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Announcing
(and Presenting and Defending) the Three Alternatives
By Richard Eyre
Publisher's
note: For the past 12 weeks, Richard Eyre has outlined and defined
“The Three Deceivers” of Control, Ownership, and Independence,
and detailed how our obsessions with them can ruin the quality
of our lives. This week begins the second phase of the column,
with the new name “The Three Alternatives.” In this
and future weeks (always on Fridays and staying posted on the
front page through the weekend), Richard will elaborate on what
he believes is a better and more spiritual alternative for each
of the three deceivers and in doing so will open to you a new
world of thinking that may change how you live. He continues to
welcome your feedback and inputs. Write to him at Richard@meridianmagazine.com
. If you missed any of the four earlier columns in this series,
you can go to the Deceivers Archive (see right sidebar) and catch
up.
In last week’s column,
we set forth a framework for what the Three Alternatives should
be and for what they should do. If you were not able to read it,
you may want to click
here and review it as background for today’s column.
Thanks!
First of all, thanks to you marvelous
Meridian readers who, for a dozen weeks and a dozen columns, have
followed my ideas about why and how our obsessions with Control,
Ownership and Independence are undermining our happiness and the
quality of our lives.
Not only have you read and “listened,”
but hundreds of you have sent in your thoughts and your ideas
on what the three alternatives should be. We have discovered together
that the three deceivers of CO&I are “paradigms”
— or ways to view the world — and that they are filled
with half-truths and misleading assumptions that can cause us
to spend vast amounts of time and energy in pursuit of things
that we can never really have and wouldn’t really want even
if we could have them.
We have concluded that there are
only two ways to rid ourselves of false or “half-truth”
paradigms. One is to expose them, to dig down and discover where
and why they are false and to consciously reject them and turn
away from them. The other is to replace them with true and eternal
paradigms — to push them aside by moving in new ways of
looking at the world which fit better with the Gospel and which
work with true principles and replace the selfish, materialistic,
short term motivations of CO&I with the selfless, family-oriented,
eternal motivations of their three alternatives.
The Criteria
Since you have waited 12 weeks for
The Three Alternatives, we had better be thorough and convincing
in their introduction and unveiling. So I will try to define them
clearly, and make my case that they are superior to the three
deceivers on the three most important criteria:
-
Truth :
That they are true paradigms, completely valid and sound, while
the deceivers build on half truths to conclusions that are ultimately
false.
-
Motivation:
That they are more inspiring and that they stimulate more action
and initiative than the deceivers.
-
Results:
That they produce not only better results, but more
results in our everyday lives than do the deceivers.
The “unveiling” then,
of each of the three alternatives, will first announce the word,
then define it with an “enhanced definition” that
helps explain why it is the alternative, and then contrast
it with the deceiver that it replaces, justifying why it is more
correct, more motivating, and why it produces better results.
Three Eleven-letter “S”
words
It just so happens (well, actually
I worked pretty hard to make it happen) that each of the Three
Alternatives is an 11-letter word that starts with S. The words,
of course, are just the titles, the symbols, the names of the
Three Alternatives, and will not represent the full meaning of
the new paradigms until they are completely defined and explained.
But that is what this column is about now and for the next several
weeks — to define and explain each of the three Alternatives,
and to discuss how they can be implemented into our lives and
make it easier and more natural to live by true principles and
to prioritize our eternal goals.
One of the three 11-letter S words
(the alternative to Ownership) is a solid and familiar word in
the Gospel, and is the one that many readers guessed correctly
as one of the Three Alternatives. Another of them (the alternative
to Independence) is a new word — a combination of two other
words, actually — and thus a word you have never heard before.
The third one, and the one I will introduce first, since it is
the alternative to Control (the C in CO&I) is a somewhat trendy
word that you may not particularly like until you hear it fully
and correctly defined.
Today’s column will lay out
this alternative to Control. Next week’s column will introduce
the 11-letter S word that is the alternative to Ownership, and
the column in two weeks will present the final 11-letter S word
that is the alternative to Independence. By doing them one at
a time, I hope to be able to explain them fully and completely
enough to convince you to adopt them as the lenses through which
you view yourself and your world.
