It’s
a lesson few of us like to learn.
“God
created a world constrained by gravity, constrained by innumerable physical
laws,” writes Matt Appling in Life
After Art. “He created animal and plant life, each kind with its own
strengths and limitations. And he created humanity to live and die by all kinds
of constraints. God created all of these constraints and limitations—and called
them good.”
Not
exactly our favorite words.
Constraints.
Limitations.
Rules.
Guidelines.
Expectations.
Laws.
That’s
like seeing a 65-mile-per-hour speed sign on the interstate, and declaring it
to be good.
The
fact is, though, we all work and live within constraints. It might be legal, or
financial, or moral, or ethical. But constraints are our daily fact of life.
My
constraints are often called lawyers. And experts.
My
day-to-day work is in the freewheeling, Wild West atmosphere of the internet –
web, social media, blogs, online news sites. What’s critical to functioning in
this kind of environment is speed. Wait too long to respond, and you can find
yourself to be roadkill.
Companies
and other organizations are not designed or structured for speed; what they are
structured for is deliberate consideration by all parties concerned. Lawyers
review things; other kinds of experts review things; people seek a calm and
orderly approach to anything that must be said publicly. There are reasons for
this, including the lawsuit-happy society we live in.
But
when you’re dealing with online time, that’s institutional roadkill. Wait too
long and you won’t know what hit you.
The
need for constraints and limitations run smack up against a world where the
very natures of time and speed have fundamentally and profoundly changed, and
they have changed forever. Constraints are still needed, but of different kinds
and in different ways.
The
tension with all of this is sometimes unbearable. They think they’re dealing
with the guy who always wants to color outside the lines; what they don’t see
is that the lines have changed.
We’re
trying to accommodate each other. It’s not easy. I’m constantly chafing against
institutional constraints. Some days the response comes way too late to be
useful; I ‘m often left with finding someone credible outside the organization
who’s already responded or communicated. It can make us look foolish, but
foolish is better that looking stupid or arrogant.
As
Appling says, constraints and limitations are good. The lines, the design, are
what give us order, stability, and even beauty. The trick honoring those
limitations – and still doing what’s needed to be done.
And
sometimes you have to color outside the lines, and perhaps in the process draw
new lines.
Over
at The High Calling, we’re
discussing Life After Art. To see the
discussion on this chapter, “Coloring Inside the Lines,” please visit the site.
Photograph by Junior Libby via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
2 comments:
colouring inside the lines
and outside of the lines
without crossing the line
This was one of my favorite parts of the book, Glynn. You are right about all of us having constraints. I've just never thought of them in a positive way, I guess. Appling is helping me see a little differently.
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