bullshit detector.  Looking back on 20 years of working in the charity sector, I found glaring fault-lines in the narrative of progress to ‘end youth disadvantage and homelessness’, or whatever the current terminology is.  As the stats keep reminding us that everything from street homelessness to health inequality is on the rise, it’s easy to feel that we are stuck between knowing what ought to be done, knowing what was done before, and our frustration to make things happen now.  I began to wonder if there was an opportunity in that ‘stickiness’ to shift how our various assets work to create deeper change.

Let me explain.  It is a popular belief that we ought to be more ‘mindful’ in how we balance the stresses of work with our life. What if it isn’t just the individual self we should be looking at though?  What if the organisational identities we ‘do good’ through are themselves a type of being whose means of production, culture and character can be directly associated with the causes they and we seek to address?  Look at the way people in organisations are supported, people work, people are paid, people talk about each other, how decisions are made, how things get funded, and you will often find examples where the values of doing good are opposite to their functioning. Does it matter? Absolutely. It’s in these things that we end up sticking with the patterns we wish we could transcend.

In former senior roles,  I used to go along with the idea that the end could justify the means.  It meant turning a blind eye to some of the more negative human and social ripples organisations create around them.  The complexities of the system we operate through might force us to work in high stress ways; where we have no time from one meeting, communication, bid and report to the next; where we are constantly too busy doing ‘things’ to care; where we big up ourselves over the significance of others: but that’s all part of the bullshit we have got used to.  Many of us end up cut off from taking responsibility for the actual world we shape in the shadow of over busy inboxes, work goals, business plans, strategic visions and meetings removed from the importance of ‘the now’.

The significance is profound: disadvantage and inequality can never be addressed until we know how to nurture their opposite through the ways we choose to do things – including, in particular, how we work. Organisations with power to do good have a double responsibility: to meet the needs of the people they are meant to benefit, first and foremost; but in doing so, to also create ways of working counter to the root causes of disadvantage they are passionate about. From how people are managed, to how they are paid, to where organisations work together, to what they do, and what they communicate in the world. It’s all relevant as part of the ‘asset base’ that defines what a moment is and what it can achieve.  If we don’t change how these operate, we keep our fingers on the repeat button of things that keep on limiting collective potential.  

Brian Eno addressed a similar theme in a recent interview with Simon Hattenstone in The Guardian (23 Jan, 2017), where he outlined his interest as a musician in ‘how you make a working society rather than a dysfunctional one like the one we live in at the moment – by trying to make music in a new way.’  For Eno, that meant trying to move away from the hierarchical model of an orchestra to embrace ‘the more egalitarian model of a folk or rock band’.  What does that difference mean for social organisations and how they operate?  

I don’t think it’s a simple case of organisations seeking to do good by switching from one mode of production to the next.  Inequalities abound in any structure which is not fully aware of itself.  We need to begin what I see as a gentle 'storm' in our perceptions, to keep a closer check on where the people and systems within a structure are, and by doing so make sure our assets are more ‘alive’ and ‘now’ in the moment we are in.  The summary questions below are starting points for how these conversations could be led by staff:

·      S: Are you Sharing the moment with yourself, and with others?  Do you have time to be aware of the world that is happening around you, to experience that with others you are working with, and to share in your work with organisations who can both benefit from you and benefit you?

·      T: Are you Treasuring this moment?  Are you focused on the needs and possibilities that lie in the here and now, as well as the ‘future good’ of tomorrow?  What can be done today that should be started right in front of you?  Do you talk about your beneficiaries as ‘now’ rather than just a possible future?

·      O: Are you able to Orientate the significance of what is happening now with the past and future? Can you understand the causes to your present, build upon learning in the past to accelerate decisions and impact, and recognise potential future effects from current actions and decisions?  And can you juggle between them? Are you able to see your past and current plans reflected in the present you are working in?

·      R: Are you willing to Revalue how you do things, as well as what you do? Can you reflect on how you do things, their consequences and relevance to your social mission, while staying attuned to developing fairer approaches and processes?

·      M: Are you prepared to measure in the Moment?  Do you have the means to recognise, learn from and feedback in the here and now with those involved, rather than just at a removed distance later on? Is the practice of change as clear as your theory?

We don’t have to experience death to share the same insights from Laurie Anderson’s film.  But we do have to be honest enough to invest in experiencing the world with eyes wide open. It’s a position I call being on the 'inspireside’of now - in a conscious space where individuals and organisations can embrace the responsibility to do good better.  Think you are too busy to get there? Think again.