Crystal ball gazing.
Everyone agrees
that seeing the future is speculative at best, but we lull ourselves with the
fruit of the exercise anyway. Economists, politicians, poets, and regular people
all play the game of crystal ball gazing and many fall prey to actually
believing their wishful projections.
Once we have persuaded our self of a
perspective it is inordinately hard to undo our vested positions. Then the whole world
needs to reinforce positions taken. Do you want to know
why this doesn’t work very well? It’s for two reasons: (1) lack of internal
research and (2) the lack of being aware of unintended consequences. Let’s look
at these two in tandem.
Internal research:
For this we need to equip ourselves with a rear-view mirror and take a hard look
at where we’ve been. It
isn’t hard, but it does require losing the blinders and look dispassionately at
the choices we’ve made and the ensuing benefits and consequences. There’s a path back there
that is unavoidably clear if we can let go of justifying our
past actions and playing the tired canard game of blame.
When all of those
fabrications are thrown aside, and we can stop the desire to be right at all
cost, we can learn something of value about how to avoid repeating the same mistakes that created havoc. If we can’t do that then we’ll keep on doing
the same thing and get the same dissatisfying outcome (our futures).
There’s a reason
why we can’t see our future. The reason is because we haven’t yet made choices.
When we make choices the outcome follows suit. Make different choices and we
get a different outcomes. Sometimes we seem to be slow learners. Cause and
effect are peerless. Push this button, you get this result. Why is that so hard to fathom? Apparently it is because collectively we seem doomed to repeated
patterns of egotistical stupidity, unable to see that common choices lead to common
outcomes. If we want a better future it will only happen when we make better
choices now.
Unintended
consequences: In spite of our best internal research and dispassionate
assessment, life is complicated and stuff happens beyond our control. Not only do we make choices that affect others, so likewise do others make choices that affect us. We are in process and will know better tomorrow, things we can only
learn by making mistakes today. That’s the way everyone learns. Nobody gets a rain
check to put off today what life brings our way from choices we have already made. Come back
tomorrow and the opportunities for learning yesterday’s lessons have passed us
by.
If we miss that
boat, stuff happens anyway. Now consequences of non-action sweep over us. This
idea of not choosing, is a death trap. A choice to not choose is still a choice. There is no such thing as sitting on the
sidelines, uninvolved while we wait for the world to emerge. We are the world
and the world answers our beckon call.
People may say, “I’m praying. That’s
enough.” No it isn’t enough. The unenfleshed manifestations of thought or divine
infusion, left in the brain cells means nothing. Thought and prayer, as good as
they may be, are just water priming the pump. Good thoughts or good prayers are
worthless unless we do something. Praying while the world burns around us is an
excuse that results in a disintegrating life and a disintegrating world.
If we
don’t act each moment of today there are new challenges to deal with the next moment. In each and
every passing moment, we have an amazing opportunity to create. The challenge
is that the ingredients we have to work with are always new and fresh. The
recipes of the past no longer apply because the ingredients keep changing.
We do make errors
and consequences flow from them. We don’t have the luxury of do-overs. All that
we can do is forgive ourselves and others, learn from what we did wrong (if
anything) and make better choices. That’s enough.
Crystal ball gazing is either a productive or a destructive endeavor. If
we are wise we’ll learn from our mistakes (everyone makes them). If we don’t
learn we’ll have new opportunities, and the ones that emerge will be precisely
the ones we ourselves have created either by choosing wisely for the benefit of
all or ones we choose for selfish reasons. The latter will come back to bite us in the future that we ourselves have created.
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