Assimilation
Among some updates forwarded to me from Robert Fritz's website by
Sharon McGann,
was this snippet of information:
Robert Fritz's latest book, The Path
of Least Resistance for Managers (Berrett-Koehler) is currently on
Amazon.com¹s best seller list for Canadians. It¹s number 7 (Harry
Potter is number 6).
Congratulations Robert!
I believe Fritz has made a major contribution to helping people
discover new ways of operating in the post-mechanistic paradigm in which
we now find ourselves. It is said, that to function effectively in a new
paradigm one must totally embody the new paradigm: its principles, its
language, its behaviours. It is not easy at first, but as more people
fully embrace the new paradigm, the old world-view no-longer seems to
embody commonsense.
A key concept Fritz talks about in one of his earlier books, The
Path of Least Resistance: Learning to become the creative force in your
own life, is assimilation. I've found his
ideas around the concept of assimilation very useful, not only in my own
life, but also in helping others transform the perceived obstacle course
ahead of them into a path of least resistance to their vision.
Assimilation is an important
stage of growth and development because it is the period during which we
incorporate intricate physical and mental skills in such a way that they
become a natural part of ourselves. Without assimilation there is no
real learning (only learning about things):
Assimilation is a step beyond mere
learning, for in assimilation you incorporate the learning into
yourself.
Yet assimilation is poorly understood.
Fritz says one reason the assimilation stage is so little understood
is that during this stage, progress in growth and development remains
invisible for a time. For long periods it might look as though nothing
significant is happening or is being learned. For example, if you have
ever learnt a musical instrument, you will recall that your music
teacher (at least this is the way mine operated) had the annoying habit
of giving you pieces to learn each week and then go on to more complex
pieces before you ever mastered any of them. The interesting thing, is
that after a few weeks, if you return to the simpler pieces that you had
never mastered, you find that you can play them with ease and well -
what has happened?
This highlights a key principle of assimilation:
One powerful way to assimilate your
present step is to move on to your next step - even if you feel
inadequately prepared for it.
People who do not understand this principle, and who are coming from
a reactive rather than a creative orientation, are likely to give up any
new venture as they perceive no progress is being made and decide,
"this is obviously not for me" - whether it be a fitness
programme, learning a musical instrument, a new language, our running a
business under the new GST regime!
The above principle pertains to taking a new path, going where we
have not gone before. The same dedication that should be applied in
persisting with a new path, should not necessarily be translated into
trying to keep going with an old path that's had it's time. A recurring
pattern in the universe is the cycle of birth, life and death. There's
no point trying to hold onto something that's "had it's day".
This is only postponing the inevitable, wasting energy and making the
final end more painful/stressful. This lack of awareness of cycles most
frequently occurs in relationships with others. We try to hold onto a
relationship that is no longer working. Humans are notorious for trying
to engineer the natural cycle of birth, life and death out of our
experience (through plastic surgery, HRT, and other technologies) yet it
is only postponing the inevitable. Fritz cites Robert Frost's poem Reluctance
to illustrate this point:
Ah, when to the heart of man
Was it ever less than a treason
To go with the drift of things,
To yield with grace to reason,
And bow and accept the end
Of a love or a season?
One final important key principle of assimilation:
What you embody tends to
be created.
Embodiment is distinct from behaviour. To embody love is
not the same as behaving in a loving style. As Fritz explains:
Those who "fight for
peace" do not embody peace, but rather embody fighting. Those who
worry about their health do not embody health, but rather fear. Those
who lust for power and affluence embody neither.
Embodiment is not simply adopting the right behaviours or finding a
new response. What you embody speaks louder than your behaviour, to the
same degree that your actions speak louder than words.
You assimilate what you embody. As you internalise what you embody,
inner development occurs that is consistent with what you embody. All
aspects of your consciousness realign themselves in accordance with what
you embody.
Media Watch
- The Australian Jan 23, 2001
(Spotted by Bronwyn
Buck)
From Sir John Browne Chief executive of BP Amoco (he has built the
business from a market value of 20 billion UK pounds to 129 billion
UK pounds in 5 years). He is talking about being comfortable with
being different.
The more you grow up the more you
understand that nobody really conforms and everyone has something
slightly different to offer.
When you think about it in a
corporation context, it's the only effective way to run a
corporation of this scale. Everybody is here on merit and they're
all different. They have different inner value systems, they speak
differently and present themselves differently. It reflects real
life.
- The Sunday Mail Jan 21, 2001, p. 92
In an article titled, Ethics of profit: honour before greed, says
new breed, by Michelle Collins
A growing number of investors is looking to make a difference as
well as a dollar. Shareholders are increasingly basing their decision
on where to invest their hard-earned cash not just on a company's
bottom line but on its stand on a range of non-financial issues, from
its green credentials to how many women sit on the board. This trend
is called ethical investment.
Recent estimates put between $150 million and $300 million - of
more than $500 billion in funds under management - in ethical
investment. However, this is just a drop in the ocean compared to the
trend which is already established in the USA and Canada.
Sara Harman, stockbroker and senior financial planner with Hartley
Poynton, says although the trend is still in its infancy in Australia,
it will grow substantially in the next five years.
So what constitutes an ethical or socially responsible investment
(SRI)? At its broadest definition, says Sara, socially responsible or
ethical investment means investing in companies where you feel
comfortable with their policies, and that means what constitutes a
socially responsible investment will vary from person to person.
Sara Harman is one of a new, and growing, breed of financial
planners who work out 'who's naughty and who's nice" based on
their own set of values. Hartman cites Cochlear Limited, maker of the
bionic ear, as an ethical success story:
Obviously, when Cochlear started, the
risk was high and the company did not pay a dividend...
This is your classic case of a growth
company that has made good and used state-of-the-art technology to
improve the lives of deaf people and it was previously run by a
woman [Catherine Livingstone - now appointed to the board of
directors of Telstra].
Last year, Cochlear went from a low
of $8.50 to a high of $21.10.
[Readers of the Minessence E-zine might interested to note that
Cochlear Limited, under the guidance of Heather
Lesley-Swan, have, for some years, been undergoing an extensive
values programme using the AVI at its
foundation]
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