154 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
154 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
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The Sumble and You
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This article copyright (c) Don Webb 1992 e.v.
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It is truth universally acknowledged that we are
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programmed by our language. A ton of opportunistic
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therapies take advantage of this maxim. Lot of New Age
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occultniks sell seminars based on this simple principle.
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But very very few people do what I'm about to do. I don't
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think people should sell water by the river, and if they are
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I don't buy it. Here's how to do it. If you want to
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program your own wetware, find a study of the concepts that
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underlie the language, and then use the concepts. Step
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means real research at seriously heavy libraries, step two
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means try and try again until you get a formula that works
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and then use it. I've found (with the help of a few
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philologists, cultural historians, and health professionals)
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a formula that works. Or like anything in life -- it works
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for the dedicated self programmer. It is never enough to
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just know the secret, you must practice it as well. Since I
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believe in human lib just as much I believe in computer lib,
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I'll give it to you free. I've passed it on to a software
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engineering group, and they're going great guns.
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The technique is called the sumble. It is derived from
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a Viking custom of boasts and toasts made the night before
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an expedition was launched. I'll skip the
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mythic/philosophical underpinnings right now (although as an
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amateur cultural historian, I not only can but sometimes do
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go on about them for hours). Suffice it to say that you
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don't have to wear a hat with horns while you do it, nor
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worship Odin, nor get into a longboat when you're done. It
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has nothing to do with racial ties, but with the language
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you speak.
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The practice reflects the nature of time in Germanic
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languages -- English, German, Norse, Dutch, etc. In these
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languages there are only true morphological verb forms for
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the present and the past. There are no verb forms for the
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future. "Future" events can only be described with "helper"
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verbs. The time notion of the Germanic languages (including
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the one we think with or try to think with everyday) isn't
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divided by past-present-future, but by Urdhr (everything
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that has happened), Verdhandi (everything that is in process
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now) and Skuld (that which should happen). In short the
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Germanic languages focus on the past as a guide for the
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future, and the magical and religious practices of these
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peoples make use of the past rather than being doomed to
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repeat (i.e., What should happen rather than what must
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happen). If you want a quick handle on the nature of
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language as programmer, the works of Benjamin Whorf are good
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-- if you want a book on time structure in the Germanic
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languages -- try The Well and the Tree by Paul C.
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Bauschatz, Amherst University of Massachusetts Press, 1982.
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This unusual and useful time structure is at the base
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of the sumble. I'll describe a sumble and then I'll discuss
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its effects on the individuals who participate. A sumble
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consists of four rounds of toasts. Someone has brought
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apple juice, a pitcher and cups. The sumble leader pours
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the apple juice into the cups at the beginning of each round
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of toasts. There is no passing, everyone must toast each
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round.
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The first round is to Principles , those things that
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each individual thinks are important. For example the
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leader might say, "I raise my glass to the principle of
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Communication, because through Communication our mental
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processes exceed the sum of their parts." Then she drinks
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her cup. The next person might say, "I raise my glass to
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the principle of Loyalty, because only through loyalty are
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we able to go that last mile." Then he empties his cup.
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And so on.
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The second round is to heroes , real men and women
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living or dead that particularly inspire us in our work.
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The leader might say, "I raise this glass to Issac Asimov,
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because he showed that with clear and simple prose you could
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open the doors of others' minds." She drains her cup. The
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next person might say, "I raise my cup to Matthew Hanson,
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Admiral Perry's aide who carried him to the North Pole when
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the Admiral was sick, so that Perry might 'discover' it."
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And so on.
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The third round is the round of boasts . Here each
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participant tells something that he or she has accomplished
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and is proud of. For example the leader might say, "I raise
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this glass to myself, I went to Dallas and presented a good
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paper on the de Bono method at the Association for Software
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Engineering Excellence."
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The fourth round is the round of oaths . Here each
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participant tells of something they are about to do. The
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leader might say, "With this cup I pledge to get release
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three out the door a week ahead of schedule with no
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defects." Note that the oath is something that the
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individual must have control over -- you can't set goals for
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somebody else here. There is a meta-rule for the oaths. If
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it is possible for you to aid another in fulfilling his oath
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without harm to yourself or your goals, you are honor bound
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to do so.
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Each of these rounds of toasts has at least two
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distinct benefits each. In the first round, the participant
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has to figure out what principles are important to him or
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her. This isn't something we do in this country. We like
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to act as though money is the be-all and end-all of our
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existence. It is almost a taboo to say that we like any
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part of our jobs or think that they are important.
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Secondly, it lets you find out what other people think is
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important. I know of people that have sat at sumble -- who
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even though they had worked on projects together for years
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-- found the first session very revealing and transforming.
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The second round produces effects similar to the first.
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It makes the participants see something heroic and
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meaningful in their own work, and it allows them to share
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that inspiration with their fellows. We know that our
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current difficulties can be solved because others have
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solved them in the past. We are choosing an heroic model
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from the well of Urdhr -- if it worked before, it can work
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again. The discovery of transpersonal patterns that have
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Worked before is one of the safest and most effective source
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of tool for self transfromation. If we truly want to find
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out what we are, and what we can become -- one of the most
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important places to look for the structutre of our
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concsiousness is in the myths that shape the langauge -- not
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only on a word level, but on a gramatical level as well.
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This is one of the greatest hidden aspects of oput lives, as
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mystery we should seek after if we are truly interestred in
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self transformation.
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The third round is also taboo breaking. We are never
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supposed to talk about our achievements -- particularly if
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we are team players. However this not only gives us a
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chance to brag, it integrates our achievements into the work
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of others. We achieve recognition for our own work, and we
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recognize the evolving stream of quality around us. Again I
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have seen individuals, walking away not only amazed at
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finding out what the guy sitting next to him did, but also
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amazed at the wonderful scope of achievement that he had to
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work with in his projects.
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The fourth round is of course the kicker. This not
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only makes the individual come up with a reasonable goal to
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overcome, beyond the dead specs of a given project; but it
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also makes sure that each individual -- now filled with the
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confidence that the toasts have produced -- will apply his
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principle to give shape to the work that should come into
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being. This gives each individual a voice in what's taking
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place, confidence that his goals are both important and
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achievable, and a sense of commitment to the team.
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In terms of the time model discussed above, the first
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three toasts come from the well of Urdhr and the last from
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the well of Skuld. It's programming that's deeply wired
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into us by our language. It makes an excellent use of
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wetware. Like any piece of linguistic programming, it works
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better if repeated. It's great if your goal is an
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individually determined freedom, why not buy some apple
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juice and try one today?
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