Will chipping away solve our biggest problems?
Every summer I look forward to some decluttering and garden time.? I sweat, I swear, I purge and I feel an enormous amount of satisfaction as my body aches, the sun kisses my skin and I remember - if I choose to, I can and that makes me very lucky.
As I work, I think and this summer I've been thinking about my approach to change in the communities I work in. I've been questioning my approach as much as my roles.
Of course these questions are further impacted by recent conscious life changes; packing in a massive leadership role; getting ready to turn 50 (territory where (so I'm told) I move from being righteous to just being right (that's a joke, well, kind of)); traveling across the globe and preparing the final stages of family life as I've known it. It's a time of massive upheaval, I'm ready.
As I chip away at a garden bed I think of how those of us who choose to work in community are encouraged to chip away slowly, steadily at our most pressing issues and opportunities. It's true, it is important to be still, to get permission, to steady and wait for others to catch up, to wait for the time to be right, or the funding to be allocated or the stars to align.
But sometimes that's not OK.
It didn't take much chipping of the garden before my back ached, my eyeballs started to sweat (or so it felt) and I started to wonder what the hell I was doing. I thought about how difficult it was for me, as a woman of action to chip away, rather than call in a lightning bolt of change and how 'slow' has always annoyed me.
As the garden bed around my frangipani tree slowly but surely expanded I was painfully reminded how this chipping processes takes time, energy and a whole lot of tenacity. If any of these ingredients subside, which they often do in community it all stops, any progress is lost and the next person has to start the chipping all over again.
Nevertheless I kept chipping, and thinking. Every muscle in my body ached and as the hot sun burned into my skin I adjusted my tactics - got up earlier, took water and mozzie coils out with me, did it in little bursts and rested in between.
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It got easier, I could see a clearly defined border, I was almost there. I thought about how good it was to see the finish line, and I was pleased there was a clearly defined end point, a point where I'd know the job was done.
Community problems don't always have that luxury and in theory we could just keep chipping away forever.
Many hours later I filled the hole with alpaca fleece and mulch, stood back and admired my handy work. Actually I was a bit underwhelmed by the lacking fanfare and the realisation that the hole wasn't really that big. Nevertheless I reassured myself the result was there and... I did it. As a seasoned community practitioner I know that's usually all you get.
But the idea of chipping away and it's relevance in community problem solving kept bugging me. I wondered what was actually wrong with a slow, steady approach to change. I realised that perhaps it's not the slow, incremental steps that are the issue. The issue is actually when the steps are stifled by:
But none of this matters when we approach our problems collectively and with the needs of the community as a central, collaborative focus.
I wondered if the commodification of problems has perhaps reduced our abilities to do this...
Infrastructure Executive | Leader | Professional Civil Engineer FIEAust | Water Professional | Non-Executive Director | GAICD
10 个月Thanks Kerry, i like chipping away at things, progress is progress ?? We use our alpaca fleece for mulch around the fruit trees too ??
Director, Billy Financial Services
10 个月Unwanted azaleas for example at minimum definitely require a crowbar and an axe in addition to the mattock. Incremental is a broad spectrum ??