Giving
without Giving Ourselves Away: An interview with Dawna
Markova
Dawna
Markova is the creator of SMARTWired
and a renowned educator, researcher, and author who
has served as a thinking partner to several Fortune
50 CEOs. She is the author of I
Will Not Die an Unlived Life, and The
SMART Parenting Revolution, and co-creator
of Random Acts of Kindness. In the following
interview with Leverage Points editor, Vicky
Schubert, she discusses her fascination with building
our capacity for cultivating collective wisdom.
LP:
In the verse that opens I Will Not Die an Unlived
Life, you write, "I choose to risk my significance,
to live so that which came to me as seed goes to the
next as blossom, and that which came to me as blossom
goes on as fruit." Is it possible to help people
develop that kind of generative outlook, particularly
when the turmoil gripping so much of the world right
now – whether political, cultural, or climatological
– seems to result in a general feeling of apathy
or disengagement?
DM:
I think that the fragmentation and disengagement we're
experiencing now comes, in large part, from the fact
that we're living in a culture that doesn't cultivate
wisdom. We don't know how to honor questions, and
therefore we're not accessing the part of our minds
that creates meaning and coherence out of our lives.
If you don't cultivate a garden, you don't get fruit.
It's
primarily in response to that need that my husband
Andy Bryner and I have returned to teaching the study
groups we began twenty years ago. We want to explore
the question, "How do you risk your significance?"
In other words, how can we use the gifts we were given
on behalf of what we care deeply about? The format
is based on the approach we followed with several
communities of commitment, as we called them. They
were made up of a mix of people from education, the
healing arts, social services, nonprofits, as well
as artists from many disciplines. It's a joy to return
to them now because, after a decade away, we're able
to see how these relationships have endured and resulted
in sustained learning. We think it's a powerful model
for today.
LP:
How was the learning structured?
DM:
These groups met for five days every other month for
close to twenty years. In order to join the study
group a person would have to name one thing in their
life they really wanted to do that would be a risking
of their significance; something that they couldn't
do by themselves, but needed a community to support
them.
Over
the course of the five days we did multidimensional
awareness practices — body work, walking in
nature along the ocean — in order to find the
central question our lives were asking us. We used
music and every variety of the creative arts we could
think of to live inside of that question. We used
storytelling practices. Different people would come
into the center of the circle, and they would move
or express their question in some form. Then they'd
sit down in the center of the circle and everybody
else would stand up and they would mirror back to
them what they had seen or felt or heard. Then the
focal person stood up and took the question one step
further.
After that we formed what I call "thinkubators.”
Each of us sat surrounded by four or five people to
share our questions and what we had learned thus far
about them, and we also shared what our particular
talents and assets were. The group then brainstormed
resources and ideas to integrate the two.
LP:
How do you think this learning model can be effective
in helping us cultivate collective wisdom?
DM:
I think it's important to understand how our internal
awarenesses inform our outer work in the world, and
how we integrate the two. One image that helps me
reflect on this is a Mobius loop which, as you know,
would be a circle except that one twist — what
I call the turning point — connects the internal
and the external. The kind of learning communities
I'm describing, with individual questions at their
core, can stimulate our capacity for turning attention
inward to integrate internal awareness with external
action. From this can come an understanding of how,
as author Parker Palmer says, we can discover how
to live in an energized way instead of frenzied and
rest instead of going inert.
Neuroscience
today is rich with fascinating new discoveries about
how the brain is neuroplastic — how it can make
new synaptic connections throughout our lives. For
the last three years, I've been part of a group of
100 neuroscience clinicians and researchers from around
the world who are participating in a moderated telecourse
to explore this growing edge. One of the things we
discovered is that none of us had ever been given
or taught a definition of mental health. This is fascinating
when you think about it, because if you don't know
even what the outcome is, how do you make the journey?
I believe this has contributed to the deficit focus
we have today about human capacity.
This
group has come to a working definition of mental health:
The capacity to integrate. And I've been playing with
extrapolating that to larger systems and asking "How
does a healthy system integrate the forces of standardization
and differentiation?" In corporations, we see
the same thing that we see in school systems and governments
— that healthy systems, as far as we can understand
them, are stable, adaptable, flexible, and energized
(It spells SAFE). Organic systems are always seeking
to balance all four of those conditions.
When
a system goes to the extreme of stability it gets
rigidly standardized, brittle, and it breaks —
which may be where we are right now in the United
States. If it gets too far toward the differentiated
end of the spectrum it gets overly chaotic. The system
has to keep creating a balance, a Mobius loop if you
will; a dance between standardization and differentiation.
In my work with CEO's, they often said they wanted
me to help their leadership teams think well together.
But what they were usually talking about was making
them all be able to think the same. They didn't understand
that it would actually be more effective to help the
team differentiate; help them understand how each
one carried a unique gift to the rest of them. The
more they differentiated, the more they could integrate.
Each person understood the unique value he or she
brought to the team.
Large
systems tend to try to create stability without understanding
that the system needs to balance on the differentiating
end. They try to create stability through cohesiveness.
In mathematics, cohesive is a term that describes
a set of things with an impermeable membrane around
them. But a healthy system, instead of cohesive, is
coherent. In coherence, the membrane around the system
is permeable so that the system internally is influenced
by what is going on outside. It changes as it integrates.
Now,
the healthy human brain is always seeking coherence
by integrating right and left hemispheric functioning,
rational and intuitive, logical and relational thinking,
inner reality and outer. As new elements enter the
human field of awareness, the internal field grows.
I think this understanding has important implications
for creating communities of people who can think together
in order to cultivate wisdom.
LP:
And as individuals, we have to risk our own significance
to get there together?
DM:
That's the key question that my life is asking me
right now: How do I risk my significance? How do I
give without giving myself away? I believe that in
living that question we cultivate collective wisdom.
We can help each other develop strategies for bringing
tomorrow into today's choices by falling in love with
beautiful, dangerous, mysterious questions that can't
be answered, by reminding one another that what matters
to us is important, that our questing does make a
difference, and by remembering those who stand behind
us.
In
a culture as stuck in standardization as this one
is, it can be very difficult to get over to the right
side of the brain and imagine a possible future. Sometimes,
we need to first look back in our lives to a time
when we felt fulfilled and did make a difference.
Then we can mine that tiny piece of history to think
about how we could design a future. What we can conceive,
we can create.
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