[Neurons] 2009 Meta Reflections #34
L. Michael Hall
meta at onlinecol.com
Mon Aug 10 06:48:39 EDT 2009
From: L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
Meta Reflections #34
August 9, 2009
KNOWING AND BEYOND MERELY KNOWING
At a Business Lunch this week, prior to the presentation, I went back to the
book table and the event sponsor introduced me as the author of the books to
a highly influential CEO. As he was looking over the Meta-Coach Series of
books, I asked him what he was interested in. He said that the term
"self-Actualization" had caught his attention and that's why he was there.
He flipped through Self-Actualization Psychology and Unleashed and then
started to look at Achieving Peak Performance. That's when I asked,
"So, what do you think?"
"Oh, I know all of this stuff."
"Really? That's great and surprising because while I authored it, I'm still
learning heaps every day about it and feel that I only know a small portion
of what's in these books."
"No ... [pause] ... that's impossible. How can that be?"
"Well, that's because there is knowing, and then there is knowing about
knowing and then knowing in your body and well, many levels and dimensions
of knowing."
Well, that hooked him and off we went on a pretty intense conversation for
the next five minutes. Part of what I shared with him are the following
seven distinctions about "knowing." Here's to your knowing, to your knowing
about your knowing (your meta-knowing) and your knowing holistically in
every dimension.
As you know we now live in "the information age." We entered into that age
sometime in the mid-twentieth century. Since then information has been
increasing at exponential rates and continues to. With the world-wide web,
information has exploded via the internet. Information is not only growing
at incredible rates, the inter-change of information is taking it levels
previously unimagined. Now what once would have taken weeks or even months
of study and research to find now takes moments at a keyboard and Google or
other search engines.
Yet information isn't our biggest need, more than that we need knowledge.
Nor is that our biggest need, more than that we need wisdom. A dictionary
is full of information, has very little knowledge, and absolutely no wisdom
at all. "Knowledge" arises from the way we put information together and use
it. Knowledge emerges from the structures that form and mold the data so
that we can now "know" something in a given domain.
Actually, in terms of getting things done, in terms of taking effective
action, in terms of using data for improving performance or moving it to the
level of experience, information itself is often the problem. Information
itself can become a significant contributing problem to getting things done.
How often do we may think that the solution to our problems, to releasing
our current potential, to experiencing more effectiveness, is more
information. Another book. Another training.
The actual problem may be information incompetence. That's because knowing
more without knowing what to do with that information leaves you helpless.
At that point, you are only one step beyond ignorance. Actually this is a
form of information incompetence. Knowing more without the ability to
translate that knowledge into action leaves you knowing-what, but not
knowing-how. And that can actually create confusion in you. Confusion,
after all, refers to the fusing together ("con") of things that need to be
distinguished. You "know" something and confuse the knowing of some
particular what with the practical knowledge of how to implement and how to
execute.
If there is such a thing as information incompetence, then is there an
opposite? What is it? Is it possible to develop information competence?
Is it possible to expand your "knowing" to other dimensions to make it more
holistic? How do you develop that? What does that involve?
1) Distinctions of Relevance
This is the awareness of what information is needed and relevant. With
anything and everything there's lots of information that is simply
irrelevant. There is information that doesn't make any difference and that
only clutters up your desk and your mind. In the area that you're working
with, what distinction/s do you need to order and structure the information?
What patterns and categories will help classify the information? What is
relevant? How do you know? What criteria are you using to make that
determination?
2) Accuracy
This refers to the quality of the information that you experience and it
comes in many different degrees. Is the information accurate? How
accurate? How distorted? Distorted in what way and to what degree? How
much accuracy do you need? How much looseness of information can you
tolerate? Since information like other things is always changing, how
current is your information? What is new or different with the information
that you're using and relying upon?
3) Contexts
Context refers to the environments and places where you will use the
information. Information is relevant and accurate according to various
contexts. In what context do you need information? What information do you
need in that context? For what purpose?
4) Know-how knowledge
Some information is about content, other is about practice and application.
Know-how knowledge is information regarding how-to apply the information to
a specific situation and in a specific application. What know-how
information do you need? How much of that know-how knowledge do you already
have? What strategy do you already know? What information is missing that
you need? What know-how knowledge would you like to have that would make a
transformative difference?
