The other day I had my graduation.  For the past year, I've been  
following a course held by MIT Sloan School of Management Executive  
programme called IDEAS Indonesia, together with United In Diversity.  It
  is a leadership course designed to bring together people from the 
three  sectors, private, public and civil society, to teach us to 
co-create  prototype initiatives to address some of the most pressing 
problems we  face today.  The method is to breakdown the sectoral 
thinking and  decision making that we normally employ when dealing with 
complex  issues, by creating an environment that is inclusive and 
wholistic, and  employing a mental model that goes to the source of our 
being and who we  are.  What my professor calls Eco System, as opposed 
to Ego System.
As the programme comes to an end, I try to think
 back about what I've  learned in the past year and what sticks in my 
mind.  Granted in the  bigger scheme of things, this is not exactly 
earth shattering event.   Not unlike the discovery that scientists made a
 few days ago when they  found a new subatomic particle, the Higgs boson
 - the particle that  underlies all the matter in the universe and what 
helps give the  universe size and shape.  The so-called 'god particle.' 
 This is a  discovery that took over half a century to make.  And it 
should be  celebrated by all of us on this planet that have a curiosity 
about our  origins, and not only by a few scientists.
While my graduation may not have much by way of cosmic significance, 
 nevertheless I try to view it as the culmination of a year-long journey
  of discovery and learning for me and my colleagues at the IDEAS  
programme.  And perhaps there is no harm to see it in the context of our
  relationship with the world, and even with the universe and the Higgs 
 boson particle.
So, what have we learned?  What discovery has been made?
For one thing, we learn that as we wish to transform the world, the  
first thing we need to do is transform ourselves.  As the secret of the 
 universe lies in its smallest particle, we learn that the secret of 
true  knowledge lies in the source of knowing deep within ourselves. 
 All we  have to do is to connect with it.
We also learn that 
in order to really connect, with ourselves and with  others, we need to 
know the different levels of communicating; through  deep observation 
and deep listening.  Not through superficial  downloading and 
reconfirming of old opinions, but with open mind, open  heart and open 
will.  We cannot get to the source of the human heart by  closing 
barriers, in the same way that it is only in the breaking up of  atoms 
can we get to the source of all things.
We learn that there are
 two sources of learning, by reflecting on the  experience of the past 
and by learning from the future as it emerges.   While I'm still trying 
to grapple with the meaning of learning from the  future, I understand 
that in order to embrace the future and all its  generative potentials, 
we have to free ourselves from the burdens that  we carry.  We have to 
let go of the past. We must suspend our voice of  judgment, voice of 
cynicism and our voice of fear that keep us stuck in  our old identity 
and narrowness.
We have to let go of our old habits and mental 
model so we can welcome  new ideas, act with authenticity and create a 
new reality that is not  merely a rerun of the old.
We learn to
 say goodbye to our small self, to merge with our big Self,  the Self 
that connects us all to each other, to the planet and to the  universe. 
 In other words, to become that god particle.  That magic  particle that
 gives shape to who we are, our world and the universe that  we inhabit.
As we let go, we have to let come.  This requires an awareness of being
  that keeps us rooted to the present.  We must always remain in the  
present.
Our learning is a journey, both individually and 
collectively.  But then  life too is a journey.  A journey where the 
ride is more important than  the destination.
In this I am reminded of an essay by Robert Hastings 'The Station' from which I quote an excerpt:
Sooner or later, however, we must realize there is no station in this life, no one earthly
place to arrive at once and for all. The journey is the joy. The station is an illusion--it
constantly outdistances us. Yesterday's a memory, tomorrow's a dream. Yesterday belongs to a
history, tomorrow belongs to God. Yesterday's a fading sunset, tomorrow's a faint sunrise. Only
today is there light enough to love and live.
(Desi Anwar:  First Published in The Jakarta Globe)
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