Holistic Effectiveness-SM

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Towards Holistic Effectiveness: An Adventure of

Consciousness

Prof. Sanjoy Mukherjee


RG IIM Shillong
E-mail : [email protected]

In the wake of globalization when market economy has become the ruling ideology and
fierce competition determines the nature and contours of relationships between people,
organizations and even societies, the question naturally arises – what is the relevance of
human values in this present scenario? When progress or growth is determined largely by
technical and economic indicators, where is the space for ethics in our discourses on
management? Where is the time to stand and stare, look back and think again at a time
when, to use a Shakespearean phrase, ‘times are out of joint’?

While it is indeed true that the world of business and industry is surging ahead towards
the single most objective of attaining economic and material progress via the profiteering
route, the search for excellence in the respective fields of human endeavour nonetheless
continues. This drive for excellence implies that the human being is also gearing up to
enhances one’s own effectiveness. The vital question today is, what is the notion of this
effectiveness that we are trying to achieve? Is effectiveness limited only to the notion of
efficiency that is understood in technical and quantitative terms? Is there a need to look at
effectiveness from a deeper, wider and a more holistic perspective which includes, and
accords importance to the subtler and qualitative aspects of human development?

On the other hand, as the entire ‘global village’ is passing through its euphoric experience
of the phenomenon of globalization, some of the biggest scams and scandals in the
western industrial world have come to public knowledge. Yesterday’s corporate
behemoths like Enron, Worldcom and Arthur Andersen are facing ignominy and

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disrepute of alarming proportions. Surely enough, the masterminds of manipulation,
compelled to achieve financial success at any cost, were not lacking in competence from
technical and economic considerations.

However, absence of competence from humanistic considerations starkly revealed their


failure to achieve effectiveness in a holistic sense. Irreparable loss of corporate
reputation’, that vital yet intangible asset, was the inevitable outcome.

If we now turn our attention to the individual, one finds a dominant trend of celebrating
material progress at the dire expense of finer aspects of life and work. While there is no
intrinsic problem with attaining material goals per se, but skewed emphasis on success
and career oversets the balance of life. Standard of living becomes equated with standard
of consumption as the pursuit of improving the quality of life loses its significance.
Psychological energy hemorrhage and unmanageable stress in life and work become
inevitable. What is more alarming is that these also produce a tremendous negative
impact on the family, especially the children.

Thus, it is for the wellbeing of the individual and the benefit of the organization that there
is an urgent need to arrive at a notion of all-encompassing, holistic effectiveness. The
current literature on leadership places a lot of emphasis on the ability to have a ‘big
picture awareness’ on the part of the leader. But prior to this, every individual must be
equipped with the requisite competence to develop a holistic perception of life and work.
Then only will it be possible to redefine effectiveness in an integral manner beyond the
tunnel vision of efficiency with its technical and quantitative connotations. Such a notion
of effectiveness accords due importance to skills development at a functional and
operational level but places it on a strong foundation of human values. While the field of
application of skills is the outer world of human action and endeavour, the space for
culturing of human values is the inner world of the individual, through the process of
‘Becoming’.

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Where do we then begin our search for human values? They say, ‘Those who can see
deepest into the past, can also see farthest into the future.’ So, let us go back 2500 years
to Athens in Greece. In the crowded street of Athens, one can distinctly identify an old
man, with long hair and unkempt beard and in tattered clothes, moving around with a
lantern in broad daylight. When any passer-by would come his way, he would hold the
lantern up close to the face of the stranger – looking for something! Then he would move
on to the next person and do the same. A young man came near him and asked, “Signor!
What is it that you are looking for, that you cannot see in broad daylight?” The old man
stopped, dangled the lantern in front of the face of this youth and said, “Among these
crowds of people, I am trying to find a human being”. He then moved on to the next
passer-by.

The above episode carries a symbolic message to us. As the process of ‘becoming a
human being’ is going on within us, it is not quite visible to the outsider even in broad
daylight. One would need a different kind of searchlight, like the lantern in the story, to
have a glimpse of this inner world. Thus the search for effectiveness, managerial or
otherwise, by culturing of human values is a journey within the individual, within the
Self. This is the qualitative aspect of human development that is subtle, invisible,
intangible and not amenable to measurements. No wonder the great management thinker
Peter Drucker titled one of his recent articles in Harvard Business Review – ‘ Manage
The Self ’. Peter Senge, another leading management expert, places great emphasis on
cultivating the art of ‘Personal Mastery’ in his famous book ‘The Fifth Discipline’. Self-
management thus holds the key to effective management of organizations in the outside
world.

What do we mean or understand by human values? Without trying to offer one single
definition, we think it is more important to come to a shared understanding of human
values. Often discussions on human values tend to get diverted to arguments stemming
from differences in opinions on the questions of universality and relativity of values.
Hence we would like to examine the whole issue of values from a psychological
perspective in terms of the experience of the individual. There exists a nearly common

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agreement across cultures, religions and systems of thought on the perception of values
like kindness, charity, compassion, humility and the like, which are registered as ‘positive
vibrations’ within the psychological space of the individual. Similarly the experience of
greed, jealousy, suspiciousness, hatred and the like are registered as ‘negative vibrations’
within our psychological space. Instead of branding them as ‘good’ or ‘bad’, let us try to
assess the impact of both these kinds of vibrations on human relationships in life and
work.

