Monday, March 25, 2013
"The cause of all upsets falls into one of three
categories: undelivered communications, thwarted intentions, or unfulfilled
expectations."
I love this quote, because it plainly states and links
together what so many intentions and expectations lead to: disappointment and
upset.
That isn’t to say that they always result in negative
outcomes or that we shouldn’t have them. On the contrary; intentions are
necessary for us to imagine what we want for ourselves and our lives.
Expectations are the gauge by which we can measure our progress toward what we
set out to accomplish. For example, I intended to write my last book,
and expected to do so within a year. And thanks in large part to creating
these goals,
I accomplished them.
Yet the opportunity and productivity
that come from consciously creating intentions and expectations quickly turn
into limitations when we, rather than being committed to achieving our aims,
become attached to them.
What is the difference?
In simple terms, a commitment to an intention is having
the willingness to create a process that supports its achievement, as well as a
determination to do your best. Often the intention is met, sometimes it
isn’t. In the latter case, one would consider what might have been
missing, learn from the experience, create a new intention, and– newly
empowered– recommit to its attainment.
Attachment,
on the other hand, follows a very different path. While the desire for
the intention may be just as strong, the need to achieve it often interferes
with doing so. Objectivity, flexibility, and creativity find
themselves pushed to the wayside as fixation on attainment, self-validation,
and perfection take over.
Returning to the example of writing my second book,
commitment inspired me to reach my weekly page goals. Attachment brought
on anxiety when I thought I wouldn’t and frustration when I didn’t end up doing
so. Commitment allowed me to creatively find time for writing when it
seemed I didn’t have any. Attachment led to either forcing myself to
write, which dulled my inspiration, or to turn on the TV in resignation for the
seeming lack of time.
At this point, you might guess– and can certainly see in
this example– that attachment and commitment tend to carry with them certain
emotional markers. For me, commitment leads to curiosity, excitement, a
sense of play, and determination. On the other hand, attachment brings
about pride, anxiety, fatigue, and competition
with myself and others. Some variation on these themes is true for most
people, explaining the frustration that so often comes when our expectations
and intentions are not met or fulfilled.
And it can be the smallest of things! Expecting
someone to hold a door for you, intending to go next at the stop sign.
The sanest of us are often driven mad when things don’t go the way we want, particularly
in areas of our lives that are of great importance: The
businessperson who not only wants, but needs to be in charge of the
meeting. The singer who not only hopes, but more, has to sound
perfect. Both find themselves incredibly disappointed when things don’t
go they way they should.
And therein lies the problem. Should is
subjective. Opinions, values, and beliefs– as well as intentions and
expectations– vary wildly from person to person, making it virtually impossible
for others to anticipate what it is we want and expect, much less to fulfill
our desires.
Given the anxiety, frustration, and overall
ineffectiveness, why in the world do so many of us hold onto these types of
attachments?
It’s not always deliberate. As I discussed in my
first book, The Artof Singing, most fears and insecurities– as well as the attachments
and fixations they inspire– are remnants of childhood
and survival related concerns that result in a scarcity-based view of the
world. Thus, the tenacity with which many of us hold onto so many
disempowering ways of thinking and being; it’s not merely about wanting things
our way and hoping to achieve our goals. It’s about needing to do
so in order to prove to ourselves and others that we’re important, valid,
visible, and worthy.
Of course, our adult minds don’t see this. While we
certainly still feel the anxieties they inspire, the years have helped to translate
our fears and insecurities into intellectual rationalizations, reasons, and
justifications for why we should hold fast to our scarcity based beliefs and
expectations, including that not doing so would lead to being walked all over
or taken advantage of, having to give something up, unjustly defer to others,
or more fundamentally, to lose.
This isn’t the case.
Regardless of what our fears, experiences, and cynicism may tell us,
holding fast to rigid intentions and expectations does not prevent either the
failure of opportunity or the loss of respect, progress, and validation.
In fact, it often causes their fulfillment by preventing our ability to
effectively and creatively partner with other people.
A look at truly great teams, companies, and
relationships demonstrates this. No man is an island, and effective
leaders are well aware that isolation and ego-driven independence never lead to
innovation. They therefore seek out participation and even partnership from
every member of their teams, knowing that the best new ways of thinking, doing,
creating, and being are generated thanks to the full and welcome contribution
of everyone involved.
For those trapped in the scarcity based model, this
probably sounds like a recipe for disaster: opening up and being truly
vulnerable and honest lead to backstabbing, infighting, and passive
aggression, along with the outright ending or destruction of
relationships. Many can’t fathom or imagine any other possible outcome of
inviting everyone to share their thoughts and ideas, much less a sense of ownership.
Yet take a closer look. When we are committed to
remaining in control and having things go our way, we are actually
creating the fertile ground for the very results we’re desperately trying to
avoid. More energy goes to managing and manipulating other people than
partnering with and learning from them. We spend more time being
exhausted than creative, more time focusing our energies inward on perfection
rather than on productivity.
Exceptional and enduring success, in any area of life,
comes only once we set our pride and insecurities aside– as well as the
ineffective expectations and attachments that so often stem from them– and
become willing to learn, partner, and co-create with others. When we do,
the results speak, and often sing, for themselves.
This article, originally published in Psychology Today, is an excerpt from Jennifer's upcoming book: "Singing On Stage and
in the Studio: Understanding
the Technology and Relationships in Recording and Live Performance"
available next year from Hal Leonard Publishing.
For more information about Jennifer, her books, and
her work, please visit: www.jenniferhamady.com
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