Don't bypass the past
Michelle Gibbings
Workplace Expert (GAICD) | LinkedIn Top Voice | Global Keynote Speaker | Award Winning Author | Certified Dare to Lead? Facilitator | Executive Coach | Influence and Leadership Expert | Media Commentator
In high school, one of my favourite subjects was history. So much so that I thought about becoming a history teacher.
Not surprising then that one of my favourite quotes is from the Danish Philosopher?S?ren Kierkegaard:?"Life can only be understood backwards, but it must be lived forwards."
And yet, we can be overly future-focused. We imagine the future. Spend time planning what comes next, rather than enjoying the present. We can focus our attention on recent ideas and writing while ignoring concepts from the past, deeming them irrelevant and old fashioned.
But if you are a watcher of fashion cycles (be it clothing, music or other trends), you'll know that everything old eventually comes back. Old concepts are recycled and presented as new or 'rediscovered'. Old ideas are tweaked and reshaped somehow, yet the core of the concept is untouched.
I was reminded of this as I returned to read some of?Charles Handy's?work. A prolific writer, his latest?book?was only released two years ago, while at the age of 87.
His previous books, The Elephant and the Flea?was published in 2010 and?The Empty Raincoat: Making Sense of the Future?was published in 2011.
In the Elephant and the Flea, Handy predicted that the age of giant corporations was over (not something that has happened yet). He believed that the age of the entrepreneur was here (and yes, there's much truth in that part). He encouraged us to change the way we think about our portfolio (and by that, he means our portfolio of work and how we approach our career). In his book, the elephants were the giants, and the fleas were small or independent operators. Handy saw the fleas as the innovators, the source of new ideas. The elephants needed them for these things, and so a symbiotic relationship existed.
The Empty Raincoat challenged you to think about your career and organisation. Here's a handy?summary.
What's fascinating is how many of the concepts he shared are still being talked about as 'new' ideas today. It's a great reminder that change happens, but often much more slowly than we imagine. So too, a reminder to always check and reflect on what's come before.
There is much we can learn from the past. In looking to the past, you gain insights into yourself and better understand who we are as a species. You can examine good (and not so good) decision making and understand the context and outcomes of the decisions. You can uncover the root of concepts and ideas that were once on the fringe and are now mainstream.
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At the same time, spending too much time ruminating about past decisions isn't healthy, and a fixation with the past can mean you miss current and future opportunities. Status quo bias, a negative frame of reference and other cognitive biases, such as anchoring and confirmation bias, can hold you back from progressing. As I've written about before (Is your watch showing the right time), it's about balancing the past, present and future.
So how do you get the balance right when learning from the past? There's a helpful process to adopt:
And even when you do all that, there will still be more to know. As philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein said, ‘Even when all the possible scientific questions have been answered, the problems of life remain completely untouched.’
So, where are you focusing your learning this year?
Getting you ready for?tomorrow, today?
Michelle Gibbings is bringing back the happy to workplace culture. The award-winning author of three books, and a global keynote speaker, she’s on a mission to help leaders, teams and organisations create successful workplaces - where people thrive and progress is accelerated.?
Chief financial officer | finance executive | non-executive director | diverse local and global roles | commercial | Sustainability/ ESG |
2 年Thanks for sharing