Tag Archives: belief

Resilience

start quote on resilienceIt’s two weeks before my operation.  The weight and enormity of my cancer diagnosis is behind me.  I’m focused on the practical.  All I have to do, prepare for, organise lies ahead.  There are lists in every notebook, on every large magnetic surface. I am a whirlwind of efficiency, able to project risks, variabilities, possibilities and solutions.  More loquacious than I’ve been for a long time, I ask for and receive help, love, support, kindness.  In amongst this maelstrom, I open an email.  Would I like to participate in  IC Fight Night?  An industry event where four executives postulate on various topics and be red or green carded by the audience.  Immediate feedback.  Immediate discussion.  Immediate interaction and debate.  Four leading industry executives. One winner.  It’s in April next year.  Months away.  I  think about it for less than  a minute before typing “I’d be delighted” and pressing send.

At the same time, my work colleagues  are having to dig deep.  Bigger change than envisaged before is upon them.  The largest corporate takeover in the UK for the  past 15 years is underway.  It’s bound by international regulations and resolution is at least 10 months away. Uncertainty abounds. So much ambiguity, so many choices.  Stay.  Go. Wait. Help!Mandela quote on resilience

I watch, frustratingly near, yet from afar.  The ironic parallels are noted.  Living with my own ambiguity, health and future uncertain,  I am unable to do any more than empathise.  Once at the heart of all people changes, I am relegated to being on the sidelines, not on the pitch.  My choices are focused on family, health, friends.  For the first time in a long time, work comes a distant fourth.    It’s a liberation.  A chance for unfettered learning and curiousity.  I become my own change experiment.great quote on resilience

I slowly learn to live in the now. This happens gradually.  A focus on small stuff – an organised cupboard, a fridge full of green stuff, a wall of past photographic memories, notebooks full of future hopes and dreams.  Little inconsequential decisions, irrelevant by themselves but all together making a larger unseen picture, the ramifications of which are felt by the future choices they enable. I start to become stronger again.   My perspective shifts. I’m living the cure for cancer, not seeking it.   Nothing I do is more important than getting well.

Invariably, time heals; my body and, gradually, my mind.  And before I recognise the change, the snowdrops are peeking out from the grey green foliage, the yellow gold of the daffodils brighten up our country lane and the light of the night begins to lengthen and stretch.  April is here.

And with it comes my past promise. Fight Night.

The week running up to the event, I have all these excuses in my head.  All of the reasons I cannot participate.  Then Craig has to go to Baku in Azerbaijan for work.  It’s like an omen.  I cannot go, I have to look after my son.    But an understanding girlfriend removes the obstacle and once more I am clear to attend.  The only thing stopping me is me.  This is my test.  Can I function in a work environment again?  Can I offer any value?  Do I have anything worthwhile to share?resilience 4

Walking into the room is an inner strength test, almost comparable to being told about potential side effects the night before my operation. All around me are political election slogans and campaign posters.  This is the home of Bell Pottinger,  the advertising agency, whose ability to tap into the Zeitgeist of the day helped bring  Margaret Thatcher to power. In fact, our “fight” is located in the very room where she learned she was the next Prime Minister of the UK.  Thankfully all of this masculine posturing is negated by the warm greeting of a fellow panellist.  She and I joke about what we’re doing before the room starts to fill up.

