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06
Dec
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the circle of Luv

Pebbles, compliments of james_ michael_hill via Flickr

“…I am my relationships – my relationships to the subselves within my own self and my relationships to others, my living relationships to my own past through quantum memory and to my future through my possibilities.  Without relationship I am nothing” [Zohar & Marshall, 1990, p. 145].

 How often do individuals at work feel ignored by their colleagues (or in the worst case scenario, attacked), rather than encouraged and supported? Southwest Airlines is an exemplar in the area of employee relations. Its goal is to create a culture in which associates feel free to express their support for one another – and, to create a circle of affirmation which they affectionately call “Luv.” Kelleher (former CEO of Southwest) explained his commitment to cultivating civility at work:  “We are interested in people who externalize, who focus on other people, who are really motivated to help other people…we are not interested in navel gazers, regardless of how lint-free their navals are” (Freiberg & Freiberg, 1996, p. 216).  Turn the page…

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Where to begin?

Photo compliments of MTSU Photographic services

This question is often a stumbling block for individuals who are thinking about rearranging their space. While my office circa 2008 looked relatively ordered to an outside observer, the space beneath my desk and inside of my drawers was teaming with all manner of things unsorted. The first thing I did was to visualize the big picture – what would I want my finished space to look like after a major excavation and a series of fine tunings? In The Intention Experiment, McTaggart describes how mental rehearsal can result in self fulfilling prophecy, in that we can program our psyches to experience a different reality – in this case transmitting an image of what we would already like to see completed to our mind’s eye. Whenever I thought of my office, I saw not what I had, but the end result of what I wanted to experience.  Turn the page…

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