Friday 24 September 2010

Ethical Ambition and Courageous Leadership

Richard Olivier is a highly skilled exponent of mythodrama. He uses this process as a means of exploring and understanding some of the most pressing themes and issues of our times. He writes, "using the adventure with Shakespeare’s Macbeth it is possible to live through this myth to learn for ourselves behaviours that make or break individuals and groups. Macbeth’s descent from fearless warrior to ruthless tyrant invites us to identify excessive and dangerous behaviours – both in ourselves and others. Prince Malcolm’s journey from runaway prince to steward king reveals the path to ethical leadership. Malcolm shows that we too can become generative leaders, creating meaning for ourselves and hope for our collective future.

I believe that a fundamentally important issue for all of us alive at this time is to discover our unique, appropriate level of ambition. We certainly need to figure out how to better manage the over-ambitious natures of the selfish few who get their kicks from power, prestige, obscene wealth and fame - but how are we going to ramp up the ambitions of the unselfish many who get kicked by power, outshone by prestige, outmaneuvered by wealth and outvoted by those in search of their 15 minutes? Surely we too need our version of worthy goals, ambitious targets, as yet unrealised dreams - and we need an ethical centre from which to operate, an internal "great bond" that keeps us pale not only in the face of obvious wrongdoing but also in the face of withdrawal and fearful submission. For all too many of the "good people" in the modern world it is not a case of too much, but too little too late. The great brains of the Oxford University James Martin 21st Century School contend that, given current trends of industrial waste, population growth and biological warfare potential, there is a high percentage probability that the human race will not survive the century we are living in. If we are to confound their predictions surely we must find a way to encourage apparently ordinary men and women to step up, to raise heads above the parapet, to find the niche, however seemingly narrow, where courage is called for and appropriate ambition required.

Imagining the future can make it real.

To attempt this, we need to expand our moral imaginations; the human race is capable of so much, has so much latent evolutionary potential to be stewards of the planet that sustains us, but so often we treat it as an object, something to be owned, mined and undermined, flown over until a volcano opens its mouth to decide otherwise. Great myths and inspiring stories can inform this expansion of our moral imagination, imagining the future can make it real ... The imagined can make it real, by stretching our own image of ourselves we can make it more likely to happen in reality.

So where is your ethical ambition, now? Is it well tended and watered? Is it starving for attention? What exactly are you doing with the garden that was entrusted to you? As poet David Whyte wisely asks "What shape waits in the seed of you to grow and spread its branches against a future sky?""

For more on ethical ambition and courageous leadership you can read the entire essay by Richard Olivier at http://www.findhorn.org/onlinecommunity/news/2010/05/the_myth_of_macbeth.php

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