(A reposting of an article by Jon Lavin, first published on the 9th October, 2009.)
These are hard times for millions – transformation is the only practical option.
I’ve been working with most of my clients recently through painful transformation brought about by the recession.
An interesting metaphor really because, since the first wave of uncertainty in the UK banking system triggered panic, I have been picking up on that uncertainty.
That uncertainty feels like it’s stalking the globe at the moment; one has been aware of an underlying fear that was difficult to name and source in me. It has been rather like a deep river in that whilst the surface feels slow moving, currents are moving things powerfully below.
For example, we now are the proud owners of 6 Light Sussex chickens. Our youngest son, Sam, and I have dug up the back lawn and planted vegetables and built a poly-tunnel. We are also planning to install a wood burning cooker. Right back down to the base of Maslow’s pyramid.

These feelings have brought about such change everywhere and I wonder seriously whether we will ever return to what was, indeed, would we want to?
I might not have mentioned it in previous Posts but as well as an engineering background, in latter years, I have focussed on the interpersonal and success in business founded on quality relationships, integrity and, vitally, awareness.
To inform this, some 6 years ago, I embarked on an MA in Core Process Psychotherapy, primarily to work on myself so that I could be the best I could be in my relationships in and out of work.
The point I’m trying to make is that the same panic I notice in many of the companies I work in, and in me, is based on fear of the unknown and on a lack of trust in abundance in all it’s forms.
We get more of what we focus on. So we can choose to focus on the constant news of more difficulties, hardship and redundancies or, we can focus on what is working. In the workplace it has been pulling people together across functions and sites and pooling resources and ideas.
When we realise we’re not doing this alone it’s amazing how much lighter a load can feel and how much more inspired we feel. I also notice how humour begins to flow and what a powerful antidote for doom and gloom that is.
Transformation is never easy but the rewards exceed the effort put in ten fold.
So what is it going to be? Are we all going to bow down to the god of Doom & Gloom, fear and anxiety, heaping more and more gifts around it; as most media focusses on, or are we going to start noticing and focussing on the other neglected god of relationship; joy, trust, abundance and light?
Whatever the future holds for us, a belief in our inherent ability to adapt and change and focus on the greater good rather than fear, anxiety, greed and selfishness is the only sustainable way forward.
By Jon Lavin
Footnote from Paul: Considering that this was first published nearly four years ago, the level of uncertainty across the world seems practically undiminished!
What a great article… and if I read it before, a new reading of it does not hurt.
The only little detail that I would dare to question is whether digging up lawn, planting vegetable, building a poly-tunnel (I hope he means buying it) and installing a wood burn cooker really has to do, for the author mind you, with the bottom of Maslow’s pyramid and not with the absolute top.
For me of course, having to think of having to do that, would rather increase my fear level, so I keep on trotting down to the grocer in blissful ignorance… the latter by the way being also a great cure for the excessive uncertainty that surround us.
By the way, may I take the opportunity to link to my latest musings on bank regulations, “The ‘Mistake’ that dares not speak its name”, and that were published in The Journal of Regulation and Risk North Asia. It speaks of the need for our banks not to excessively avoid risks but to audaciously embrace it… (perhaps something like me betting on the grocer to supply me with fresh organic produce, grown on his lawn and in his own poly-tunnel)
https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B2Sn_liAX-Y-bEw0Ry1wSmZHNzA/edit?usp=sharing
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Dear Per, good to hear from you and trust all is well. Enjoyed your reaction to Jon’s essay even if that might not have been in Jon’s mind! Will follow up your link later on today.
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Like what is said by Jon Lavin, wish I can think the way as he does, believe in self and never giving up hope!
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It’s not a bad aim in life, is it!
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