A Beautiful Mosaic by Bob Tschannen-Moran
I was speaking last week with a client in Vietnam who informed me that, yes, the Olympics are as big a deal in Vietnam as they are in the United States. There's something about the idea of competing nonviolently across nations, cultures, and races that is incredibly attractive, and incredibly needed, at this point and time. Here's to the Olympic spirit in all areas of human endeavor!
In watching some of the games, I have been impressed as to how people are approaching different cultural and personal preferences with respect and understanding. That's the way it should be. Instead of objecting to or taking offense at those differences, it is better to appreciate and accommodate them. When Roqaya Al-Gassra of Bahrain, for example, competed in the women's 200 meter race, she did so wearing a neck-to-ankle suit and hijab, a full Muslim headscarf. And she ran that way into the semifinals.
Did her choice cause any problems? No. She found it personally motivating to represent her country and her tradition in such fashion. And she celebrated the fact that at the Olympics there are no obstacles to participation. American Allyson Felix, wearing the more common briefs and singlet top, did not find Al-Gassra's garb to be distracting in the least. She was focused on the competition, the crux of the matter, not the clothing.
On the human-interest side of the Olympics, perhaps some of you saw the story regarding the Panda baby-boom in the wake of the recent Chinese earthquake. Although two Pandas died in the earthquake, the rest were evacuated to a new Panda reserve where they been recovering both physically and emotionally. Through the adoption of a policy called "loving-heart action." This policy involves:
-- pairing up keepers with no more than two Pandas,
-- staying with the Pandas every day until they feel safe and secure again,
-- calling them by name, and
-- patting their fur and head
One keeper, Xie Hao, came with the Pandas to the new reserve. He knows every Panda by name, include the nine newborn Pandas. When asked how he could tell them apart, he said, "From the face characteristics, but I cannot tell you the details. That's a feeling. I just feel every Panda's difference and I can tell which one, one by one." To get them to where they can be reintroduced in the wild, Xie Hao concluded, "We have to have a relationship just like best friends. I must love them and they must love me."
You can watch the story yourself by going to: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/ ... 4#26327804.
Life is like that. No two creatures are the same. Everyone and everything is unique. Yet we all need genuine caring and love.
That's what empathy is all about: authentic connection. Xie Hao has an authentic connection with those Pandas. Allyson Felix had an authentic connection with Roqaya Al-Gassra. Through noticing and respecting differences we shift from judgment to appreciation, from fear to affirmation, from appearance to engagement. That is the spirit of the Olympic games and that is the spirit our world needs today.
So how do we do that? How do we cultivate genuine love and caring for all, regardless of differences and disagreements? It helps to recognize the universality of human needs. Although everyone is different as to their preferences, cultures, traditions, and talents, everyone is the same when it comes to the needs they are trying to meet. However well and however poorly we choose to express ourselves, the underlying intent of all our actions and words is to get our needs met.