Formats explained, everyone settled down, Fight Night begins.  A lively debate ensues on the value of having an organisation purpose, which segues into a heated conversation on the validity of resilience and if it’s something which can/should be trained.  I am in the thick of it.  Out of the window goes any reservation that my brain might not be working, that I’m better observing and participating with pithy one liners.  Oh no, I am passionate about purpose and resilience – two areas where I have personally invested these past nine months.  I’m up to my welly boots, and beyond, in debate. resilence diagram
In flow, I share that a purpose is required for attraction, recruitment and engagement – particularly of millennials; that resilience needs to be learned, not taught.  But this is greatly aided by providing a framework and tools for people to explore.  I talk about the value of peer group storytelling and experiences, about holding the conversation and listening.  I talk about brand purpose being so closely aligned to strategy deployment there is no chink between them.  I listen to the discussion on the differences and sameness of brand expression externally and the internal employer brand.  I offer a view on a more transient employee base – made up of knowledge workers, contractors, consultants affecting the employment proposition – challenging participants to stop just thinking about engaging employees. I get carried away talking about operating models and governance and the impact these have on change communications. And I listen to  others and learn much about channel strategy and the changing role of communicators and get involved in discussions on authenticity and leaders.   In summary, I have heaps of  fun.  And somehow, I “win” Fight Night.

But my real win is recognising I have no fear in sharing my truth.  And that, in this freedom, I connect with “flow”.  People may agree or disagree.  Red or Green card.  And I can bend, listen, laugh, be persuaded or stick to my thoughts and beliefs.

But always I am real.

Power Full.

Me.

maybe final quote on resilience blog

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sing

Singing in the car
Easter Saturday.  We are in our new car heading for the coast.  We are on the trail of the briefcase left on the train which turns up at the end of the line in Littlehampton.  Despite the weather it’s a chance to take the car for an airing, a 2 hour drive combining motorway and winding A roads.

I’m the passenger, encased in cream leather, soothed by the gentle purr of the engine as we speed long.  Roscoe is oblivious – we could be in Timbuktu –  his eyes are glued to his portable DVD screen, headset on, he is lost in the world of X-men.Sing - X men
Super heroes with no limit to their powers to save the world from the bad guys.

Back in reality, I get to choose the music.  Because we both love to drive we have a rule, whoever is the passenger chooses the tunes.  There has to be some pleasure to sitting passively. sing great quote I’m playing one of my sing-a-long playlists, everything from Joni Mitchell, Nick Drake, Gram Parsons, Emmylou Harris, Carly Simon, James, Taylor, Fleetwood Mac through to John Legend, Bruno Mars, Phil Phillips, Coldplay and even Johnny Cash singing the Old Rugged Cross – my Nana used to sing this as a soloist in church and I still remember sitting in a hard wooden pew listening to her voice soar while silently ‘sooking’ a polo-mint.  Johnny is good but he’s not a patch on Margaret Godfrey!

As the child of a music teacher who can play any keyboard, I was often pressed into action to fill in time or fill a slot.  So I would duet with the angelic Ailsa at the Christmas eve service in Wick.  Full of inebriated, happy folks piling into the warmth of the kirk Sing - bridge street church Wickas the pubs had closed, we would stand importantly at the front of the pulpitSing - inside of the bridge street church Wick and trill Stille Nacht in two-part harmony.  When I got older, I would earn money by singing in the clubs as Mum played keyboard and sang harmony as together we would croon old favourites like Beautiful dreamer and Show me the way to go home!!  I would never have won the X-factor but I could hold a tune.

However much I love how music and words make me feel, I am now somewhat hampered in joy.  Turns out that our tongue is a key instrument in how we sing. No longer am I the songbird; now I’m the warbler. sing proverbAnd without the ability to hold the notes, my ability to let go in the music is diminishing.  It’s fine being the funny guy – Craig and Roscoe roll around laughing as I try to get the tune out- but inside it hurts.

So I am careful with my child who is currently tone-deaf.  He loves to sing but his voice is getting quieter.  He’s gone from loving music at school to attending music class and choir reluctantly.  The school have hired a music teacher still harbouring her own aspirations for West-End stardom and she brooks nothing other than perfection.  So she has told him he’s “no-good” and to stand at the back “singing quietly”.  He tells me he “can’t sing” and I respond that his voice will come when it breaks.  And I have no idea if I can teach him to sing in tune or if I can train my errant tongue to vibrate in a pleasing manner.

But I’m going to try.  Suggestions on how are most welcome!

sing! great end quote