A Tentative Manifesto for Future of Organizations —1
This is work in progress. No individual can envision this alone. I'm just hoping to stir some thoughts and start some dialogues…
Ancient Polynesian Wayfinding (https://www.letmamabee.com/moanastudy/ancient-polynesian-wayfinding)
Maybe decades from now, existing humans will look back at this period of human civilization and organizational trajectory in astonishment and horror.
They will see uber-tech infused multinational organizations abysmally stuck in industrial era norms even as the world crashed around them. They will see organizations still focused on shareholder profit, short-term growth, and vicious competition and acquisition even when they proved futile. They will see organizations willfully and deliberately bypassing, misusing, and changing policies and regulatory laws to aid obscene wealth accumulation for a few at the cost of the planet and Life. And they will wonder at the stupidity, greed, and absolute narcissism that must have driven these deranged behaviors.
But I'm still hopeful. Although it's diminishing rapidly. Maybe, just maybe, there will arise organizations and leaders who can step off this treadmill of Derangement and Destruction. Maybe, they will not give into the futility and folly of perpetual profit and doomed productivity--all aimed to feed a vicious cycle of consumerization and accumulation even as the planet is ravaged by floods, fires, and furies of human creation.
I call such organizations that dare to step off the treadmill of destruction, Wayfinders*. These organizations have the power to create ‘islands of sanity’ in the midst of the madness induced by a lust for power, privilege, and profit. I believe organizations have the power to reimagine our civilizational narratives. They can be:
Islands of sanity (phrase used by Margaret Wheatley in Who do We Choose to Be)
Imaginal cells for the future
Intentional communities of sensemaking
Containers of possibilities and potentials
Sacred holding spaces for dialogue and emergence
Profoundly relational spaces of co-creation
Harbingers of future citizenship
Movers and shapers of a regenerative planet
Truly GLOBAL SPACES of collaboration
If today multinational organizations have the power to shape national politics and define destinies of countries and their economies, tomorrow's organizations can reshape and redefine too. Only in a direction vastly different from the current toxic forces.
Industrial era norms, exacerbated and propelled by the tyranny of technology, have completely run amok bringing life to a point of extinction. The Sixth Mass Extinction is staring us in the face. And we are headed towards an abyss at breakneck speed. Organizations as Wayfinders have to unhook themselves from the toxic paradigms of yore and create fundamentally different narratives for their raison d’étre.
Technology, arising from the same mindset of the old hegemony, has become a destructive and degenerative force. The promises of tech utopia are long lost although technocrats won't accept it. Instead of the promised democratization of information, we have a deluge of disinformation and misinformation, propaganda, and vicious, polarizing toxicity. Mega-platforms like Facebook and Twitter have become havens for trolls and propagandists. All sanity is lost. AI with all the hype and hoopla appears to be a threat to humanity. One can only wonder what use are these inventions and billions spent in research, if all we have are hate-inducing algorithms? So much wasted. So much lost. Because those in power lost sight of what it meant to be alive on this Pale Blue Dot.
So, coming back to Wayfinders. What will such organizations look like, feel like, act like?
Honestly, I don't know. No single individual can know. We can only collectively envision and draft some foundational narratives that will anchor these organizations. For the last few years, discussions and debates around Regenerative Organizations have become very popular. The thinking and collaboration are already happening. But I'd like to take this a step further.
The Eurocentric hegemonic narrative must go. It has become actively toxic to life on this planet. We have to recognize the toxicity of the mindset of colonialism that still pervades although officially countries are no longer ‘colonized’. The epistemology and ontology of the global North have been imposed on a diverse, pluriversal planet for way too long delegitimizing and suppressing all other ways of knowing, being, relating, and doing. The new narratives will have to be woven from these unseen, unheard, unacknowledged voices and visions because that's where our (all living beings which includes humans) redemption lies.
The narrative running the show is actually just an economic monomyth passing of as reality. It's a construct cleverly sold through imperialism and colonization, and then through neoliberal capitalism in its various guises. Unfortunately, this construct has invaded all aspects of society from healthcare to education, from business to politics, from ecology to economy. And even religion and spirituality. It will take some deliberate undoing and unraveling. The good news is that it is already frayed at the edges and loose threads are showing through. They just need strong tugs and pulls to unravel.
The current dominant power enjoying the status quo won't and can't be a part of the unmasking and unraveling of the old narrative. But those in power are rapidly losing control. The planet is ensuring that. The time is ripe to unravel the old and weave new narratives from life-affirming paradigms.
This requires a complete shift towards fearless imagining. This is where Wayfinders can pave the path. Organizations are not inert machines with human resources operating them. Organizations are living ecosystems of deep interrelatedness in a continuous and dynamic equilibrium with their environment. I see organizations not as pyramids of power hierarchy but fluid fractals of natural hierarchy. Just like form fits function in a forest or in animals, organizations’ forms flow with the function.
Anthropocentrism has to give way to Biocentrism (the view or belief that the rights and needs of humans are not more important than those of other living things). It's time to live like other life forms—within our ecological boundaries with respectful deference to all sentient beings, with the knowledge of our own ignorance, and the humility to learn and adapt. If we wish to survive. Wayfinders will operate from essentially different paradigms—beyond the trivialities of GDP, shareholders profit, and endless efficiency. The paradigms will stem from wellbeing. Not human wellbeing but that of all sentient beings. They will shift from human-centered designs to life-affirming design and purpose.
Technology, when thoughtfully and wisely deployed, can be a facilitator of such organizations. Today, technology has become a harmful addiction exploited by a few to manipulate and maneuver the planet and humans at will. Think about it. What would you like technology to do for you?
Wayfinders have to go back to the basics. To the drawing board and to deep dialogues with all life form. I literally mean we have to learn from forests and rivers, oceans and mountains, birds and bees, beavers and bears. All the voices we chose to unsee.
This is not utopia but the only survival manual I can think of. Janine Benyus put it beautifully when she tells us that the Earth has 3.8 billion years of learning to impart. We need to become learn-able and worthy of the lessons being taught.
To be continued…
*The anthropologist Wade Davis coined the word “wayfinder” to describe the ancient navigators who first discovered the Pacific Islands, guiding small boats across vast stretches of open water to patches of land so small they make needles in haystack look like anvils in breadboxes—all without modern navigation equipment. ~from Finding Your Way in a Wild New World by Martha Beck
Pulling back the curtain and seeing a frail, pale-faced man wielding levers.
We used to call narrative "ideology" — when I studied philosophy years ago. Which is fine, though it didn't quite get at the nature of its constructability and deconstructability. I remember with great clarity my first class at 19 years old with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak in a philosophy of literature class, she asked if anyone could define "ideology". An axis of hers at that time. We were all petrified with fear to dare an answer. (What happened then is another story for another time!)
Sahana, you divinely put it here:
"The narrative running the show is actually just an economic monomyth passing [ ] as reality. It's a construct cleverly sold through imperialism and colonization, and then through neoliberal capitalism in its various guises. Unfortunately, this construct has invaded all aspects of society from healthcare to education, from business to politics, from ecology to economy. And even religion and spirituality. It will take some deliberate undoing and unraveling. The good news is that it is already frayed at the edges and loose threads are showing through. They just need strong tugs and pulls to unravel."
Here's to collective tugging!
Are you familiar with the Tamera community in Portugal? I visited them a few times several years ago. Many of the ideas they work with are compatible (or essentially the same) as what I read here.