Jim Clemmer
is a bestselling author and internationally acclaimed keynote speaker,
workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer on leadership,
change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal growth. During the
last 25 years he has delivered over two thousand customized keynote
presentations, workshops, and retreats. Jim's five international
bestselling books include The VIP Strategy, Firing on All Cylinders, Pathways to Performance, Growing the Distance, and The Leader's Digest.
Visit Jim's webste or contact him at service@clemmer.net
"Weep not that the world
changes. Did it keep a stable, changeless state, it were cause indeed to
weep." — William Cullen Bryant, 19th century American poet, critic, and
editor.
"I
hate all this change. Why can't things just stay the same ?", Dirk
shouted angrily at the TV news anchor. He threw a pillow at the TV
screen and clicked it off with a snort. Suddenly a hissing noise arose
from the corner of the room and green, shimmering mist filled the air.
Dirk stood in shock as a one-foot tall, wrinkled old man emerged from
the glowing cloud. The tiny, grizzled fellow had a long flowing white
beard and was dressed from head to toe in green. His eyes twinkled with
mischief as he flashed a gap-toothed grin. "Hi, I am Mike. I can take
you to a place where people don't have to deal with change and things
stay the same all the time."
Before
Dirk could say a word, the little elf drew a handful of sparkling green
dust from his vest pocket. With an impish smirk and a big wink, he
threw the powder at Dirk. With the hissing sound filling his ears Dirk
was engulfed in the green, twinkling fog. Still unable to see through
the emerald haze, he heard Mike say, "Here we are. Here's a place where
things stay the same and people don't have to deal with change." The elf
blew away the mist. They were standing on the lush green grass of a
well-trimmed graveyard. Neat, polished gravestones stretched far out to
the horizon.
"Life
is change," the aged elf said with a chuckle as he leapt to the top of a
headstone. "It's one of nature's mighty laws. Eons ago, I had this
conversation with my old buddy, Heraclitus, and told him that change is
the only thing that's permanent. Of course, he took the credit for
saying that," the elf playfully grimaced. "It's a timeless principle.
People who aren't changing and growing aren't living. Growth is one of
nature's vital signs. It shows you're alive. Once you stop changing and
growing, you'd better check your pulse."
We can't manage change.
The single biggest "change management" failure of the 20th century was
the old Soviet Union. With highly centralized planning, the politburo
tried to tightly control the lives of an entire block of nations. There
were to be few surprises and activities that weren't in the official
plan. Bureaucratic organizations often try to do the same thing. So do
many static, low growth individuals. We need to be on guard against our
own rigid thinking and "hardening of the attitudes".
The
faster the world changes around us, the further behind we fall by just
standing still. If the rate of external change exceeds our rate of
internal growth, just as the day follows night, we will surely be
changed. To the change-blind with stunted growth, it will happen
suddenly and seemingly "out of the blue."
Change forces choices.
If we're on the grow, we'll embrace many changes and find the positive
in them. It's all in where we chose to put our focus. Even change that
hits us in the side of the head as a major crisis can be full of growth
opportunities — if we choose to look for them.
We
don't always get to choose the changes that come into our lives. But we
do get to choose how to respond. In my workshops and speaking
engagements, when working with people who feel under siege by negative,
unwanted change, I often show the Chinese symbol for crisis. It is a
stark example of the timeless wisdom of choices. Apparently, the top
character in the two-part symbol reads as darkness, disaster, and danger
(it could be a lot of swearing for all I know.
But I have had this interpretation confirmed by a few people who can read Chinese).
The
bottom character reads as opportunity, renewal, and rebirth. Many
people or organizations — who didn't give in to the dark forces of
despair and Victimitis — and successfully weathered a serious crisis,
look back years later and say that was a significant turning point. Most
would rather not go through that pain again, but it was a key part of
their growth. Crisis can be a danger that weakens or destroys us. Or
crisis can be a growth opportunity. The choice is ours. Which ever we
chose — we're right about that crisis. We make it our reality.
Change
is life. Successfully dealing with change means choosing to
continuously grow and develop. Failing to grow is failing to live.
Source:leader-values.com
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Wednesday, 10 April 2013
Change : Change is Life
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