|
So you think you know what's going on...by Michael Bungay Stanier So you think you know what's going on......but trust me, you don't. In fact, none of us do. We're very visual creatures, and although this seems to be a great measure for what is and what isn't - "I'll believe it when I see it" - consider this:
Feeling dizzy yet? Let me quickly take you through the four points above. The UniverseNo matter how they cut the data, scientists can't figure out most of what makes up the universe. By some calculations, they're 99% short of the stuff they need to make sense of the universe we're in. The missing mass was first named by the Swiss Astronomer Fritz Zwicky as "dark matter" - a fabulously poetic name. The two main explanations of what makes up dark matter prove, if nothing else, that some scientists have a sense of humour. They're either WIMPs (Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, i.e. specks of invisible matter left over from the Big Bang) or MACHOs (Massive Compact Halo Objects - i.e. black holes and very dim stars that don't reflect enough life for us to see them). Life on our PlanetIn Bill Bryson's book A Short History of Nearly Everything, he mentions that the vast majority of life - perhaps as high as 80% - is invisible. This became most apparent when, in 1976, microbiologist Carl Woese redrew the so called "tree of life" with twenty-three main domains. The entire visible world - plants, animals, and fungi - represents just three of the twenty-three branches. Most of the rest are microbes. As Bryson puts it, most of life is "small, unicellular and unfamiliar." Dodgy MemoryIf you feel your memory is going on you, it may not just be a sign of increasing age. A good deal of what you remember may be false. In Diane Ackerman's Alchemy of the Mind, she quotes some fascinating studies done to show how unreliable memory is. Ulric Neisser of Cornell University tested memory by asking people for their memories the day after the space shuttle Challenger exploded. Three years later he surveyed them again, and about two-thirds were totally wrong about where they heard the news, when, with whom and so on. And more tellingly, they were totally confident that they could remember the details correctly. (Neisser also found that if you tell a story about an event, you're more likely to remember it. Narrative, one of the brain's key strategies, helps engrave memory). Our ShadowThe final realm of darkness is within - the Jungian shadow. This is a complex and fascinating area, and one to which I can do no justice in a single paragraph. But to attempt to sum it up, Jung argues that we all have parts of ourselves that are unclaimed, elements of who we are that for one reason or another we've decided to disown. One of Carl Jung's insights is that it is through embracing and incorporating our shadow that we become whole. As he said, "One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light but by making the darkness conscious." There's a lot of good stuff written in this area, one of the most accessible being Debbie Ford's The Dark Side of the Light Chasers. Action Acceleration challenge
You can download the Action Acceleration Sheet™ for free and use it to work through your action challenge. PDF VersionDownload the PDF version of this article (384 KB) About Michael Bungay StanierMichael Bungay Stanier is a professional keynote speaker and author of the best selling coaching tool, Get Unstuck & Get Going ...on the stuff that matters, available at Get Unstuck and Get Going. A certified coach and Rhodes Scholar, he offers coach training programs and business coaching services to coaches, trainers, teams and organizations to help them get unstuck and get going on the stuff that matters. Sign up for Michael's free Outside the Lines ezine and check out his blog, Michael Bungay Stanier's Out of His Mind! Copyright 2005-06 Michael Bungay Stanier, Box of Crayons. Reprint permission available by request. Article must be complete and must include all contact information above. Apply to info@BoxOfCrayons.biz |
Home | Discover What's Possible | Bio | Contact | Articles | Newsletter | Get Unstuck & Get Going ©2008 Michael Bungay Stanier and Box of Crayons. All rights reserved. |
|