Archive for August, 2009

Status quo struggles…or an exercise in pussy power!

Saturday, August 15th, 2009

A month or so ago, we lost our much loved cat after 16 years; she’d shared our home with her two daughters.  She was undoubtedly ‘Top Cat’ here, and her two ‘kittens’ kind of stayed kittens throughout her reign.  Once she died, suddenly they didn’t quite know how to relate to each other.  There was a vacant slot for Boss Cat and they can’t agree who it belongs to.  This shift in the status quo has thrown a real crimp into their relationship as they feel compelled to ‘duke it out’ for the vacant position.

It is fascinating how relationships come under pressure and change when the power dynamic changes.  This doesn’t just apply to animals but to us too.  It applies when one person gets promoted above a colleague, or when one partner perhaps looses their job and the other becomes the main breadwinner.  It happens as children grow into their prime and their parents age.  Power in a relationship is a key determinant to the shape of a relationship. 

Just to keep life interesting, we have thrown a ‘wildcard’ into the house as we have just acquired two new kittens, Rambo & Roxie, so doubtless there will be another dimension to the power struggles now!

I’d be interested to learn how shifts in the power dynamic in your relationships has affected them.

 

 

“The term ‘power’ comes from the Latin posse: to do, to be able, to change, to influence or effect. To have power is to possess the capacity to control or direct change. All forms of leadership must make use of power. The central issue of power in leadership is not Will it be used? But rather Will it be used wisely and well?”  Al Gini

  “Where love rules, there is no will to power; and where power predominates, there love is lacking. The one is the shadow of the other.”  Carl Jung

 

Just a streak of dust

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

Last night saw a meteor stream called the Perseids streaked through the sky last night.  This dazzling show is produced by tiny specks streaking through the upper atmosphere.  This amazing, eye-catching  display was produced by just a little dust.

I wonder how often our attention is grabbed and captured by some tiny thing that streaks across our mind and creates a ‘display’ out of all proportion to the cause?  I know it happens to me.  Wouldn’t it be nice if we could just sit back and enjoy the spectacle as one could with the meteors…

“I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet.”   Jack London

 

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The Devil you don’t know

Monday, August 10th, 2009

I wrote the other day about what happens when Life overtakes you.  Today, is the other half of that story.

We were able to reformat the blog, but I learnt a bit more about the ‘back end’ and now know what bit needs protecting during updates.  I called the Revenue and got to speak to someone helpful who explained there could be no penalties if you didn’t owe them anything, so I just need to write in and explain what had happened and the systems would be overridden.  So today I’m feeling much happier. 

However, this little walk on the ‘wild side’ reminded me how bad it feels it be powerless and uninformed.  I probably have a worse reaction to this than most but it certainly never brings out the best in folks.  That is why communication is such a big deal these days, however, for all the money spent in this area, it is seldom done very well.  I have yet to work with any team that feels its needs are fully met in this area.

Today would be a the very best day to let someone know exactly how you feel, where they stand and help them feel more powerful, because knowledge is power!

“We are drowning in information but starved for knowledge.”  John Naisbitt:

“Trust your hunches. They’re usually based on facts filed away just below the conscious level.”  Joyce Brothers

 

Outside your control

Friday, August 7th, 2009

I had two incidents happen in the last 24hours which left me feeling very uncomfortable.  The first was an update of this blog software which somehow scrambled the formatting and ruin the page.  Next day, I got a couple of letters from the Revenue about about some technical problem, which throws me into their system, and on to the ‘mercy’ of their common sense.  In both cases I have to rely on others expertise to sort me out.  It is not a comfortable feeling to be powerless and completely reliant on others.

The thing is that in companies it is those with the least power who suffer from the most stress for exactly these reasons.  The more you can involve people, and give them some kind of choice, the less stressed they will be.

Managing communications is also key as you don’t want people to feel that you are keeping secrets from them, but nor do you want to alarm them by speaking about things too soon, when everything is vague and up-in-the-air.  It is a very delicate balancing act, and one key is to be as honest as you can, and treat others with respect.  This helps reduce stress and resistance later on.

“Forces beyond your control can take away everything you possess except one thing, your freedom to choose how you will respond to the situation.”   Viktor E. Frankl

 

Necessary Risk

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

I listened to John Varley of Barclays talking this morning about how the bank was behaving and fairing in these challenging economic times, especially given the fact that they just posted a £3b profit in their interim results.  He used an interesting phrase; he talked about the banks role in supporting businesses taking necessary risks.  I’m sure he was talking about commercial risks, but it got me thinking about how people handle other sorts of risks.  I’m not thinking about the sort you can take insurance out against, but the others that are part of building a business or a life.

We take all kinds of risks when we step away from the safety of the things that we know and those that we control.  If you think about it, that zone is pretty small for most of us, and yet most of our growth, excitement and achievement takes place beyond those limits.  If only we could go to our friendly, neighbourhood bank and get an infusion of courage or wisdom!  Most of us are (at least a bit) risk adverse, and yet it is the garden of our growth.  People talk plenty about chucking themselves down black runs or rollercoaster rides but it isn’t often I hear people talking taking these less adrenalin fuelled risks.

Maybe today is a good day for stepping outside that ole comfort zone and into the scary place where the real business is done…?

“The person who risks nothing, does nothing, has nothing, is nothing, and becomes nothing. He may avoid suffering and sorrow, but he simply cannot learn and feel and change and grow and love and live.”   Leo F. Buscaglia

“You have to risk going too far to discover just how far you can really go.”  T.S. Eliot

Two little pieces

Sunday, August 2nd, 2009

Following on from yesterday’s blog, it turned out that two small pieces of information made all the difference.  A friend told us to test a couple of muscles which were connected with the eyes, and we learnt that the TMJ (the jaw muscle) could also have an impact.  This allowed me to treat her and reduce the symptoms by around 70%, but the biggest thing was knowing there was a non-threatening cause for the symptoms.

When you can understand even part of how something has come about you can do something about it, if only change your own responses.  It is like opening a door into a new house and once you have passed through the door a whole new set of views opens up, which expands and relates to what you saw / knew before. 

They say knowledge is power, and so it is but I also have always felt that it is hard to judge when you really understand things from another’s perspective.

“There are no extra pieces in the universe. Everyone is here because he or she has a place to fill, and every piece must fit itself into the big jigsaw puzzle.”   Deepak Chopra

You are not alone…

Saturday, August 1st, 2009

Today I was reminded of the incredible power of learning that you are not the only one in your particular boat.  It is so easy to worry and feel scared; perhaps even think that you are going nuts.  Over the last few days someone close had something odd going on and of course it is worrying.  We all subconsciously scan our environment and that includes our bodies, for anything abnormal.  Once our alarm has been triggered it isn’t simple to turn it off.  We constantly worry away at what is causing this. 

This is where knowledge is power; discovering other people agree with us or feel the same way, or can explain what we are feeling or seeing is a huge relief.  Suddenly we are no alone, not nuts, not powerless.  It is one of the real gifts of the internet.  It gives us access to a universal library and window into the inner world of others. 

Helping others not feel on their own is one key step to building rapport and those people who can make us feel understood on a regular basis earn our trust and our love.

“From the outside looking in, you can’t understand it. From the inside looking out, you can’t explain it.”