The Alternative to Control
is Serendipity
This marvelous word has been over-simplified
and even bastardized quite a bit lately in popular culture, becoming
the name of ice cream stores, boutiques, and clothing lines and
even the title of a major movie. Serendipity is often defined
as “dumb luck” or having something good happen to
you by chance.
Its true definition, though, is much
more interesting, quite extraordinary and quite spiritual.
The word was coined by a 19th century
English author named Horace Walpole who loved an ancient Persian
fable called “The Three Princes of Serendip” (Serendip
being the early name of the beautiful, teardrop shaped island
off the southern tip of India that the British called Ceylon and
that we, today, call Sri Lanka.)
In the fable, the three princes each
go out in search of their fortune. None of them find a fortune,
but all of them, through their acute awareness and perception,
find things that are better than a fortune — love,
truth, and opportunities to serve. They are able to make these
discoveries because they notice things that other people miss,
and thus find unexpected joys and opportunities.
Walpole, reading the fable, said
to himself, “We do not have an English word that expresses
that happy ability to find things that are better than what we
think we are looking for.” So he made up the word Serendipity,
and defined it as follows:
A state of mind whereby
a person, through awareness, sensitivity, and sagacity, frequently
finds something better than that which he is seeking.
Definition
Think for a moment about the elements
of Walpole’s definition. First, it is a person’s state
of mind or an attitude. Second, it requires awareness and sensitivity
along with sagacity, (a thoughtful and wise interpretation of
what one notices). Third, it implies that the person is proactive,
because he is seeking things, or has goals. Fourth, it indicates
that, as life spontaneously happens, we get opportunities, or
impressions, or ideas — perhaps things that most people
miss — which are actually better than whatever it was that
we were seeking or doing at the moment.
In other words, as we are going along,
trying to control things and get the things done on our list,
working to reach our goals of what we want to do and what we want
to have, we should strive to stay aware and in tune,
using both our senses and our inspiration . As we do, we may well
see better paths — things more important than what is on
our list; things that God wants us to do that supersede
what we thought we wanted to do.
These “serendipities”
can be big or small. They can involve little opportunities or
small beauties like an unexpected call from a friend or a lovely
sunset. Or they can be big connections or discoveries (Fleming
discovered antibiotics by the serendipitous observation of how
the mold blown in through an open window started killing bacteria
on a Petri dish in the lab.)
Large or small, the search for serendipity
puts the premium not on controlling but on observing, not on forcing
things to be the way we want them, but on seeing the possibilities
in things as they really are.
Spiritual Serendipity
Serendipity really gets interesting
when the spiritual dimension is brought in. We can strive to be
more aware and observant not only via our five senses, but through
the Spirit. As we strive to become more attuned to the Lord’s
plan, and to His will, things come to us via His spirit —
impressions, “nudges,” promptings, inspiration —
and through them we become more in tough with what is really going
on around us, and we begin to see things the way He wants us to
see them.
In this spiritual dimension, serendipities
become what Elder Bednar calls “tender mercies,” and
we begin to perceive the unexpected (and certainly “beyond
our control”) blessings that God puts before us every day.
An enhanced, spiritual definition
of Serendipity then, would be:
A state of mind and
spirit wherein we strive for awareness of the Lord’s blessings
and of His will, so that, as we go about our lives and seek our
goals, we also try to notice all that is around us and inside
us, happy for the adventure and spontaneity of life, and willing
to take detours and departures from our plans as we see opportunities
to please Him, to receive His gifts, and to turn control of our
lives over to Him.
Contrasting the Deceiver
with its Alternative
Control or Serendipity: Which is
true, which is most motivating, and which produces the best results?
Truth:
The fact is that we control so very
little, and that God controls all. His gifts are all around us,
along with His opportunities and incredible beauties, and we just
need the awareness and spiritual sensitivity to see them. We can
cultivate this awareness, and we can ask Him for it. As we do,
we use our agency to take the spiritual initiative that allows
God to bless us and inspire us and guide us. Guidance is infinitely
more valuable and more worthy of our pursuit and quest than is
control. And Serendipity is the mind set or paradigm that can
get us to guidance.
Motivation:
Control can seem motivating because
it appeals to our lust for power and dominion. But it is a dangerous
kind of motivation because it is unbridled by humility and can
lead to the worst kind of pride. With a serendipity paradigm we
are motivated by our desire to discover and deliver God’s
will into our lives. We begin to see life as a great adventure
where our challenge is not to control but to perceive and to understand.
