-David Robinson, The Circle Project (www.thecircleproject.com)
Think of the Grand Canyon. Or of a river gorge
closer to home. We know from those examples that water follows the
structure of the land. Behavior is also like water; it too follows the
structure of the land.
We can either belittle their shortcomings or we can move them to deeper
and more intentional action about diversity issues. But how?
There are two things required of a good model for change: 1) the issue has
to be personal, and 2) it has to be relevant for the long view - it has to
apply to something bigger than me, go beyond me. Perhaps there are actually
three things - the third has to do with believability: I have to believe
that my actions matter (the actions are immediate but the impact is long
term).
Relevance is actually the first thing (if we don't do this now we'll lose in
the long run), then making it personal (this is mine to do, in everything that
I do), then believability (I may not see the change but I know if I act now the
change will happen).
After watching An Inconvenient Truth, I am re-astounded by the capacity
of human beings for denial, or truth construction based on what we want to
believe. Given all that Al Gore has presented, all the science and data,
the actions our leaders are taking (and in fact, we ourselves) are less than
minimal. The same can be said of diversity efforts.
Regardless of what we want to believe, people do not act out of reason. Smokers
who continue smoking in the face of overwhelming evidence that they are killing
themselves provide one good example of this. Approaching diversity solely from
the standpoint of data and statistics is ultimately futile.
Executives demand
data and the omnipresent "business case for diversity," but they
will not really respond to it in significant actionable ways because it is
irrelevant to their experience (they can't see it) and the only kind of
"personalization" they can see is "I will lose or my people will
lose." They have no visceral reason or understanding to act on the data
and data, in fact, is largely a negative impetus, not a positive one.
Significant diversity change is not possible as an intellectual exercise or
“data dump,” nor can it be legislated. Significant diversity change will only
come when it is personal and relevant to the leadership of our
organizations. Until then we are
incapable of looking beyond our behaviors to the structure of the land.
[amazing, beautiful river images from David Jensen]
Recent Comments