Sometimes the best ideas are not our own. Definitely not mine, anyway.
Sometimes when we check into our communities, we realize that they have gone on without us. They have brilliant ideas about what should come next and they don’t require us for much of anything. The ideas abound. Ones that we would have never considered, or at least considered useful. Others can and do create what we would have thought too difficult to manage or attempt.
And yet, we can and do jump in. We take one look at the big plans that others have started in motion and we take part. We tend to our communities and it becomes something that is a part of us as well. I’m okay with the plans that others people have for me, or the ones that we co-author over time.
Today, I checked in on one of my communities and they were working on creating a broadcast, of the community itself. How is it that they came up with that idea before me? How is it that they started developing it, sharing phone numbers and emails? How could they have figured out how to advance the community beyond the current set of messages going back and forth?
And yet, I injected myself into the conversation. I created a collaborative document for them to help plan. I encouraged them to fill out their roles and their ideas for the project. I gave them ideas about how to broadcast and which tools would help them to make it valuable to the rest of the community. I made myself useful, sure. But, it wasn’t my idea in the beginning. I didn’t start it.
And that is a pretty wonderful feeling, all around.
Sorry–I’m going backwards till I get caught up with your posts. Got a wee bit behind with life the last couple of months…lots of transition. I’m back though. As for this post, I think it is priceless. I have always advocated that any healthy group can move on without one person or for that matter the leader who started it. We are all people who come and go in various groups in our lives…we need to do our best to set them up so that they can continue when we choose to move on.