Energy as a Way of Life |
Wednesday Mar 05 2008
By Charles E. Smith | Bio
This is my personal journey, how I came from seeing organizations as static objects, to seeing them as interacting energy fields. It began six years ago, when I was the owner of a 16-person organization development and training firm. We helped companies with strategic visioning, culture change projects, coaching programs, and project effectiveness. I built the business from a $25.00-a-day practice in 1969 to over $2.5 million in annual revenues in 1993, with the promise of continued doubling in growth.
I didn’t sleep very well during those
years. My company had several very talented, star-quality people whose
view of what the business should be doing was not the same as mine. I
would sell something for one million dollars, design it, do the first
piece of work, and it would be very successful in my own terms. Then
others would take over, supposedly to extend what had been started and
bring it to fulfillment throughout a client company. But that isn’t
what happened. My intention was that everything we did would be
brilliant, meaning that clients would come away from working with us
cooperating and working together toward the same future. And while a
lot of what went on was great, it did not meet my own standards of
brilliance. Some clients were very satisfied; others were satisfied
some of the time. But the experience over time was too harsh and
divisive for me.
I had also hired people to run the company
that had their own agenda and actually undermined my relationships with
many of the key employees. They wanted to turn it into the kind of
company they wanted, rather than what I wanted. So, the company was
going in many different directions and there were lots of disputes and
talking behind people’s backs. I became increasingly deflated and
didn’t have either the presence of mind or the courage to make a
radical change, to take the bull by the horns and make it into
something that I really wanted.
As my energy and inspiration
waned, the company was still successful, but became less and less
effective. I was the leader and without my inspiration, many things
began to fall apart. I began to get the idea that companies and people
succeed when they have a lot of energy, assuming they know what they
are doing, have talent, and have a good product or service to sell. And
they began to fail when they ran out of energy. At the time, this
wasn’t a clearly articulated thought, but a background awareness that
things were good when you felt great, when your personal and team
spirit was strong, and things didn’t work so well when team spirit and
personal energy was down.
I was lucky at that time to meet a
Native American Indian medicine man, Lorin Smith, on the Pomo
Reservation in northern California. He was a short, balding, chubby
fellow, with a very pleasant expression on his face and very
soft-spoken manner. I met him in a “round house,” an enormous round
building that he had built to do his work as the tribal healer. I had
no idea what that meant. I thought it had some remote association with
medical doctors.
I spent about two hours with him and asked questions. He talked about how hard it was to be a healer, how a healer heals himself or herself first, and that life really was all about energy. Life was all about maintaining, preserving, and increasing the energy you have. Life was all about gaining access to the infinite amount of energy that was available from the sun and the moon and the water and the stars and the wind and the earth. And that was what was most missing and most needed in the world—an improved relationship to one’s own energy and to the energy of others.
He told me his people call this energy by the name of “Weya”, and I found that Weya was pretty hard to define. It was everywhere. It was contained in all living and inanimate things. It seemed to have a spiritual quality, and he and his people sang songs about it and were always attending to their relationship with Weya, with energy. He taught that when one was in harmony with the energy, life worked. And when one ignored the energy, life didn’t work. I didn’t begin to understand what he was saying or where he was really coming from. But I knew, both from his words and the calm way he was being about it, that he was representing something I had not seen before: that living in a world in which my harmonious relationship with my own energy and the energy of others was possible. I saw that healing was getting energy to be where it was missing and needed.
© 2008 Charles E. Smith. All rights reserved.
Written by admin at Leadership
Tagged with: energy healing inspiration relationship