|
|
|
Wellbriety
and Economic Development
By Don
Coyhis
Economics
and economic development is very, very significant for the wellness
of communities, but I think we need to understand the natural order
of things in considering this. I believe we always have to work
with natural order. To me, the natural order or understanding is
that we are spiritual beings trying to be human, we are not human
beings trying to be spiritual. Its really important to try
and understand that, because if you want to be successful at economics
you must first develop the inside and then work on the outside.
In recovery it is spiritual first, then material. Its never
the other way.
So, for example, if, with good intentions, you bring
in economic development opportunities and entrepreneurship to a
community, you are almost doomed to failure if part of the economic
development plan omits developing oneself inside. In the business
world, you put energy into a business, then you get a certain amount
in return for doing so. For successful economic development, you
have to have a plan, you have to have goals and objectives, you
have to measure them, you have to have work ethics. You need to
have work habits. You need to be willing to put in the timenothings
free.
Water always flows down a mountain through the path
of least resistance. Suppose water flows down the mountain and hits
a tree or a blockage. It will go around that tree until it hits
a stone. It will stay there a little while and then go around the
stone. Eventually it finds the path of least resistance because
thats the nature of water. Business is the same way. It always
follows the path of least resistance. Your goods or services must
be easy to use. Youve got to be faster, cheaper, better, quicker,
or offer higher quality than any one else. But certain thought patterns
have to be established inside a person before you can do that.
Suppose I drink, I party, I go out with friends, I
come in late, and I have an, I dont give a shit
attitude; is that going to affect my productivity or the outcome
of any kind of a business I have? They say, As within, so
without. If you are clogged up inside, you will clog up the
business. If you are judgmental to yourself then you are going to
judge your customers. If you hate yourself, youll hate your
employees. If you are intolerant of yourself, youll be intolerant
of everybody you run into. In an interconnected world, everyone
will pick up on it. So its kind of a Catch-22. Which do you
do first? Do you bring in the business and start that way? But if
your thinking isnt right, your business project is not going
to work anyway.
Most economic development plans, I believe, use the
European model which only focuses on the outside. They proceed like
this: Heres your goals, heres your charts, heres
your spreadsheets, heres your money, now go and do it.
In Indian Country, I think that in order to make a plan work you
also have to come in with a personal development plan to show people
how you must think if you are going to run that business. For example,
businesses dont start on Indian time. Indian time is a delusion
anyway. Indian time is really about being responsible. Its
about being there when you say you are going to be there. Thats
Indian time. It isnt, Set an agenda for eight oclock
and have everybody show up at 8:30 or a quarter to nine. Thats
an excuse for being irresponsible. Dont say the meeting is
going to be at eight, oversleep, come in late, have coffee, and
say its Indian time and the Indian way. Its not. Our
traditional Indian way was to say what you are going to do, and
do it.
To sum up, in order for economic development to be
successful in Indian Country, part of the training for business
needs to include the thinking skills that go with it. What thought
patterns would it take for me to run a business effectively? At
the community level, what work habits does a potential work force
need to develop? You must define what is excellence. What is mediocrity?
What standards need to be in place if the project is to succeed?
What is it you want? I really think you have to have that balance
of both: the inside look and the outside look, simultaneously, so
that you can both grow.
Don Coyhis, is president of White Bison, Inc., an American Indian
non-profit organization based in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Reprinted
with permission from Well Nations Magazine, January-February 2001.
|
|