I am often asked, “What do
positive life changes look like in
a child, or for that matter, in
anyone?” As I am just beginning
to understand this question, I see
that one healthy goal for us to
envision — or imagine — as
individuals and as a community
is that of the wizened, community-
minded elder, who shares
his or her experiences in ways
that guide children toward
service and stewardship. By
picturing the “elder in training”
as an ideal, we can benchmark
our positive life changes through
service to our community. This
means service to self, family, and
friends, the community at-large,
and to the environment.
Service begins with me and
it begins with you. We must be
the change we seek in the world.
From there, our concentric ring
can move out with power and
affect. This is one of the
fundamental ecological principles guiding
the interdependence of all life. Through
this principle I find immense hope in that
we each have the power to change the
world.
I am reminded of a phrase shared by a
friend recently when confronted with a
sticky situation with a neighbor, “We
cannot make peace, we must BE peace!” I
look at this axiom and think of its relationship
to mentoring and how we must
become the change we hope for in the
youth we guide. The foundation of service
is about being that change through
awareness of our own gifts and by knowing
how to express them — and little else.
Service then becomes a walk in the
moment through our daily existence. No
matter where we work, walk, or play,
following our hearts is a practice in service.
We can become elders, not just old
people, by serving our community in
simple, substantial ways that bring health
and happiness to our daily lives. By
recognizing, developing, and sharing our
individual inherent bundle of gifts, we hold
the world with an embrace of service that is
at the very root of our being. Being “in your
gift” is knowing why you are here on the
earth and what piece of the puzzle you are
here to fulfill. When we are in that place of
understanding our own power, we are a
living piece of art that works from creativity,
awareness, and empathy. When a child
is patterning his or her behavior early in
life on mentors who know and express their
gifts, a learning gradient is created for the
eventual flowering of that child’s own
unique gifts.
One of our core routines of mentoring
at Wilderness Youth Project is creating a
hero culture around service in action. On
our family adventure outings we begin the
weekend with a thanksgiving circle in
which children and adults alike share those
things we each are thankful for in life. This
brings us together around appreciation for
our lives and the world around us. Children
and adults are excused from the circle for
dinner by sharing something helpful they
have done for someone over the past week.
Once the kids share, they go up to the
expedition kitchen, fill the plates of their
parents, and then serve their parents and
the elders dinner. Immediately, service is
put into action.
The next morning, at the end of the
thanksgiving circle, all the kids and adults
are excused in the same manner as the
evening before. This time, we each share
those things we have done for others in the
last 24 hours. Many of the kids again go
right to the task of serving their elders and
parents a lovingly prepared breakfast. They
also begin to clear and wash other people’s
plates at the end of the meal. A dance of
service ensues for the remainder of the
weekend and on into their everyday lives.
That second night, as people are
excused from the thanksgiving circle for
dinner, we each share about some act of
service that we saw another person perform.
Then the person who is being recognized
for his or her service is excused
to get dinner. In all of our
circles we creatively honor the
stewardship and service for our
selves, our family and friends,
and our environment. The kids
pick up on our accolade for
such action and they begin to
model the ‘heroes’ who are
receiving the accolade. As the
time the youth spends with us
progresses, we bring service
more into a place of anonymity.
Service becomes something
we do because it is in our true
nature, and not as a show.
Service is core to our
human operating system and is
key to becoming fully alive.
There are gifts for the character
that come only through
selflessness. In these gifts are a
plethora of lessons around
understanding
the
essence of
who we are and
how our
concentric
rings effects the
world we live in. If
one harms the world,
one also harms
oneself. If one serves
the world, one is also
serving those deep
inner needs of self, an
age-old karmic
principle. As we
actively train to be
elders who guide our
communities toward a
healthy place, we
must fully imagine
our natural gifts out of
their shells and into
the expression of our
lives. It is then that
we are no longer the
artist, but the work of
art.
Before you sit
down to dinner
tonight, ask yourself,
“What have I done to
help another move
further into his or her
gifts over the past day?” We must become
those heroes of service and eventual elders
of insight and compassion for our families
and for our communities. Look around you
today and see with awareness how to be
truly helpful in anticipation of the needs of
the people around you. Service is not
something you do only when you are retired
but is in the kindness you share with
everyone you meet and in every way you
live your daily life.
Positive life changes are born out of
the womb of the “elder mind and child
heart” where each and every one of us is
walking our path of service. Please join
with me in imagining a world where the
children are truly healthy and happy, living
in an earth that is nurtured for the generations
to come, and a community of elders
who see, feel, and understand the nature of
service. If we can see a healthy future, we
can get there! Peace! |