Creating the Future You Deserve

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Either you create the future you deserve; or somebody else gets to create the future you must endure.

The future can be arrived at with a bold, sweeping vision or it can be the product of dozens, even hundreds, of little moments.

Wouldn’t it make sense to make sure that every such moment rises to the level of genius; if you can find a way to make that happen?

The best way to predict the future is to create it.”
Abraham Lincoln

The operating principles for creating the future you deserve are, have been, and will continue to be, essentially the same.

  • One, you need a clear and actionable vision of what you see to be the desired destination.
  • Two, you need a sound, realistic, and unvarnished appreciation of your starting point.
  •  Three, you need a road map and an action plan that will take you from the first reality to the second.

Sometimes you create the future you deserve because you hold all the cards. At other times you win by knowing how to play them like the genius you can be so as to make the most of whatever you are dealt.

The former is a view that makes sense in western culture but may not be quite as well received and understood in the east; which is more likely to appreciate the latter. In the west, creating the future and effecting innovation are dynamic, aggressive, even demolishing activities.

The western model of the future is all about subverting the status quo, precipitating dissonance, and replacing “what is” with “what should be” – never mind that the very nature of “should” is subjective and personal.

They see things differently in the east. Their view is that the future is what the future will be. As innovation is the natural order of things that pass from one reality to another, the future is the product of an inherently transitory and well-ordered universe.

In the east, everything proceeds according to a perfect symmetry and cyclicality. Railing against the present is futile at best.

As Lao Tzu observed: “To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders.”

In that mindset, it would seem, the best way to effect change is not to try to make change happen but rather to perceive the way of the universe and fit into its flow.

There is both a Taoist name and a practice for this approach. It is called “wu wei” which loosely translates as “the action of inaction.”

The practice of wu wei cultivates a mental state which, once achieved, aligns our actions effortlessly with the natural flow of life.

Where the western mind insists on dissonance and precipitating change, the eastern mind seeks to unblock the natural flow of change and harmoniously embracing its energy to maximum benefit.

Each culture can achieve its goals – but the way of getting there will necessarily be different. The manifested results are equally likely to be different, if not in substance than at least in nuance.

When it comes to thinking about the future, nuance matters.     With a slight nod to the east, we have chosen a solution that is founded on “west AND east” rather than on “either west or east.”

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