2010 Vision
THE BACK STORY
While making my annual Happy New Year calls
to some of my friends and colleagues, one call in particular
was so powerful, that it will literally define my own plan
for 2010, and hopefully influence others as well.
During our conversations, my friend, a
consultant, is writing a paper on how manufacturing impacts
the environment. She has allowed one of her employees to
read it as a run thru. The employee had told her that one of
the sections might alienate some of her targeted readers.
She explained to me that she didn’t to alienate anyone, so
she was considering rewriting that particular section to
“pull the reader forward” through it. I thought to my self
“Wow, not only is that a powerful and insightful change to
make, but the expression ‘pull the reader forward’ alone was
a light bulb moment on it’s own”.
After our call, I could not get that phrase
“pull them forward” out of my mind, and so I began to
explore a larger ramification have how it could be used.
After looking for the right word, I found two definitions
for this great idea.
The first definition was engineering in
nature. That definition was two-fold, the first referring to
“the relationship between what is being pulled (the drive
member) and the surface on which it moves”. The second was
“the act of drawing or pulling”, and “the state of being
drawn.
The second definition was medical in
nature. That definition called for “ the deliberate
application of prolonged pulling, as resistance, to relieve
pressure.”
When I read this, I felt as if I had hit
the jackpot, which had eluded me all month, and knew this
was going to be THE turning point, and my mind exploded with
fresh ideas and new possibilities. The word of course is
TRACTION.
MOVING FORWARD
During the winter months watching the TV we
all see the cars and trucks slipping and sliding on the snow
and ice covered streets in of some of our cities. The
vehicles are either unable to move at all, spinning in
place, or moved in ways not intended by the drivers, unable
to brake or steer, usually crashing into another vehicle or
going off into the ditch, all due to the lack of traction.
Both of these are the exact opposite of what the driver
wanted. As I pondered these observations, I decided that
this is the exact same things that happened in people’s
everyday lives. They have no traction in their personal
lives, and in their careers. There may be ‘actual’ movement,
but they are possibly unable to ‘positively control’ their
forward movement.
Traction problems occur in adverse conditions. In driving,
the loss of traction occurs when the interface between the
tire and the surface is disrupted. When it occurs, this
disruption can have disastrous affects. This is so on
vehicles, and in life. Both can be corrected, and prevented.
These “ultimate interfaces” where traction
problems may occur, exist everywhere there is contact
between two points. Some important examples you may
experience are, Husband/Wife, Parent/Child, Boss/Employee,
and Business/Client, all inseparable, all in contact. This
“ultimate interface” is the space in which all the action
takes place.
We all know that there are different tires
made for different wheels and different needs. Trains have
steel wheels for steel track, Jeeps have oversized tires for
the mud, and a forklift has padded tires to operate indoors.
The common denominator is in choosing the correct tire for
the surface it operates on. All of us have seen Indy cars
change their tires in the middle of a race to accommodate
rain, or we have put chains on ours tires to operate in the
snow. An important point to realize here is that the tires
that are used for a particular job are not a coincidence;
they are designed, engineered, and chosen for a specific
environment. This is important to consider when you are
making choices in your own life where good traction is
necessary to move in your desired direction. The decisions
are made and the correct product chosen, knowing that good
TRACTION is a necessity.
In medicine, traction is used to relieve
pressure, or stress off of a bone so it can mend properly.
This is accomplished by using weights to pull as resistance,
eliminanating the stress on the bone. The weight acts as a
counterbalance placing the bone in optimum conditions to
heal. I believe this same mechanism can be harnessed in your
personal life as well, with a small leap of thinking, so
keep an open mind.
Keeping this counter-balance idea in mind,
and knowing that many people are feeling a great deal of
stress in their lives, its possible that exercise is a form
of TRACTION to stress. If that’s possible, then creativity
is a form of TRACTION to blockage, training is TRACTION to
doubt, and that a plan is TRACTION immobility, ands so on.
I will not distract you with technical
definitions, or discussions of tires or medicine. This is an
exercise using simple language and concepts; to discuss the
difficult and serious situations many of us are in today.
Everyone knows what a person means when they say “ I need to
get some traction in my life”, or “I can’t seem to get any
traction in my career.” All of these conditions can be
corrected now, and prevented in the future by making better
decisions in creating your own TRACTION.
I will explore this idea of TRACTION all year.
This will be a two-pronged approach, beginning with
regaining traction after loss, and then holding on to it,
once achieved. This approach will always be grounded to my
artistic roots of art, books, music, TV, and movies where
all people have overlapping experiences, then use them as
material to create traction propelling us forward into the
pragmatic world we all live. Lets all “pull ourselves
forward” this year, in the direction we choose.
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