Bridges Newsletter: December 2007
A Culture of Abundance
By Richard W. Cronen & Angela C. Gonzalez
The Power of One
Each
workplace holds a wonderfully unique culture—a rich
diversity of human talents, customs, ethnicities and generations—that
reveals itself in daily work activity, with each person contributing
in their own way. Contrary to popular opinion,
culture cannot be dictated by corporate policy nor mandated
by leadership. It is both created and expressed by
how each person goes about his or her daily activity. The
creation of a Culture is every person’s responsibility,
and the care and nurturing of your culture begins with the
actions you take everyday.
Recognize that the power of one—your unlimited potential
to contribute—is the dynamic force supporting a positive,
productive, abundant workplace culture. A
culture that elevates individual ingenuity, believes in possibility,
and boosts business success - A Culture of Abundance.
As an individual you can make a difference
in every thing you do
when you generate abundance in yourself and others.
What Do You Believe?
Abundance (or scarcity) is a choice that is entirely up
to you, the individual. If you think it is possible
to create and work in a culture of abundance, your thoughts
will lead to actions that will make this happen, and you
will attract the support of like-minded people. Wallace
Wattles, a pioneer thinker and writer on the topic of prosperity
believed that:
"A person's way of doing things
is the direct result of the way he thinks about things.
To do things in the way you want to do them, you will
have to acquire the
ability to think the way you want to think."
If you are a workplace leader, do you cultivate an attitude
of possibility and inclusion, one that believes in your employees'
abundant potential? Do you believe in your own potential? Are
you motivated by scarcity or abundance? Your beliefs
affect your actions and your results.
A culture of abundance emphasizes possibility.
It favors membership over mere employment.
It is future focused.
Remember This
The most formidable obstacle to abundance, to seeing possibility
in any form, is your mental attitude. Tennis
coach Timothy Gallwey, author of The Inner Game of Tennis, realized
that all of his students had the physical ability to play
tennis, but what truly influenced peak performance was the positive mental
attitude some players possessed. Is it possible
that you sabotage yourself and others with negative or counter-productive thoughts and attitudes? Negative
thoughts and attitudes will result in a crisis of reduced
expectations that, like an attitude of abundance, will become
a negative reinforcing cycle.
The key to an abundant mentality starts with your thoughts
because what you think about, is what you bring about. Holding
positive beliefs and positive self-talk about yourself and
others, means that like attracts like. Here
are eight actions you can take every day for generating abundance
in your life and workplace:
- Cultivate an attitude of gratitude. Be
grateful for where you are, what you have accomplished,
and that today gives you the opportunity to be, do, have,
and give more.
- Ask for what you want. Be
straightforward and honest about your needs and expectations.
- Act with confidence. Know your
strengths, talents and challenges, and be comfortable with
what you find. Extend that confidence to others.
- Trust others. To gain trust, you
must first give trust and assume that others act in good
faith.
- Be accountable for your own actions before
you shift accountability to others.
- Focus on the results, not
on the process or doing it your way.
- Remain open to influence. Model
the behavior you want to see in others and be prepared
to change!
- Learn to give constructive feedback that
gets the job done AND preserves the business relationship,
stick with the facts and don’t make it personal. Learn
to eliminate the word "but" from your vocabulary
when telling people what you liked.
Every person is 100% responsible for the results they get. You
have the opportunity to choose between alternatives that
are presented to you over and over again (abundance or scarcity?) You
make choices that lead to the results you get. Make
your choices count for you and others!
Surrounded by Abundance

In the days of the mighty sailing ships, when brave
souls voyaged into the unknown, dependent on the winds
and their as-yet incomplete knowledge of geography and
navigation, one of the greatest and most dangerous challenges
was to traverse the area known as "the doldrums."
Extending about 30 degrees on either side of the equator,
the doldrums are subject to days, weeks, even months of
no wind at all. After a long and difficult crossing from
Europe to South America, lying becalmed in the doldrums — with
no land in sight and with the ship's supply of fresh water
dwindling — was a terrible and life-threatening situation.
But history and legend offer us some fascinating insights
into the power of our own thinking and belief. Back
then no one had yet figured out how to determine longitude,
although latitude was easily calculated. So if you
could not see recognizable land, you could only know in
what band of latitude you currently were. Exactly
where you were in that ring around the earth was, at that
time, unknowable.
And so it happened that at times a ship would fetch
up off the coast of South America, out of sight of shore,
fresh water supplies exhausted and death knocking at the
door. Then, with what must have been the sweetest
sound those sailors could ever have hoped for, the lookout
would suddenly call out that a ship was approaching in
the distance.
Once the ship was within hailing distance, the cry went
up: "Water! Give us water!" And the reply
would come back, "Lower your buckets over the side."
You see, although the sailors didn't know it, they were
afloat in a virtual river of drinkable and life-sustaining
water flowing from the mouth of the powerful Amazon River,
which carries nearly 20 percent of all the earth's runoff
water into the sea with such force that the fresh (or brackish
but safe) water flows as far as 100 miles out into the
Atlantic.
The sailors, dying of thirst, only THOUGHT they were
experiencing lack. The REALITY was that they were
afloat in a literal sea of abundance. Exactly what they
needed was within their reach the whole time, but the APPEARANCE
of scarcity and their BELIEF in that appearance threatened
to overpower them. They could have died — and
many certainly did — believing in lack while surrounded
by abundance.
This story was reprinted with permission
from the “Science of Getting Rich Network.” http://www.scienceofgettingrich.net
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