In the phenomenal world of our existence, every individual needs to interact with other
human beings. Simply speaking, the ‘I’ is constantly engaged in relating to the ‘Others’.
When the positive vibrations are at play within us, the ‘I’ naturally reaches out to the
others and including the others within its domain of concern. Whereas under the spell of
such psychological vibrations like greed, jealousy or hatred, the ‘I’ finds itself getting
separated and isolated from the others. It is in this sense that the positive vibrations can
be called desirable human values, whereas the negative vibrations are undesirable
because these block the expansion of the ‘I’ into the others. It is this separateness from
the others from where stem most of our problems relating to unethicality in our thoughts,
decisions and actions. The pathway to effectiveness through human values thus requires
conscious cultivation of our positive vibrations and vigilant awareness of our negative
vibrations.

How then should one begin this journey? At the outset it is important to realize that the
developmental process for culturing of human values begins with the individual and not
the organization and the society, nor the systems and the structures. Each individual has
within oneself one’s own unique constitution of these vibrations – positive and negative.
The first step is to identify one’s own strengths (positive vibrations) and weaknesses
(negative vibrations) through an honest and rigorous self-analysis or rather our own
SWOT analysis, in the psychological sense. Then conscious effort is needed to
strengthen and further develop one’s own positive vibrations that are ever expanding in
nature. Human consciousness has to be directed towards allowing for the expansion in
our daily transactions with other human beings. Simultaneously one needs to be vigilant

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of the presence and activation of the negative vibrations so that one does not fall into the
easy trap of that degenerative tendency of rationalizing one’s own weaknesses. This
holds the key to developing a positive approach to life, work and other human beings.
This will practically translate into conscious effort to identify the strengths of the others
and help them develop their positive qualities.

We have already mentioned that the interplay and development or decline of values
occurs within the inner psychological space of the individual. Now the question naturally
comes – which of the human faculties are involved in this process of development?
Broadly speaking, the human being has two sets of faculties – rational
(reason/intellect/logic) and emotional (emotions/feelings /impulses). Let us take a deep
look at the entire spectrum of vibrations as we experience them psychologically. Honest
introspection will tell us that we experience these vibrations in our domain of emotions
and not the intellect. Charity or compassion, greed or jealousy are essentially feelings and
not intellectual constructs. However our education system, right from the formative days
in school up to the highest level, places primary emphasis on the development and
sharpening of our rational faculties. Ironically enough, emotional enrichment of the
individuals, which is critical to the values-development process, hardly finds a space in
the modern curriculum. The situation becomes worse when one finds experts coming up
with such smart yet ill-founded advice: “Don’t be emotional! Be rational”.

There is little appreciation of the simple truth that most of the values related problems
primarily spring from the world of emotions and these cannot be overcome by sharpening
of the intellect alone. It may be worthwhile to spend some time pondering over the
following insights from two of the greatest personalities in the last century on this issue.

Albert Einstein: “And certainly we should take care not to make our intellect our
God…The intellect has a sharp eye for methods and tools; but it is blind to ends and
values”.

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Mahatma Gandhi: “And I know that ultimately one is guided not by the intellect, but by
the heart… Man often finds reason in support of what he does or wants to do”.

If we now look back at the sacred literature in all religious traditions, we find a
unanimous emphasis on culturing of noble emotions for integral human development.
The Bhagavadgita highlights the importance of ‘chittashuddhi’ or emotional purification
as an essential step towards one’s progress to the ultimate goal of Self-Realization, the
summum bonum or purpose of life. “Blessed are they that are pure in heart,” says the
Bible. And the Holy Koran spells the warning: “Greed robs a learned man of his
wisdom”.

The last quotation from the Koran is indeed a revelation! And isn’t it so painfully true?
Mastery in any discipline of knowledge is not sufficient to open up the doors of
perception that lead to a comprehensive understanding of our life-world, which is what
wisdom is all about. Nor does it equip us with the necessary competence that provides the
momentum to our journey of human values through emotional enrichment. This is not to
demean the importance of intellect in our developmental process. But the evolution of
human consciousness to the level of wisdom from knowledge is not a function of
intellectual learning from the available ‘Book of Knowledge’. One can understand why
Bertrand Russell also had raised the alarm: “Unless men increase wisdom as much as
knowledge, increase of knowledge will lead to increase of sorrow”. One only needs to
take a deep look at the problems of modernity to appreciate the validity of this statement.
No wonder why the great poet T.S. Eliot lamented in his famous poem, The Rock,

“Where is life, we have lost in living;


Where is wisdom, we have lost in knowledge;
Where is knowledge, we have lost in information.”

