There is no virtue in being uncritical nor is it a habit to which the young are given. But criticism is only the burying beetle that gets rid of what is dead, and, since the world lives by creative and constructive forces, and not by negation and destruction, it is better to grow up in the company of prophets than of critics. -Richard Livingstone
In 2008, I won’t be against something if I can’t offer something to be for instead.
This blogger got it so right:
"A few days ago I saw a bumper sticker that reminded me of a lot of [IT] people. It was a list of nine political/social topics, all of them with a red ‘anti’ symbol (you know, a red circle with a line through it) over them. The list included all the ‘hot’ topics of the last fifty years, and the owner of the vehicle was apparently opposed to all of them: abortion, war, genocide, racism, poverty, starvation, illiteracy, etc.
"This bumper sticker made me laugh. Not because of the topics on the sticker, but because of the thought it generated: I wondered if the driver of the car in front of me was FOR anything at all!"
I spend a lot of time thinking about intention and direction these days, trying to own up to the primary intention that I am playing at any given moment in time. I watch HR professionals say they really want to do diversity work in their organizations to unleash the talents of all their employees, but what they really want is to impress their boss, mark it off their lists, and maintain the status quo. Owning what our real intentions are is vital—otherwise we are playing to split intentions. And as my business partner David teaches young actors: You can only play one intention at a time. If my intention is to refute you, let me own that. If my intention is to embarrass you, let me own that. If my intention is to understand your point of view and ask questions to enlarge my understanding, let me own that. Can you see how the actions taken for each intention would be vastly different?
As I watch our national debates at the moment, I realize that it is so easy to ridicule presidential candidates, and not so easy to get involved, offer alternatives, ask questions. Is my intention to show how ridiculous the national debate is, or is my intention to make this country a great place for my children to live? What actions would each of those intentions entail?
Intentions: This year, I will name the one intention I am playing at any given time, no matter how uncomfortable that is. In procrastinating, for example, I say that my intention is to get my creative juices flowing, but my intention is, really, to delay the possibility of failure and the fear that comes with that. In 2008, I will be intellectually critical while offering both intellectual and emotional support and ideas and alternatives. I will redefine myself not as office cynic but as wellspring or buoy.
