Change happens; it’s the new rule in town. Sometimes we welcome it; sometimes we don’t. Sometimes, we have some control over it; sometimes, we don’t. But when change happens, it will always provide the opportunity for you and your organization to change, grow, and transform.
Change can occur in various ways, at different levels, and with different responses or
reactions.
For example:
What I want to address in this article is that if we want to harness, leverage, or take advantage of change, whatever it may be, and however it may come, to learn and grow from it, we need to accept the reality that on the other side of change (if we embrace it positively), we will have in fact changed ourselves. There is no going back to the way it was, or more specifically, who you were. Suppose X represents your current reality (i.e., stability), and Y represents the change you experience; the goal is not to return to X. In that case, it’s to emerge and evolve to a new stability, Z. That’s why so many people would say as we all journeyed through the COVID-19 pandemic, we are not returning to normal; we are going to a “new” normal - a different version.
Here is an excellent excerpt from Master of Change (2023) by Brad Stulberg concerning this:
In the late 1980s, two researchers—one a neuroscientist, physiologist, and professor of
medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, and the other an interdisciplinary scholar with a
focus on biology and stress—observed an interesting phenomenon. In the vast majority of
situations, healthy systems do not rigidly resist change; rather, they adapt to it, moving forward
with grace and grit. This observation is true whether it is an entire species responding to a shift
in its habitat, an organization responding to a change in its industry, or a single individual
responding to a disorder event in her life or an ongoing process such as aging. Following
disorder, living systems crave stability, but they achieve that stability somewhere new. Peter
Sterling (the neuroscientist) and Joseph Eyer (the biologist) coined the term allostasis to describe this process. Allostasis comes from the Greek allo, which means “variable,” and stasis,
which, as you learned earlier, means “standing.” Sterling and Eyer defined allostasis as “stability
through change.”
We may be familiar with the term homeostasis. It can be defined as “the tendency of living systems to resist change in order to maintain stable, relatively constant internal environments.” If change happens, the goal of homeostasis is to return to stability, back to order - the exact order it had before (i.e., X goes through Y but goes back to X). Regarding change, we would prefer to go the homeostasis way instead of the allostasis way. However, with many of the latest findings in the fields of psychology, biology, philosophy, and neurology, the way forward is allostasis.
Here are some practical steps you and your team can take to develop an approach toward
change that changes you and your organization for the better.
At the end of the day, it is always beneficial to consider and pray the Serenity Prayer:
“God, grant me the serenity to accept the things that I cannot change, courage to change the
things I can, and wisdom to know the difference.”
If I can be of help to you and your team to process and work through change dynamics, please
reach out to me. I would love to connect with you.