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Wherein then lies the key to wisdom? What are the sources of learning beyond learning
from the Book of Knowledge through the exercise of reason and intellect? Modern
education has perfected the learning process from the Book of Knowledge to a fault. But
it has missed out badly on opening our minds to two other important sources of learning.
– the Book of Nature and the Book of Life. Learning from Nature was an essential
feature of education in many ancient traditions, especially the Indian tradition and
culture. Unlike many other modern civilizations, the Indian civilization grew in the lap of
Nature. Observation of Nature and learning from the workings of Nature was integral to
our classical system of education. Nature can actually offer us profound messages
relevant to us even today if we care to keep open our eyes and ears – our doors of
perception. Let us take an example.

In the early hours of dawn, Nature is quiet and serene. Throughout the day there is a
grand ceremony of incessant activity going on in Nature. And again, when the evening
falls, the Nature recoils into silence. This cycle of conservation – application – renewal of
energy takes care of energy replenishment in a natural way. The human being is also
engaged in application of energy throughout the day in all kinds of activities. Nature
gives us the key to achieving effectiveness in our energy application. If we care to spend
some time and effort in conservation and renewal of energy before and after application,
the chances of our energies getting dissipated become minimal. The Nature does not feel
the necessity of going out on holidays or weekends like us for rejuvenation! Do we care
to ask why?

But what are we supposed to do for conservation and renewal? This is the time for
reflection and contemplation, self-analysis and introspection. The human energy or
consciousness is always flowing out from within during the phase of application – the
centrifugal movement. During conservation and renewal, this energy is drawn within us
from the outside world. Unless this centripetal movement is introduced in our daily life
cycle, the balance of life gets disturbed leading to disorder and disharmony in our
psychological space leading to dissipation and stress. This ‘going within’ or

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interiorization of awareness is another important aspect of values-development through
introspection.

If we take our time to look at the wonderful play of activities in Nature, we immediately
sense a rhythm that brings joy to us. Nature transmits to us this rhythm and joy through
her dance and movement. Effectiveness in our action also consists in transmitting this
rhythm and joy through our actions. The journey through human values has to be made
adventurous and enjoyable at the same time. Otherwise it may not achieve the real
transformation, which is the transformation of human consciousness. That is why the
great savant J. Krishnamurti had observed: “The problem is not in the world, it is in our
consciousness”.

Another important source of learning is the Book of life. Learning from the Book of Life
consists in keeping ourselves open and receptive to learn something from anyone and
everyone we meet in our daily life – from the CEO to the doorman. Such learning is
possible only when we have mastered the art of ‘seeing’ and ‘listening’. Most often we
see things not ‘as they are’ but as we want to see them. We are more interested in talking
than listening. And in the process we become ineffective in our decisions and actions.
Proper seeing and listening demand a high quality our attention to objects and persons,
which is only possible by improving upon the quality and intensity of our consciousness.
Journey through human values is indeed an adventure of consciousness.

There is another source of learning that we often ignore and neglect. Through out our life
we learn from our teachers, parents, adults, experts and so many others. They mostly
develop and perfect two dimensions of our personality - the parent and the adult. But the
child in us fails to find expression and suffers in anguish. The child which stands for
novelty, freshness, curiosity, spirit of enquiry and sense of wonder has been smothered in
our present system of education. To bring back joy and vitality in our pursuit of values
and search for excellence, there is an urgent need to resurrect the child in us. The best
way to do so is to spend some time with children – not to teach them but to learn from
them. The child also sends the message to us – transformation by values cannot

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ultimately become a reality without the magic touch of Love. ‘Love thy neighbour as
thyself’ was the cardinal message on values from Jesus. This is not just the message of
Christ, the Messiah but the eternal Divine child within the Lord.

We began our journey 2500 years ago with the old man with a lantern in the streets of
Athens. Let us conclude by keeping alive the search for this light – this time within
ourselves – in the heartland of India around the same time - way back 2500 years. In the
twilight hour, Lord Buddha is sitting with his benign smile in front of his chosen disciple
Ananda. Ananda is beaming with confidence as he says,

“Lord, I am convinced that you are the greatest of all prophets and seers that have come
on this earth. Of all their messages, yours are the most relevant to humanity at large. I
have been fortunate to learn your messages, sitting at your feet. Now I seek your
blessings and permission to spread your message to the world “.

Buddha keeps silent. Then he smiles and says, “Are you familiar with all the prophets
and sages that have come on earth?”

Ananda is silent.

“Have you understood the full import of all their messages?”

Silence.

“Have you understood the full import of all my messages?”

Silence.

“Then wherefrom do you get this confidence?”

Ananda breaks down and asks,

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“What then should I do, my Lord?”

The smiling Buddha gave a look radiating compassion. Then, from the depth of
silence arose his eternal message:

“Atmo Deepo Bhavo”.

“Be a Light unto yourself”.

We are neither prophets nor seers. But let us all pray and hope that in the darkest hours of
the night, in our moments of silence and solitude, may we keep this Lamp burning. This
will be our homage to the great Lord and his message

“Atmo Deepo Bhavo”.

*******

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