We become as interested in learning to “watch and pray”
as we are in learning to “work and plan” and the two
sets of skills complement and enhance each other.
We become motivated not just to “kick
against the pricks” in the blind pursuit of our own selfish
goals, but to diligently seek the Lord’s will for us and
to discover and develop our unique, individual foreordinations.
Results:
The results of a Control paradigm
(“control freaks” are actually pretty well named)
include obsessive behavior and a lot of irritation and frustration
at all the things and circumstances (and people) in life that
simply won’t happen or behave exactly the way we want them
to. In a control mentality, we are annoyed by surprises or unexpected
occurrences that distract us from the things on our list.
Things that don’t fall into
line with our plans and our controlling idea of how things should
happen are seen as interruptions, irritations, impediments.
And then there are the times that
we do succeed in controlling a situation, only to find out that
the results would have been better if we had let it go in another
direction. The longer we live, the more we realize that we don’t
have enough information to pre determine what is best for ourselves
or for others, and that we are better off to seek the will (and
submit to the will) of the One who knows all.
The results of a spiritually serendipitous
paradigm are much happier, much more peaceful, and much more exciting.
Through our increased awareness, we learn to live in the moment
and enjoy the present. We do our best to plan our future, but
we expect and relish (and look for) surprises and unexpected opportunities.
We take off the “blinders” of our obsessions with
our own wants, and start seeing to both sides and noticing the
needs and the beauties of others.
A serendipitous attitude seems to
slow time down, to take the pressure off, to make us observers
of God’s world rather than feverish little worriers, trying
to control our own little imagined world, and never finding enough
time to do so.
A serendipitous approach to life
makes us consistently aware of God’s control and thus causes
us to constantly seek His guidance and even His perspective. In
short, a serendipitous approach draws us closer to the Spirit,
while a control approach pulls us away.
Perhaps most importantly, the serendipity
paradigm creates an atmosphere and an awareness in which the key
principles of Christ’s gospel can live and grow and find
their fullest implementation. Faith flourishes because we can
draw down His power rather than depending on our own. Hope is
always present because we are seeking and trusting in His will
and acknowledging His control and believing that all will turn
out as He has ordained. And charity never faileth because He is
able to work through us due to our awareness of others and of
the daily opportunities put before us to give a little, to serve
a little, to help a little.
Upcoming
There will be more — much more
— on Serendipity in future columns. In fact an entire month
(four columns) will be devoted to a fuller explanation and description
of what a serendipity paradigm is, how it works, and how you can
develop it in your life. But first, we must introduce the other
two Alternatives. Next week we will present and define and defend
the Alternative to Ownership.
Thanks for staying on board for this
journey, and thanks for continuing to send me your feedback at
Richard@meridianmagazine.com.
What do you think
of the first of theThree Alternatives? Does a Serendipity paradigm
preserve all of the good aspects of Control (initiative, discipline,
responsibility and so on) but eliminate all of the negative aspects
(judgment, jealousy, conceit, presumption, envy, covetousness,
frustration and other deceiving and damaging qualities)? Does
a serendipitous perspective help us to see “things as they
really are”? The next two columns will unveil the other
two Alternatives (to Ownership and to Independence) and future
columns will explore each of the Three Alternatives individually
and in much greater depth. All through the process, Richard will
continue to appreciate your input at Richard@meridianmagazine.com.
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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A former Mission
President in London and candidate for Utah governor, Richard was
the director of the White House Conference on Parents and Children
for President Reagan. He served on the President's advisory panel
for secondary and higher education. A graduate of the Harvard Business
School, he headed a management consulting company for 20 years before
giving it up to meet the growing demands of his writing and speaking
schedule.
Richard and
his wife Linda are parents of nine children and authors of a dozen
bestselling family and parenting books. They are now focusing on
the phase they are entering: Empty Nest Parenting. Through their
web sites valuesparenting.com
and familynightlessons.com,
their frequent national media appearances and theirspeaking and
lecture tours (see http://www.theeyres.com/),
they continue to work at their mission statement which is, "FORTIFY
FAMILIES, popularize parenting, bolster balance, and validate values."
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