- Vision-driven change is completely different from problem-solving-driven change.
- For the most-part, people are uncomfortable with moving away from problem-solving
- Vision-driven change requires an understanding of the problems but, instead of beginning with the problems, begins with tapping into people’s dreams, unearthing them, sharing them, building common dreams and then catalyzing collective action around these dreams
- Vision-driven change and problem-solving-driven change are not mutually exclusive… but putting the vision gives a better context for the problem-solving
- Vision-driven change is all about creating new realities – this gives a real sense of moving forward towards something that is desirable rather than simply away (or aside from) something that is bad
- Problem-solving change is all about trying to get out of slippery holes – getting out of one doesn’t mean that you haven’t fallen into another
- Vision-driven change is holistic, and presents an inclusive and clear goal that people can both relate and aspire to
- Problem-solving change is fragmented, and often fails to consider how one problem is linked to the next – it also often encourages looking for solutions at levels that are far beyond people’s grasp
One thing is for sure: the dream-based leadership workshop that we conducted in Delwara – which included an exercise for linking people’s own actions to the realization of their dreams – worked! Within a few days, a Muslim lady – a local leader – was out and about in her neighbourhood trying to collect money from each household to cover the cost of getting the neighbourhood cleaned on a regular basis. And just the other day, I was translating for a volunteer studying the relationship between women and water in Delwara, and two women quite clearly recounted: “it’s not that we didn’t have dreams before the Citizen’s Forum was established, it’s just that we didn’t have a way of realizing them”.
This is an urgent plea to not let ourselves start trying to possess other people’s dreams and to focus instead on trying simply to listen to, know and understand them, to get people to own up to having them and to cultivate a passion for realizing them – both individually and collectively!
I sincerely believe that these dreams are the source from which any glimmer of hope for positive social change emerges. As such, they are worthy of unfathomable respect.
1 comment:
hello andre,
i so appreciate your focus on the vision and not the problem solving. i am reading peter block's new book - Community: The Structure of Belonging - and much of what you say resonates with his core themes. he uses the word possibility rather than vision and i have been in an inquiry around this since my favorite word has been vision, visioning, collective visioning, etc. but something about possibility acts as a roadmap for the vision. they are in relationship with each other.
i think we are seeing the need for shifting from one worldview focussed on how things aren't working to a worldview which sees the good, the affirmative, the solutions. can you imagine what would happen if we as a world culture were in appreciative inquiry mode when we were doing our work in all places?
where do our visions come from? vertically from a source greater than ourselves? from what is emerging in an evolutionary context? from the conversations that matter happening here and there between people? yes!
i appreciate your writing.
i hope we can all begin to see with eyes of possibility and create shared spaces where we can create a republic of heaven here and now. not waiting for the leadership to solve things for us, or for bigger programs that didn't work last year to work this year, or for someone to tell us what to do. this to me is individual and collective sovereignty and i believe at the base and root of true democracy.
we are still discovering what this is...
sheri
seattle
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