|
Share the article on
this page with a friend.
Click
here.
|
|
| 
The
Pursuit and Practice of Synergicity
By Richard Eyre
Editor's
note: Today's column continues a series on the Third Alternative
of "Synergicity." Over the next few weeks, this column
will continue to outline and explain the third alternative of
"SYNERGICITY," and how the concept can replace the loneliness
and isolation of "Independence."
A Declaration of Interdependence
and Dependence (and the Amazing Power of "Nothingness")
Over the past few weeks, we have defined our third alternative
of Synergicity, and outlined why it is such a superior attitude
and paradigm to Independence. (Click the Alternatives archive to
the right if you need a little review of the last couple of columns.)
Now we turn to the question of how to get more of it into
our lives!
For starters, make a personal declaration of interdependence
with other people and a declaration of divine dependence
on God. Just acknowledging your own lack of independence
is a good first step. It brings a type of peaceful humility
wherein there is much less stress. It allows us to start
turning things over to the Lord, and it increases our faith and
our hope. It allows us to follow the Savior's admonition to "Cast
our burdens on Him."
Sometimes just understanding ones own nothingness is the beginning
of a glorious humility and something that liberates us from all
kinds of things like pride, selfishness, and loneliness.
"Nothingness," as it turns out, is not a negative thing,
in fact, it is a powerful thing that opens to us great worlds
of promise.
And the promises are very literal, and very specific. Read
with me from King Benjamin's great address:
I would
that ye should remember the greatness of God, and your own nothingness
and if ye do this, ye shall:
| |
-
always
rejoice,
-
be
filled with the love of God,
- retain
a remission of your sins,
-
grow
in the knowledge of Him that created you
-
live
peaceably,
-
teach
your children to walk in the ways of truth and soberness,
and to love one another.
|
How is
that for a list of promises? What would you give to have
those six things come true in your life? Well, the admonition
the challenge which Benjamin gives that leads to those promises
is to remember and retain in our rememberance "The greatness
of God and our own nothingness."
If you think about it, you can see how an attitude of humility
and nothingness leads to each promise. Humility gives us
gratitude and causes us to rejoice. Realizing how great
God is and how dependent we are on Him fills us with love for
Him. Feeling our nothingness makes us repentant and thus
retains the remission of sins.
The perspective
of His "everythingness" and our "nothingness"
allows us to know Him and grow in knowledge of Him. And
nothingness brings peace and the example that leads our children
to love each other and choose God's path.
And nothingness is the trigger of Synergicity! When we are
in this state of mind, we look for God's timing and notice His
hand and feel His nudges. And we reach out to work synergistically
with others and to look for win-win solutions and to find the
Lord's way rather than insisting on our way.
I still remember one of the boldest prayers I have ever heard.
Elder LeGrande Richards, then too old to speak in General Conference,
was giving one of the prayers. As I recall, he said something
like "And please bless all of us General Authorities with
a realization of our own nothingness."
Synergicity as an Accurate Lens on Mortality
Synergicity is a lens through which we try to view the world a
little like God sees it with everything interconnected, everything
benefiting from everything else, and in one way or another depending
on everything else. (Symbiotic is another nice S word,
by the way, meaning "any interdependent or mutually beneficial
relationship between two persons, groups, etc." It could
also have been a candidate for the Alternative, though it only
has nine letters)
Synergicity
then, the third of the Three Alternatives, really is a combination
of the words synergy, synchronicity, and symbiotic, and it can
be defined as a paradigm in which we acknowledge divine dependence,
mutual interdependence, and respect the interconnectedness of
all things, times, and occurrences within the framework of God's
plan.
On a more
personal level, we learn that, as D&C 90:24 teaches, all
things will work together for our good, if we walk uprightly,
remember our covenants, search diligently, be believing, and pray
always.
Implementation
The key
to implementing an attitude of Synergicity is to understand that,
while our perspective and grasp of reality is narrow and limited
by our mortality and by the veil, we have three incredible tools
at our disposal, each of which can open things up to us and give
us a much broader view of reality and of God's will. (And, in
doing so, can show us the connections, opportunities, and insights
that will allow us to learn the lessons, do the work, and find
the joy that God has put us here for.) The tools can open up to
us enormous resources and capacities beyond what we have independently
and consciously.
The tools that we have, that our spirits can use, are:
- Our own
brains. We use less than 10% of the capacity of our marvelous
minds. The power of our subconscious is largely untapped. We
can "program" our brains to show us connections, to
notice subtle things, to put the right words into our mouths,
or give the compliment that someone else needs. We can literally
tell our minds to be more aware, to prompt us to call someone
when they are available, or to remember things from past experience
that are relevant to what we are doing at the moment.
- Other
people's consciousness. When we ask other people how they
feel, how they see things, what their take is, it's like getting
a whole new picture with a whole new camera angle. When we develop
our sense of empathy, we can sometimes get these perspectives
without even asking. The point is that there is so much awareness
and perspective around us, in the form of other people with
their own sets of experiences and viewpoints, and the more we
tap into that, the more our own awareness and perspective expands.
- The Holy
Ghost. The third member of the Godhead has the complete
grasp of all reality, and we have the right to His companionship
and benefit from His vast and beautiful comprehension. This
connection is a gift, but only we can open it.
Think of
these three resources in a technology metaphor. Our brains are
our laptop computers (let's call them our head-top computers).
They have far more capacity and memory and connections than we
normally use.
Other people's experience, insights, and perspectives are like
a computer network or even the internet. By plugging in and tapping
in, we dramatically expand our own computer's speed, memory, and
capacity.
And the Holy Ghost is, of course, the mainframe computer, the
unlimited database and endless capacity master computer to which
we have access. And it never breaks down or goes off line and
cannot supply any false or misleading information, only truth
and light.
As we avail
ourselves to these three sources of awareness and perspective,
we will find our lives ever more influenced by the wonderful phenomenon
of Synergicity!
Richard
appreciates your comments, questions, and feedback at Richard@meridianmagazine.com
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|
|
| About
the Author: |
|

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."
|
| Related
Articles: |
| The
Three Deceivers Archive
Alternatives Archive
|
| What
do you think? |
| Share
your thoughts, comments, and impressions about this article. |
Format
for Print
Click Here |
Share
the article on this page with a friend.
Click
here. |
|
|