Flipping the Script on How We Make Things Happen
Traci Philips
CXO Matchmaker for Top-Performing Visionary Professionals | Executive Coach to some of the Triangle's Top 50 ★ Using Neuroscience & Systemic Coaching to Catalyze Leaders' Communication, Strategy & Vision ★
“Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration.”
This is a well-known quote by Thomas Edison. Edison lived a long time ago, and yet we still seem to hold this belief to be self-evident.
During much of human history, we have been told in order to get anywhere in life, we must toil, struggle, sacrifice, suffer and have grit. And for most of our time, on this planet as humans, this has, indeed, been our experience.
Yet as all things evolve over time, we also have as a human species. I believe the era and paradigm of laborious effort and a need to control to “make” things happen is shifting considerably.
In leadership, we see a movement from authority-based models to leading others through service and collaborative-led approaches. A focus from “I’m in charge” to “together, we are better.”
Today, we speak more about the impact of heart-centered leaders, and how applied autocratic methodologies are the kiss of death for those in charge and their organizations.
We are in a time where many manners and methods are being called into question.
Around this, we are becoming much more aware. We are being challenged to consider our various inner and outer control mechanisms, in order to see how disoriented and ineffectual they are in helping us manifest what we truly want at this current time.
We are being invited to examine and experience how it is to approach what we do, instead, from a position of inspired action. In other words, we are awakening to how we can create, produce and achieve through inspiration and being “moved” and “called” to do so, rather than through control, strategy and manipulation.
There is a powerful movement towards increasing our focus and energy, and channeling it into where we can create change, momentum and manifestation through intrinsically motivated choice and action.
Instead of simply working “harder” and requiring others to do so, we are having the conversations to uncover where we can produce desired results in a way that is more aligned with our natural flow, rhythm, inclinations and innate genius.
The script is being flipped to what, I believe, is the true definition of genius. After all, genius is as genius does … inherently.
领英推荐
So, here it is.
“Genius is 99% inspiration and 1% perspiration.”
Genius is innate. It’s our natural way and our greatest gift and value to the world. It takes zero perspiration to be who we were born to be. Unless, we work against our own nature.
When we are filled with such inspiration and clarity of vision that we cannot see anything other than what we know we are and can create, it is the slightest bit of applied effort that will produce what we hold in our mind’s eye. The forces of nature will open doors and join us to create the necessary support for this to happen.
As members of the living world, first and foremost, we are inspired beings. It is important that we don’t lose sight of this truth.
Everything begins with an inspired thought. From this seed sprouts physical form. The action and effort involved in creating this form has a natural intelligence and flow, like when a child is conceived and the mother’s body innately knows what to do to grow that child. We don’t have to think about it, it simply happens. There are things we can do to support the process, but the more we try to control it, often the more we tend to get in the way of this essential course of development and growth.
So, I ask you …
? Where might your own addiction to forced effort and control be getting in the way of you creating and experiencing what you truly want?
? Where can you begin to identify and focus on what inspires and motivates you to discover where you are meant to apply inspired action?
Let’s make this next chapter about filling our cup of inspiration. Let’s allow the efforts we do entertain to feel energized, galvanized and aligned with what genuinely matters to us, who we want to be and what we wish to create.
To an inspired, motivated and intentionally manifestational time ahead!
Retirements Representative | Fidelity Investments
3 年I agree!!
Cardiologist. Educator. Mentor. Researcher. Yoga student. No one is a number. I respect you as a person and as a professional colleague, if not as a co-learner in kindred spirit??
3 年Lovely post Traci Philips The simple truth is that there are two aspects to our ego - that of doer and that of enjoyer. When the doership dominates, there is drudgery. When the enjoyership takes over, there is effortlessness.
Joyful Journey Mentor? | Clinical Nutritionist | Lifestyle Medicine Specialist at me&my
3 年So true Traci Philips ????
I Bring Clarity, Balance, and Positivity to Accounting and Operations | Wellness Advocate | Conscious Purpose-Driven Professional ??????
3 年I'm so curious to see how things shift as people adopt this approach to life. Old habits die hard. But once people start realizing that we are the ones making it so hard on ourselves (unnecessarily), how much would we grow as individuals and a society? What creative solutions will appear that have remained dormant (because we were all too busy hustling to be creative enough to even have the thoughts or invent the things). So many possibilities....
Commercial Photographer | Life Sciences, Branding | Headshots, Corporate Events, Around The Office, Products, Personal Branding, On Site Printing, AI / Photography Blend, High End Portraits
3 年Traci at 55, I’m still learning but have made significant progress. I spent far too much time working long hours in the 90’s when our daughters were you and it got me no further ahead financially. Then, came about 20 years of being overweight with too many long hours still in the mix. My 105 pound weight loss journey has not only helped me physically but has also been part of a mindset and paradigm shift. I’ve learned how to focus on my health and find balance with the amount of hours I work. All is not perfect because my wife of 32 years ( 33 this year ) still wants more of my time and attention which she deserves. We do have more time together now than we used to: My tombstone will not read “I wish that I’d spent more time working.”