
The E-Newsletter for the Awakening Workplace
1998 © John E. Renesch
Aha! is a free newsletter written by John E.
Renesch. It may be downloaded for personal use for no charge. All or parts of
it may be reproduced so long as correct attribution - including author's name,
date of publication, and the name of the publication - Aha! The E-Newsletter
for the Awakening Workplace - accompanies its reproduction in any form,
electronic, print, or orally cited.
September, 1998
#2: Children, CleanUp Your
Mess First!
By John E. Renesch
In a recent discussion with
a colleague we were comparing the maturity of humankind with the human being's
life cycle here on Earth. For several years now it has seemed to me that our
species is still in its adolescence, an opinion I've expressed frequently in
articles and speeches over the past eight or nine years.
In keeping with this
analogy, we all know the stereotypical adolescent's rebellion against
authority, the need for peer approval, awkward striving for a sense of
identity, and other traits often associated with those difficult years we all
endured. Some of us got through those years and actually became adult. Most, I
contend, never grew up but developed a facade of "grown-up-ness" that
passes for adulthood, at least with others who have adapted similar facades
themselves. Like teenagers, there's an unspoken agreement that no one calls the
others on their facade.
As a species, I see clear
comparisons between the troublesome teenage years for each human being and the
recent past and foreseeable future of our global society. In our teens, we've
seen bullies, followers, the skinny or pint-sized victims, the "in
crowd" or gang, or club or fraternity of those who belong - the outsiders
like the Cutters in the bicycling movie "Breaking Away." Saddam
Hussein's attitude toward the west, the various cultures in the former
Yugoslavia, the conflicts between Irish Catholics and Protestants, Arabs and
Jews in Palestine, and all the other social confrontations bear striking
similarities to the way teenagers deal with growing up.
Whether they accept
adulthood gracefully or resist it with all their might, there is no doubt that
the physical maturation process of each human will take place. The emotional
process of accepting adulthood with all of its responsibilities is optional,
however, as we all know from personal experience. Most every country in the
world has reached some level of maturation in these waning days of the
Industrial Age. But anyone would be hard-pressed to name one nation that has
fully entered true adulthood. Some may seem to be adult, just like some
sixty-year old adolescents I know who never really grew up. They seem to be
adult but their behavior gives them away. Similarly, countries can seem to be
adult, parental, somewhat like an older brother or sister who emulates a parent
in scolding their younger siblings. But it's all appearances.
Now, to my point.
Like pesky adolescents who
need to be reminded time and time again to clean their rooms or do their chores
before they can go out and "hang" out with their buddies or
girl/boyfriends, modern society needs to clean up its messes before it can
claim to be adult. Irresponsible behavior, whether by the rebellious boy or
girl of thirteen or twenty, or the centuries-old nation-state, cannot co-exist
with real adulthood. One cannot claim to be an adult and proceed to get drunk
every night with the "boys." One cannot proclaim that one is adult
when they consistently act without concern for the impact their actions have on
others - when they refuse to be held accountable for their actions.
Similarly, countries and
their leaders cannot claim to be mature when they bully other countries, rebel
against the consensus, engage in terrorism (gang warfare) and act just like
teenage delinquents.
The Age of Consciousness we
are entering is beckoning humanity to grow up and become mature and responsible
- responsible for ourselves and the impact we have on others. This includes our
families, friends, co-workers, our local communities and the community we share
with everyone else on this planet - the entire world.
1998 © John E. Renesch
P.O. Box 472379
San Francisco, CA 94147-2379
USA
voicemail: 415-437-6874
fax: 415-474-7202