5) Embodiment
We usually call the information that's we have in our head "intellectual"
knowledge. It is the know-about information that we learn academically.
When you develop the ability to translate what you know in your mind into
muscle memory, you close the knowing-doing gap. You then transform the
information into intuitive knowledge so that you know it in your
neuro-pathways and can perform the knowledge. Now your body "knows."
6) Implementation
Once you translate information into your muscles for muscle memory, now you
have the ability to apply that information. You can now execute what you
know and close the knowing-doing gap by taking appropriate and effective
action. You now actualize the information in your everyday actions.
7) Monitoring
Implementation is not the end of the story. The next step is to monitor the
information that you have applied to see how well it works out. Is the
information effectively translated into action? How well? What's missing?
How are you monitoring it? What feedback mechanisms are in place to hold
you accountable for the effective actions? When do you check it out? How
often? With such monitoring, you can then continually refine and hone the
information, keep revising it, and develop a continuous improvement loop or
kaizen.
Since all of this refers to a core capacity-that of information competence,
then how competent are you in turning information into knowledge and perhaps
even wisdom? How skilled are you with taking the information that comes
your way via television, radio, internet, books, magazines, conversations,
and so on and competently use, apply, embody, implement and monitor that
information? How much more would you like to be? For translating mind
into muscle, meaning into performance, check out the newest book in the
Meta-Coach series, Achieving Peak Performance ($25 plus shipping).
--- Meta-Coach Trainings coming 2009 - 2010
1) Sweden
Sept. 15, 16-23 - Coaching Mastery. Sweden: Stockholm
Sponsors: Sara Lee, Niklas Daver, and Helene Nordgen
<mailto:niklas.daver at gmail.com> sara.m.lee at gmail.com
niklas.daver at gmail.com helene-nordgren at tele2.se
2) New Zealand
October 1, 2- 9 - Coaching Mastery. Auckland, New Zealand
Sponsor: Ignition - Colin Cox and Lena Gray - www.ignition.co.za
<http://www.ignition.co.za/>
Lena at ignition.co.za
3) South Africa
Oct. 22, 23-30 - Coaching Mastery. Pretoria, South Africa
cheryl at peoplesa.co.za
Cell : 083 267 1412 Tel: 012 362 6542 Fax : 088 012 362 6641
Skype: meta coach www.psacoaching.co.za
4) Australia
November 19, 20-27 - Coaching Mastery. Sydney, Australia
Sponsors: Laureli Blyth and Heidi Heron
Heidi at nlpworldwide.com Laureli at nlpworldwide.com
5) Australia --- 2010
March 19 (Leadership Team training) and March 20-27 ACMC Training
Gold Coast, Australia --- Martin Urban: 61 7 5500 4175
martin at urbantrainings.com
www.UrbanTrainings.com
6) China --- 2010
Meta-Coaching in two parts -- January 17-22 and May 9-14 (6 days
each time):
Includes also Module II (Coaching Genius).
Guangzhou, China: Sponsor: Team Huang --- supported by
Neuro-Semantic Trainers:
Mandy Chai and Wilkie Choi For Chinese--- yeshow at 163.net . For English
speakers:
Mandy Chai: chaimansun at yahoo.com.hk
7) Mexico --- 2010
In two parts --- March 4-7 (March 3 for Team Leaders) and April 15-18
(April 14 for Team Leaders).
Sponsor: Salom Change Dynamics- www.salomchd.com (55) 30930687 ---
emilia at salomchd.com
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
International Society of Neuro-Semantics
Meta-Coach Training System
P.O. Box 8
Clifton, CO. 81520 USA
1 970-523-7877
1 970-523-5790 fax
<http://www.neurosemantics.com/> www.neurosemantics.com
<http://www.neuro-semantics-trainings.com/>
www.neuro-semantics-trainings.com
<http://www.self-actualizing.org/> www.self-actualizing.org
<http://www.meta-coaching.org/> www.meta-coaching.org
<http://www.ns-video.com/> www.ns-video.com
To sign up for a free subscription to the egroup of Neuro-Semantics
(Neurons) go to <http://www.neurosemantics.com/> www.neurosemantics.com ---
you can subscribe and unsubscribe there. Meta Reflection articles by Dr.
Hall are sent out every Monday and meta-Coach Reflections sent out every
Wednesdday to the Meta-Coaches egroup.
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