We’ve
been reading Mindfulness
by Ellen Langer for the current book discussion at The High Calling, and
this week’s focus is Chapter 4 – “The Costs of Mindlessness” and Chapter 5, “The
Nature of Mindfulness.” I believe Langer has a serious point to make about how
mindlessness – doing things almost by rote because we’ve always done this way –
can lead to bad results and negative outcomes. But her evidence for the costs
of mindlessness gets a little thin.
She
cites a 1975 Harvard Business Review article by Theodore Leavitt, “Marketing
Myopia,” for how the railroad industry mindlessly destroyed itself by
continuing to see itself as a railroad industry instead of a transportation
industry. The article was rather famous for several years in the business
community; I can remember my then-boss handing me and the other speechwriters a
copy of the article and told it was a quotable resource for speeches. But even then
we understood that it was one way to look at what happened to the rail industry
– and only one way.
Some
of the other evidence for mindlessness she cites includes a wife “unlearning’
how to balance her checkbook because she’s turned that activity over to her
husband, an anecdote about the author’s nieces, and the example of Miss
Havisham in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. There is other evidence she
cites I’m more comfortable with, but these examples are more anecdotes than
evidence. I suppose she might say I’m trapped in the mindlessness of not being
open to new information, but Miss Havisham? I love the novel but it is a novel,
no matter how much truth it might contain.
There’s
also a statement she makes that I have to question, and the statement, made in
an almost offhand way, is that advertisers conspire to make us mindless. That
is a pretty broad generalization. Most advertisers (including the federal
government, political candidates, companies and even public interest groups)
are not so much focused on making us mindless as they are on us buying their
product, service, belief or position. That one offhand statement made me pause
and question what I was actually reading here. There are costs to mindlessness,
to be sure; I’ve seen them and experienced them. But I don’t think Langer makes
a compelling case here.
But
I continued on to Chapter 5, “The Nature of Mindlessness,” and I found her to
be back on firmer ground. She describes mindfulness, the opposite of
mindlessness, as a continual creation of new categories of thinking and
thought, paying attention to both the situation and the context; welcoming new
information; openness to different points of view; and the importance of
process rather than a slavish devotion to outcome.
My
own business career has been a perpetual state of tension between outcome and
process. Business people like outcomes. Outcomes are things like sales, profit
and return on investment. And sometimes we forget that there’s a process that
precedes every outcome, as Langer points out.
A
typical conversation I’ve found myself having over the course of decades concerns
this tension. The organization has something it wants or needs to announce
publicly. Communications people are often told “here’s the news” and proceed to
write the news release and plan other communications.
But
there’s a question that needs to be asked first – what is the desired outcome?
Does the organization want a lot of attention, only a little attention, or a
lot of attention by a small (or large) number of people? Defining the desired
outcome results in the creation of a process to achieve the outcome. Announcing
the news in a traditional news release may do exactly the opposite of what’s
desired, but a mindless belief in the effectiveness of news releases may
actually contribute to not achieving the desired outcome, or achieving the
wrong outcome.
Mindlessness
and mindfulness are everyday occupations.
To
read more posts on these two chapters of Mindfulness,
please visit The High Calling,
where our discussion is being led by Laura Boggess.
Sounds fascinating -- your experience parallels my experience.
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your insights here, Glynn. I too have wondered a bit about what Langer calls "research". Perhaps if we read the articles she wrote for the scholarly journals she mentions in the introduction we would be less dubious. What I am finding is that in just considering the information she offers, the way I evaluate the world around me is shifting. It's pretty cool. I've never been much of a critical thinker--children from substance abuse families tend to be pretty big on acceptance. So this is teaching me to be open and explore other possibilities. Who says you can't teach an old dog new tricks?
ReplyDeleteinteresting thoughts, even though, i am not reading the book.
ReplyDeletei went to the quaker church service the last few sundays, and the speaker has been talking about listening. all the different ways that we listen and all the different ways that God speaks to us.
when we make time to listen...as well as as spontaneously as we are doing our ordinary day.
i do see it as listening, and yet, i see it more as relating...both talking and listening. being aware of the living relationship that is both spiritual and physical in it's relating...as we know that God does relate through other people and things that we can touch and perceive. which brings all relationship and mindfulness into the relationship that we have with God.
and in a way, we add another and different kind of mindfulness to the other...a spiritual mindfulness.
we can see some things in a new way. we can have an extra sensory perception, in a way.
Good thoughts in the post and the comments!
ReplyDeleteWhat I find most compelling here, Glynn, is how mindfully you're reading the chapters! You're not just accepting at face value what Langer says. You have a unique perspective from your career vantage point so I value what you're saying and perhaps should read these chapters a little more critically myself.
ReplyDelete