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Visionary Leadership
and the Chakras
by Corinne McLaughlin
There are seven
steps in expressing your vision and passion effectively in the world,
related to your seven chakras or etheric energy centers. To become a
practical visionary, you need to understand how energy flows through your
centers and where there are blocks or imbalances. The ideal is to have
visionary energy from your highest chakra (at the top of your head)
flowing unimpeded through each chakra until it is grounded in a practical
way through your lowest chakra, the root chakra. The following steps will
help you realize your intention:
How to Use Your Chakra Energies to
Manifest Your Vision
There are seven steps in expressing
your vision and passion effectively in the world, related to your seven
chakras or etheric energy centers. To become a practical visionary, you
need to understand how energy flows through your centers and where there
are blocks or imbalances. The ideal is to have visionary energy from your
highest chakra (at the top of your head) flowing unimpeded through each
chakra until it is grounded in a practical way through your lowest chakra,
the root chakra. The following steps will help you realize your intention.
1. Align your vision
(crown, or pineal center). The first step is to
focus your attention in your crown chakra at the top of your head. Affirm
your intention to align with your soul, your higher purpose and your core
values, guided by concern for the common good. Then take some time in the
silence to turn within and ask for an intuitive vision.
A vision is a specific,
compelling picture of a desirable future that is achievable and
appropriate. It includes a long-term, whole-systems perspective. Vision
can be described as a field that brings energy into form. It may come in
words, pictures or symbols, or just as a sensed energy. It may be about
embodying a quality of energy, and/or doing something.
For example, my friend
Daniel Greenberg is an educator who is deeply concerned about global
warming and the destruction of the environment. He wanted students to
learn how to create a more sustainable future and receive university
credit for living and studying in ecovillages around the world. So he
created a nonprofit called Living Routes through which students can do
this.
Your vision may be learning
how to be more loving toward your family, for example, or it may be an
idea like promoting Spirit in business. When you’re clear about your
vision for the future, it helps to constantly reaffirm and articulate it
to create a coherent and magnetic field of energy around it. Having a
clear vision will start magnetizing people, resources and ideas toward
you.
2.
Shape your vision into a clear mission with strategy and goals (brow, or
ajna, center). Focus your energy and intention
in the intuitive brow center in the middle of your forehead. Think
clearly, and create a specific mission to describe how you will achieve
your vision. Next, create a strategic plan and clear goals as steps to
achieve your mission. Your goals will provide focal points for your
attention and will attract energy, because energy follows thought.
Create SMART but flexible goals: Specific, Measurable, Achievable,
Realistic, Timed. Then prioritize your time and commitments, which is like
creating a magic circle to work within—inscribing boundaries that contain
and harness your energy. Without clear boundaries, you will be tempted to
take on too much and dissipate your energy. You have to be able to say no
to some things and prioritize others.
If
your larger vision is learning how to be more loving toward your family,
your specific mission might be to appreciate each family member daily and
express gratitude more frequently. If your vision is creating Spirit in
business, your specific mission might be to create an organization that
hosts a monthly public forum with dialogues among local business leaders
to create mutual support.
3.
Communicate your mission creatively and sound a clear note (throat
center). Your throat center is your creative will
center and can help you be disciplined, imaginative and innovative in how
you express your mission. It focuses and directs your will to accomplish
your goals and project a clear thoughtform of your mission. It helps you
focus on opportunities and solutions, not problems. Get feedback from
others about how clear and compelling your communication of your mission
is. You may want to employ new media technologies, for example, as well as
face-to-face communication. Research the best ways to get your
message to others, and if appropriate, develop a public relations
strategy.
4. Develop
good relationships to ensure support (heart center). Reach out to
other people to enlist their support and collaboration in helping you
create a harmonious environment to manifest your vision. The best way to
reach out is from the heart—by being sensitive, respectful and
appreciative. Express gratitude on a regular basis for help you’ve
received.
Marc
Lesser, founder of Brush Dance, said that he learned to take a few minutes
each day to appreciate an employee, to thank them for a job well done or
to just listen to their concerns. Simple things like this can make people
feel supported. He found that generosity with his time can be as important
as generosity with his money.
It’s important to develop good
listening skills so that people feel heard. Don’t make communication a
one-way street. Encourage team spirit, and build a sense of community and
trust with people who are drawn to your vision. Agree on a process for
resolving any conflicts that might emerge so that your relationships will
be
harmonious.
5.
Energize your mission with
emotional enthusiasm (solar plexus center).
To generate emotional power,
confidence and enthusiasm for your mission, you need to energize your
solar plexus center at your navel and express the dynamic “fire in the
belly” needed to ignite others and attract allies and supporters. You need
a burning desire to make the vision manifest and the passion to do
whatever it takes to see it through. Enthusiasm is contagious and ignites
others. Risk taking and playfulness bring excitement to your project.
Many
good spiritual people try to keep their attention out of the solar plexus
center and the next two lower ones, wrongly thinking that these centers
aren’t spiritual. Or they may repress the energy in their solar plexus
center or it may be depleted, and they wonder why their visions don’t
manifest.
To
kindle your passion and enthusiasm about a new project, you could
brainstorm and write down the reasons you want to do this project, whom it
will help, and what you enjoy about it. You can also talk to other people
about why you want to do your mission and what inspires you about it and
ask for their feedback and support. You can also read about similar
initiatives around the country and attend conferences on this theme,
because this can energize you.
6. Attract
resources (sexual/financial center). The sexual center is the life
force center of vitality. It’s about not only concerned with sexual
procreation and attracting people but also with vitality and attracting
prosperity. Madison Avenue clearly knows this as they use sex to sell
everything. If this life force energy is inhibited or blocked, financial
resources may be lacking. Scarcity consciousness around money and lack of
generosity also block the flow. Focusing energy in this center will make
your mission vital, attractive and compelling—even if it’s a public forum
on business. It will attract investors, donors and/or paying customers.
7. Ground
your vision with practical, sustainable strategies (root/survival center).
Here is where the rubber meets the road—where your vision and mission
meet real human need and where you need clear strategies for survival,
security and safety. The root center at the base of your spine is the
life-giving principle. Honoring this grounding energy, you create a basic
survival strategy, interface carefully with local bureaucracies, make sure
that you are following legal, financial and health requirements and deal
with physical-plane realities such as buildings and transportation. You
also make sure that you’ve created a healthy, comfortable and safe
environment for people.
You can’t have successful business,
for example, without renting a meeting room or at least finding a
comfortable living room, setting up a business or nonprofit to receive
money and pay bills, keeping records of your expenses and income and
filing yearly taxes. Too many visionaries come up with great ideas and
announce their events or projects, thinking that the rest will magically
fall out of the sky without them having to do the hard work to organize it
or paying someone else to do it. Some spiritual types seem to be allergic
to the physical world!
Through the process of spiritual
growth and expansion of consciousness, each chakra will open eventually
and radiate balanced energy. Your inner world affects your outer
expression in the world. The key is to appreciate and love each chakra;
each one is equally spiritual and important. Remember that Spirit and
matter are simply different frequencies of energy along the same spectrum.
Your crown center and root center are different frequencies, each with a
specific, sacred function that is essential to your overall well-being and
that of your mission or project.
To hone your practical leadership
skills or simply become a more effective and confident person in the
world, attend a Visionary Leadership training, and learn the above process
and other techniques more in depth.
--Corinne McLaughlin;
www.thepracticalvisionary.org
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