Archive for June, 2009

Monday Morning Rock Out!

Green peace signNormally I slowly weave and tease my way into the video I share for the Monday Morning Rock Out. This week, though, as we watch the future unfold before us in a way we rarely witness, it seems disingenuous to do anything but get right to the point.

Each day, as we watch the news unfold from Iran, we are inspired. We are encouraged. We are frightened for the violence faced by those who are holding themselves accountable for creating not only the future of their country, but in many ways, the future of our whole world.

So this week’s Rock Out is a reminder of the power we have together that we do not have alone. It is a reminder of those who are holding themselves accountable with their very lives. And it is a reminder of the power of art to convey all of that.

I can think of two other Monday Morning Rock Outs that have used this song – one to share the power of the arts to connect us with what is possible, and the other to address the message that is so strong as we watch the news unfold in Iran – the power we have when we all stand together.

And now this one, by Jon Bon Jovi and Iranian superstar Andy Madadian (check out the background about this endeavor here.)

If a song has landed in this spot three times in three different ways – if so many people are using this song to provide the same solid message – then it is a message we must keep in mind as we head out to create the future of our communities this week.

We have power when we stand together, holding ourselves accountable for accomplishing something bigger than ourselves.

What will you hold yourself accountable for this week.  And who will you link arms with today, this very hour, to make sure you can accomplish that?

Make it a great Monday and a great week, all.

Many thanks to Phabiola Herrera (aka @Phabi), a new follower on Twitter, for the heads-up about this video.

Photo credit: The Boston Globe I strongly recommend clicking the link, to see the rest of their breathtaking and powerful images.

Strength-Based Work is Not Enough

Rainbow

If we want to create a healthy, vibrant, compassionate, resilient future for our communities and our world, strength-based work is not enough.

I know that’s stepping on a lot of toes, but hear me out.

Strength-based / asset-based work is seen in various places.  It is seen in community engagement efforts, to engage folks in solving their own problems.  It is seen in the counterbalance of “Yes, we did a needs assessment because the funder wanted it, but we also did an asset map to assess our strengths.” It is seen in the battle cry to not just look at clients and communities as a pile of needs, but a pile of strengths to address those needs.

All this is good stuff.  Heck, I even included the need for building on our strengths as Pollyanna Principle #5! As Jody Kretzmann of the Asset-Based Community Development Institute says when he speaks about a glass being half empty or half full, “When we consider only needs, we are considering only the useless part of the glass.”

That said, there is a gap that focusing on strengths cannot fill. When we use strengths to solve people’s problems – to help stabilize a homeless family or to eliminate crime from a neighborhood – our best possible outcome is that we will eliminate that problem.

And while yes, we indeed want to solve those problems, when all we do is fix what’s not working, we are limiting our potential. We are failing to reach for what is possible, because what is possible goes beyond just eliminating harmful circumstances. What is possible is – well – everything we can dream of!

We Accomplish What We Hold Ourselves Accountable For
and
We are Creating the Future, Right Now, Whether We Do So Consciously or Not

As the first two of the Pollyanna Principles note, creating visionary change in our communities and our world requires that we hold ourselves accountable for aiming at positive, powerful, visionary end results.

And that’s why strength-based work is not enough.  Strength-based work focuses on the means we use – tapping on the strengths every individual and every community has to create its own future.  But strength-based work towards marginal goals will still only take us so far.

The key is in the future we hold ourselves accountable for creating, for an individual client, for a community, for the world.

If we hold ourselves primarily accountable for getting homeless people back on their feet, that is where we will aim our strengths. And that is what we will continue to accomplish, over and over again.

If, however, we hold ourselves primarily accountable for creating an equitable society where not only does homelessness not exist, but everyone has the opportunity to reach for their own highest potential, then that is where we will aim our strengths. And along the way to that end goal, we will indeed get homeless individuals back on their feet.

I cannot guarantee we will achieve the equitable society imaged in the second example.  But I can guarantee that if we do not aim for it, we will absolutely not attain it. We will continue to fight poverty, fight drug use, fight terrorism – fight whatever sadness it is our mission to fight.

Try This
Question 1: Today, for every need you identify (in a client, in your organization, in your community, in your country, in our world), ask this question:

What is the best possible outcome here? For whom?

Question 2: Just by asking that question, what might change about your approach to the work you do?

If you have not already taken the first step in aiming at what is possible – for your clients, your organization, your community AND for yourself – The Pollyanna Principles can take you there.

Monday Morning Rock Out!

big birdIt’s Monday – another week ahead, another chance to hold ourselves accountable for creating the future of our communities and our world.

Given the events of this weekend, that somehow seems more critical this morning than it does on other Mondays.

The election in Iran, deciding how that country will interact on the global stage.  The extent to which the whole world connected via Twitter to bear witness to the events in that country at the moment they occurred, far away and yet so close.

If this weekend proved anything, it is the extent to which we are realizing that all of us, all around the world, are really just one big family.

In 2001, eleven days after September 11, two hundred artists of all kinds (not just musicians – actors, sports figures) gathered to record this video at the invitation of Nile Rodgers – the man who originally wrote the song. What was once a disco anthem became an anthem of the heart we all share, all around the world.  And then it became a movement.

Since that day, Nile and his life partner, Nancy Hunt, formed the We Are Family Foundation.  Together they have been doing whatever it takes to link us to each other.  Their latest effort is aimed at having US Congress and the United Nations to declare March 11th We Are Family Day - “a day to celebrate our common humanity and provide an opportunity for teachers, parents and educators of all kinds to teach our youth about different cultures, different religions and the importance of respecting our fellow human beings.”

But can one day do it all? As we hold ourselves accountable for creating the future this week, isn’t it time we stopped thinking of our differences, and started linking arms to accomplish what none of us can do on our own? Pollyanna Principle #3 states that everything and everyone is interconnected and interdependent, whether we acknowledge that or not.

The power comes when we do indeed acknowledge those links. The power comes when we see that truly, we are all family.

Have a great Monday and a great week, all.

Why the photo of Big Bird? Just one more project We Are Family created – this one for kids!