• Economic Equality (A Goal)

    Transparency is a Great Principle

    I believe in the truth.  I have often postulated that secrets are a means for controlling others.  We keep secrets because if others know, they will make decisions which are outside of our control.  Think about it this way: cheating on your partner requires that you lie to your partner.  You know that if your partner learns the truth, your partner may not be your partner any longer.  The only way to keep “control” over the situation is to lie to your partner.

    Mahatma Gandhi said “there is no God higher than truth”.  In this new world of electronic banking and FaceBook connection it is becoming more and more difficult to lie.  Mortgage bankers wanted the world to believe that greedy Americans who could not afford houses had tricked them into a worldwide banking and mortgage crisis.  The mortgage bankers tried very hard to convince the world that they were blameless.

    Because of the indefatigable memory of a computer, mortgage bankers did not get away with the lie, it was they who profited from the mortgages, it was they who now have millions, indeed billions in their personal checking accounts.  Mortgage brokers were not victimized by greedy Americans; their smear campaign fell victim to the perfect memory of the computer chip.

    Propaganda will now fall on deaf ears.  We have been dosed with a healthy bit of cynicism and now, we have the means to find the facts of the situation.

    So, like the cheating husband, who got caught via the traffic cameras driving to his mistress’s house, large corporations and big banks will no longer be able to fool the public with sweet lies and propaganda.  We can go online and find out what bank fees really are fair.  Then we make a decision based on real knowledge.  We then tell our friends, who tell their friends.

    To me, that transparency equates to sweet freedom.  I now have the ability to make decisions based on the truth, rather than someone else’s fabrication.

  • Philosophy,  Psychology of Life

    Legitimate Suffering

    Carl Jung once said that neurosis is always a substitute for legitimate suffering.

    The way that I have interpreted this statement is that if I deny my pain and refuse to suffer,  my suffering will maintain inside of me and then become a neurosis.  I do not wish to be neurotic, who would?  Dictionary.com defines it as –  disorder typified by excessive anxiety or indecision and a degree of social or interpersonal maladjustment.

    Part of being aware of who I am at any given point in time is to also be aware of my pain and to have my pain by going ahead and suffering.   Yes, it is important to suffer, crying and yelling and being angry are all expressions of pain and suffering.  Expression helps me to avoid neurosis.  Avoiding suffering is not possible in the human experience, avoiding neurosis is.  Suffering and pain comes and goes, neurosis sticks, unless and until you are willing to suffer.

    So…for me (anyway) crying and fussing is a lot better than being maladjusted, eeww!

  • Philosophy

    Sometimes

    Things are just a mess.  You cannot control everything, you do not know if things will turn out the way that you wish for them to.  You can only have faith, you cannot do anything else.  What else can you do?  You have no choice, all there is, is faith.

  • Management,  Personal Growth

    Change

    Please stop asking me to change in anticipation of something that you believe may happen.  I do not know how to change for something that has not occurred yet, do you?  It is hard enough for me to practice being here now…

  • Philosophy,  Psychology of Life

    Tyson Wrote This…

    Live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about their religion; respect others in their view, and demand that they respect yours. Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life. Seek to make your life long and its purpose in the service of your people. Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide. Always give a… word or a sign of salute when meeting or passing a friend, even a stranger, when in a lonely place. Show respect to all people and grovel to none. When you arise in the morning give thanks for the food and for the joy of living. If you see no reason for giving thanks, the fault lies only in yourself. Abuse no one and no thing, for abuse turns the wise ones to fools and robs the spirit of its vision. When it comes your time to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with the fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again in a different way. Sing your death song and die like a hero going home. Tyson Kuhn 2/27/12
     
  • Management

    Power and Control

    I have always written about power and control in the most intimate sense.  For example, watching the dynamics of familial relationships has always fascinated me, including my own.    Contrary to what television portrays, the largest and strongest person is not always in control.  The path to dominance can be somewhat mysterious.

    In the absence of dominance, when power and control are questioned, many people will leap forward to try to assert themselves.  Part of what makes people vie for power and control is a need for security.  In the absence of security people can, and often do feel panic.  Fear causes people to try to grasp control in many ways.  Because of our culture of domination, people often use forcefulness to gain control.  Also, because our culture is ostensibly non-violent, forcefulness and dominance, must be subtly communicated.

    Subtle communication is a means of creating plausible deniability.  Subtle communication might be a boss stating that job performance is poor, this statement can be threatening enough to force a subordinate into agreement.  By evaluating job performance and NOT addressing the issue of employment, the boss can deny that a threat has occurred.  Humans know this tactic at a very early age, witness any teenager who is being denied, you will see that threatening is part of our social language.

    The thing is that threatening may give the threatener a sense of security; but it is a false sense of security.  True power resides with influence and cannot be purchased with control and dominance.  Dominance is a person telling you what to do – within the purview of the job function, threatening you to gain your submission and then telling themselves that they are secure because of their power over others.  While this may be the way that many employers operate, is not an effective means to accomplish goals.  Managers who operate this way are toxic to their organizations.  Control and dominance are inherently temporary and inefficient.  They are temporary and inefficient structures of power because very few people are willing to be within the control of another person, if not treated appropriately or paid well, they will find a way to go somewhere else.  Therefore experience and expertise are constantly at a loss.

    For those people who have power and control and use it in the absence of influence, the game of “rightness and wrongness” is a very important game.  People with power and control will use it to gain agreement from subordinates as to the “rightness” of their decision.  This agreement will always be forthcoming from well paid subordinates.  It is the very definition of sycophant.

    Those who do chase the agreement of subordinates – perhaps – have some measure of intelligence, because even a very “wrong” thing can be accepted as “right”.  Just look at the concept of groupthink: absence of personal responsibility, and a lack of individual creativity.  The controller decides on the “correct” reality and the threatened sycophants give it energy and life.

    In conclusion (ha-ha Mrs. Brownlee [my 4th grade english teacher]): power and control is no more than currency granted by others to you for your temporary use and should never be mistaken for security.  Threatening is a means by which people use their position to maintain control and power over others.  Often, those who threaten, practice subtlety in order to create deniability.  Owning power and control is not special in any way in the course of management.  Having influence over others is a much more effective and efficient means of management.  People often use power and control to gain agreement for their faulty actions because being “right” helps them feel more powerful and secure.

    Security is a paradox because the more you chase it, the riskier it is.  To influence, is the very act of being self-secure.