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The "Synergy" Part of SYNERGICITY
By Richard Eyre
Editor's note: Today's column continues
a series on the Third Alternative of "Synergicity." Over
the next few weeks, this column will continue to outline and explain
the third alternative of "SYNERGICITY," and how the concept
can replace the loneliness and isolation of "Independence."
Being Clear on Just
what Synergicity Is
OK, here we go with our deeper dive
into the third alternative (the alternative to the isolating and
prideful notion of Independence). You already know that synergicity
is a combination of the words "Synergy" and "Synchronicity."
We will define and clarify each of these two words (one this week
and one next) and then combine their definitions into the powerful
and liberating (and deeply spiritual) concept of synergicity.
The way I like to think about it is
this: The idea and notion of Independence has two critical flaws.
One is that it can rely on self instead of acknowledging our need
for help and asking for it and seeking it from God and from others.
The second flaw is that Independence often tries to operate outside
of and independent of the bigger picture, with a failure to look
for God's plan and God's timing in everything.
Synergy is all about seeking help,
both from God and from others, instead of trying not to need it!
Synchronicity is all about seeing opportunities
and connections and unexpected timing from God's perspective rather
than trying to force everything to fit our own idea of when and
how things should happen.
For today, let’s delve into Spiritual
Synergy!
Be More Than What You Can Be,
and Do More Than What You Can Do
We all have limits and limitations,
right? And all we can do is all we can do!
The fact is that we limit ourselves
by our ideas of independence. When we depend only on ourselves,
our limits are very finite and very apparent. And we often fall
so far short of what is needed, of what we need, and of what others
need. We suffer in silence, feeling inadequate and sometimes a little
helpless and a little hopeless.
And that is the point: Help and hope
do not come from independence. Hope comes from dependence on God
and Christ, and help comes from that same place and also from interdependence
on other people. Once we get over the limiting (and actually somewhat
prideful) attitude of independence, we can begin to develop real
synergy, with other people, and with God and His blessings.
Working together, sharing ideas, and
combining complementing talents, people can do amazing things--more
than expected — more than the sum of what they could do individually
or independently.
Working with God, and for God, and
in harmony with His will and dependent on his strength, people can
literally do anything, and overcome everything.
So there is something magical about
synergy, something emotional and exciting that goes beyond the practical
and beyond what can be added up or figured out. It is, essentially,
a way of surpassing your personal capacity, and reaching levels
and doing things that are impossible without it.
Let's look at some definitions of synergy
— both secular and spiritual.
Definitions
Synergy: The interaction of two or more agents or forces so that
their combined effect is greater than the sum of their individual
parts.
Synergy: pronounced SIN-ur-jee, from
Greek sunergia, meaning cooperation or sunergos, meaning working
together efficiently
Synergy: (from the Greek synergos,
συνεργός
meaning working together, circa 1660) refers to the phenomenon
in which two or more discrete influences or agents acting together
create an effect greater than that predicted by knowing only the
separate effects of the individual agents. The opposite of synergy
is antagonism, the phenomenon where two agents in combination have
an overall effect which is less than that predicted from their individual
effects. Synergism stems from the 1657 theological doctrine
that humans will cooperate with the Divine Grace in regeneration.
The term began to be used in the broader, non-theological, sense
by 1925.
Synergy can also mean:
- A mutually advantageous conjunction
where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
- A dynamic state in which combined
action is favored over the sum of individual component actions
- Behavior of whole systems unpredicted
by the behavior of their parts taken separately.
Synergy comes from the Greek word synergia,
meaning joint work and cooperative action. Synergy is when the result
is greater than the sum of the parts. Synergy is created when things
work in concert together to create an outcome that is in some way
of more value than the total of what the individual inputs is.
Example: Smoking can cause lung cancer.
Breathing asbestos can cause lung cancer. Smoking and breathing
asbestos can cause lung cancer at a higher rate than the sum of
individual smoking and asbestos rates. (Now there is an interesting
negative example of synergy, and the last one we will use, because
the positive examples of how we can help bring about cooperation
and mutual help are endless.)
Synergistic: The Adjective
Form
The secular and scientific definitions
are interesting — but not nearly as interesting as when the
word takes on a spiritual dimension. Now the word can mean the power
and efficiency of working with God!
Actually, broadening our thinking reveals
several types of synergy:
- The synergy between you and other
people
- The synergy between you and God
- The synergy between your body and
your spirit, or between your brain, body, and spirit (whole soul
synergy)
- The synergy between husband and
wife (the essential definition of a good marriage)
How to Find more Synergy in
your Life
There will be a lot more "how
to" on this when we get it rolled into the third alternative
of Synergicity, but for now, for starters, let me give you two important
keys for how to develop more Synergy:
First: Ask more!
When we ask — for help, for advice, for input, for participation
when we are teaching a class, for other's opinions — we are
creating opportunities for synergy. We are bringing the minds of
others into the equation, and the combined result of their thoughts
and yours will be greater than the sum of yours and theirs taken
separately.
- Asking your spouse more —
what he or she thinks, or needs, or feels — will be the
beginning of more synergy in your marriage.
- Asking your body what it needs,
and listening to it — and asking your spirit what it needs
— begins a process leading to soulful synergy and completeness.
- And of course, asking God is the
most powerful of all.
Did you know that of all the admonitions
of scripture, to ask is the most repeated? Think about
that: Of all the things God tells us to do, the one He repeats the
most often is the simple three-letter admonition ask! When
we ask God — for inspiration, for guidance, for our righteous
desires, we open the way for Him to bless us without interfering
with our agency (because we took the initiative to ask).
Parents understand this, because we
all long for our children to ask us — for our advice, for
our council. We want them to need us. God, as the Eternal Parent,
asks us to ask because he wants to bless us, to inspire us, and
to guide us. He wants to have synergy with us and with our lives!
Second: Think of yourself
as interconnected. As you go about your daily life, think how glad
you are that you are not independent — that you are dependent
on so much and on so many, and that you are interdependent with
everyone, and that you depend on God for your every breath.
Begin to see yourself as fitting into
something so big and so wonderful and so awesome that you can scarcely
imagine it. Adopt the lovely, humble feeling of dependence and interdependence.
This will cause you to appreciate others more, to notice them more,
to seek their feedback and feelings and to enjoy and welcome their
input and impressions.
Next Week
Thanks for being here (in this column,
on this earth, as part of God's plan) I love sharing thoughts with
you and getting your feedback (write me at richard@meridianmagazine.com)
and I am excited about next week and getting into the other half
of the third alternative of Synergicity (the half called Synchronicity).
Join me then, and in the meantime, have a synergistic week!
Actually (and please excuse this one
last bit of parting advice for this week’s column), it’s
not a bad idea to keep a "synergy journal" for a week
or so — noticing and jotting down the times when you work
with someone, or share an idea, or ask for input, and end up being
better off than if you had "gone it alone."
You can also put in that journal what
you ask for — particularly what you ask for from
God. Some call it an "ask journal" and have testified
that every righteous thing they have ever asked for has come to
them — not always in the way or the timing they wanted or
expected (and that timing is getting into synchronicity, by the
way, which we will get into next week) has been given to them!
See you here next weekend when we will
swim into Synchronicity.
Write to Richard at richard@meridianmagazine.com
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