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Why we chose dragons as our symbol? Dragons are known
through out the world in virtually all climates, cultures, and eras with
horns, claws, breath of fire, great size (some small), wondrous wings
(some wing-less), and marvelous colors these serpentine creatures forever
populate our myths, legends, and imaginations. Dragons are strong, fierce,
powerful, and persuasive. As such, they are creatures of magic and power.
In some Western, Christian-oriented cultures the magic and power of dragons
is a masculine symbol of destruction to be slain. How ironic that it
is a man's (St. George's) job to slay the dragons before it devours all
that is feminine. (Some see this perspective as masculinity wanting to
cover its paternalistic behind.) In many other cultures, dragons are
positive symbols. For example Chinese dragons are symbols of good fortune.
In the Aztec, Olmec, Mayan world, their dragon - Quetzalcoatl - symbolizes
sustenance and re-birth. In the old Slavic world, some dragons - Zmaj
- were friends of humans while others - Azdaja -were friends of witches
and such. When they would fight great storms would occur.*
The Center for Human Systems in its vast and unbiased wisdom is clear
dragons are good or evil depending on how they are being treated. When
treated well they are creatures of fertility and and as such are not
only creatures of power and magic, but also creatures or possibility.
In these modern times, our scientific method would have
us be sensible people who do not believe in dragons or magic or fairies
or spirits or sprites or witches or wizards or anything that cannot be
observed and measured and managed, and ultimately controlled. In the
place of dragons and magic, it has given us the wonders of modern technology
so that I can search the World Wide Web (which, by the way, is chockfull
of dragons - check any search engine) and call you on my teeny weenie
cell phone from anywhere. Caught up in the thrall of rationality, technology,
and sensible adulthood we depend more and more on these things. In the
process we put aside the part of ourselves that can love wholeheartedly,
that can create a real castle (from what sensible adults would call a
cardboard box), that can create possibility simply from believing we
can. Those things can only be done if we believe in dragons-as magic,
power, and possibility.
As a symbol of possibility, when I live as the dragon
I am, I end the power struggles I create when I try to proof. I learn
from our differences rather than work to convince to you (and myself)
that I am right and good and handsome. The dragon I am loves fully with
total focus, consummate passion, and direct action irresistibly and in
wonder.
Only the dragon I am listens with compassion, understanding
hostility and fear to be signals of pain needing healing. Only the dragon
I am turns dysfunctional groups into synergic teams appreciative of each
member's good heart, good intentions, and useful contributions. Only
the dragon I am can see the systemic issues that drive organizational
cultures to be blaming and dysfunctional so I can discover the levers
that can most easily bring everyone to full alignment and the organization
to full productivity and success.
Dragons are the symbol of the Center for Human Systems
because only the dragon in us commands sufficient use of self for us
to master the seven Essential Tools which can enable us to manage change
within ourselves, with others, with groups, and total organizations.
Hmm, sounds like I'll be putting together a program (a new book?) called "Becoming
the Dragon You are!"
* Thanks to my friend Ivan Cvetkovic, web developer
par excellence, for the information about Slavic dragons.
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