A
couple of years ago I
posted some mid-year and year-end "intentions", to distinguish them
from "resolutions". Intentions are not aspirations; they are things we
are in the process of doing, achieving, or becoming. They are what
we're meant
to do, and who
we're meant
to be. We have already begun to
realize them.
They are, as the word's etymology implies, what we are "stretching
towards".
I later shifted from intentions that are results-oriented
(goals) to
intentions that are process-oriented
(practices), because I realized
that all of the things that are worth doing for a lifetime are complex,
and can never really be completed. There is no mastery, there is only
the practice.
More recently, I described the importance of aligning our
long-term intentions (what we are meant to do and be for what's left
of our lives) and our short-term intentions (what we
are
meant to do and be right now, today, this week). Until they are
aligned, we will continue to live in this unreal space, in the knowing/doing disconnect
-- we know we should be doing X (we are good
at it, we love doing it, and it is needed in the world), but we keep on
doing Y. We do Y because it is urgent, because it is easy, because it
is fun, or because we don't think we have any choice. Things are the
way they are for a reason, and until we understand what that reason is,
we will not be able to change it, or adapt ourselves to it. We will
keep on doing Y, and X will never get done.
If our long-term intentions are X-stuff, then when we identify
short-term intentions that are also X-stuff, that are "stretching
toward" the same place, we will see starkly the disconnect between it
and the Y-stuff we're actually doing. Something then has to shift.
Either we stop doing (some of) the Y-stuff to make time and space for
the X-stuff, or we acknowledge that we don't actually intend
to do X at
all. We're merely dreaming about it, or hoping it will happen
magically. Recipe for unhappiness, self-dissatisfaction and a life
wasted. If we were able to hear our future
obituary, and it was all
Y-stuff, would we see it as a life well-spent? And if not, what's
holding us back from doing the X-stuff? And if it's lack of time or
money holding us back, are we really
intending to do X?
Example: One of my long-term intentions is to create working models of
a better way to live and make a living. I've written a book about how
to create sustainable, responsible enterprises. I'm working on a
novel/screenplay that depicts what life in a sustainable world 200
years from now might look like, to help us imagine possibilities. Right
now I have James Kunstler's book World
Made by Hand
sitting beside me -- airplane reading as I make my way to visit my
father for the Thanksgiving weekend. In this, my long-term and
short-term intentions are aligned.
Second example: Another of my long-term intentions is to work with
others
to stop the Alberta Tar Sands. I have a book, Andrew Nikiforuk's Tar
Sands sitting
beside Kunstler's, but beyond the vague idea of some kind of Open Space
event, to brainstorm with others creative ways to disrupt and close
down
this ecological nightmare, I have no short-term intention stretching
towards that longer-term one. Worse, I'm anxious about the longer-term
intention: I have no passion for this kind of work (though I have great
passion for helping others do it), and I know people
whose lives have been devastated as a result of having been arrested,
for nothing. No
question this is holding me back, and that my intentions in this area,
if that's
what they are, are out of alignment.
This brings me back to practices. It occurs to me that, when I retire
(soon), I will be best able to align and stretch toward both my
short-term and long-term intentions by allocating specific time blocks
to
three kinds of practices every day (though I recognize I'll have to be
flexible on the times): (a) Reconnecting practices, (b)
Capacity-building, activism and model-building practices, and (c)
Reflecting practices. Or, put more simply, sensing (mornings), doing
(afternoons) and thinking and playing (evenings).
Starting with these three blocks of time, I developed the chart below
that shows my long-term intentions, the long-term practices that
"stretch toward" those intentions, and the short-term, daily intentions
(exercises) in alignment with the longer-term ones. The long-term
practices tie into the nine steps in my What You Can Do graphic above,
and the colour (red, yellow, green) is from my 'scorecard' and shows
how much work I have to do on each.
Long-Term
Intention
Long-Term
Practices
Short-Term
Intentions (Exercises & Projects)
Hrs/day
now
Hrs/day
intended
Reconnecting
with All Life on
Earth, Instincts & Emotions
Appreciation
(1) Presence/Paying
Attention (2) Heart-Opening/Letting
Go (3)
What I discovered in putting this chart together was that (a) many of
the things I do today, things which take up most of my day, really
don't contribute at all to my intentions, and (b) when I reallocated
time in my day to these three blocks of time (right column), it
required a lot of thought, imagination and work to come up with a list
of short-term intentions (exercises and projects) with which to
usefully fill that time -- exercises and projects that would stretch
toward the long-term intentions. And even with retirement, I suspect
"freeing up" six additional hours a day for intentional work will be a
challenge -- it will mean
less time on e-mail and casual reading, for example (i.e. getting away
more often from this computer).
The third column of this chart is new and tentative and incomplete, but
it's also for me a personal breakthrough. I am not sure whether this is
the solution, for me, to the knowing/doing disconnect and the tyranny
of the urgent over the important -- the real formula for Getting Things
Done.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
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