PBS has amazing programs! We all really need to watch that channel more often!
In celebration of being on the air 30 years, PBS through its Nightly Business Report (NBR) program, collaborated (one of my favorite words!) with the Wharton School of business at University of Pennsylvania and its Knowledge@Wharton website on innovation and entrepreneurship. Their goal: to identify the 30 innovations that have changed life most dramatically during the past 30 years.
The resulting program, the Top 30 Innovations of the Last 30 Years, is also featured on both the Wharton and PBS websites. NBR program viewers in over 250 markets across the U.S. and Knowledge@Wharton readers from around the world submitted some 1200 suggestions for the best innovations they thought had shaped the world in that time. A panel of eight judges from Wharton selected the top 30. A fascinating list to check out — true legacies all.
This got me to thinking about my favorite teacher R. Buckminster Fuller, the man who coined the term “Spaceship Earth” and the phrase ”doing more with less.” He encouraged people to create artifacts – very much a personal legacy concept.
Bucky’s stated intention – as a lifelong experiment with his own life, made as a conscious decision in his early 30′s - was “to make the world work for 100% of humanity, in the shortest possible time, through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or disadvantage of anyone.”
He answered the question of why there were humans in the universe, with the notion that we are basically local information gatherers and problem solvers. While we are more complex than that, it is an accurate observation.
Bucky focused his life on solving complex problems through an approach he called “comprehensive anticipatory design science.” The approach emphasized individual initiative and integrity, whole systems thinking, scientific rigor and faithful reliance on nature’s underlying principles.
He thought it was not helpful to try to change people, but rather important to change the context in which they operate, by providing innovative solutions to the problems they face. That way, ultimately no one would have to work to ‘earn a living’ (we are, after all, already alive), but we would each contribute what we’re good at to positively impact the world around us: gathering information about and solving the problems that presented themselves uniquely to us.
What if we did more of that? What if you took a look at what you do well and easily and even take joy in doing, and looked around to see who you could assist by creating something that would benefit them in some way?
If your brain is already spinning with ideas, you are developing a legacy consciousness. Building anything from that thinking would make the planet a bit better place.
If what you build happens to answer Bucky’s urgent call for a design science revolution to make the world work for all. If it:
- “emphasizes a new design, material, process, service, tool, technology, or any combination”
- “is part of an integrated strategy dealing with key social, economic, environmental, and cultural issues”
- “present[s] a bold, visionary, tangible initiative that is focused on a well-defined need of critical importance [and is]
- regionally specific yet globally applicable, and backed up by a solid plan and the capability to move the solution forward”
Then you might even win the Buckminster Fuller Challenge, as stated on the Buckminster Fuller Institute’s (bfi.org) website.
My ultimate joy at Creating Legacy would be to work side by side with you in helping you do just that, or even some fraction of that, which, in your own unique way “makes a difference now that lasts for generations.”
I’d love to hear your ideas.
1. Give Services instead of Goods. You can give a gift certificate for salon or spa services, a car wash, a gardening service (like tree-planting or mulching the planting beds around the house), or organic cooking lessons. You can also give the gift of your own time, energy and expertise. Giving someone a book of coupons representing anything from computer training to your help doing household chores can be a very meaningful … and useful gift.
life, I’ve got enough stuff. But sharing time and experiences with people I care about means a lot to me. A card redeemable for lunch with a friend is worth a lot. My husband and I create trips and adventures (from local to international) to share with one another — which also supports the economies of the places we visit.
Here are a couple of photos from our recent honeymoon / “staycation” in our hometown of Key West. We had great fun being hometown tourists. Yes, we’ve chosen to live in this paradise at the end of a long road (which has its trade-offs folks), but I’m guessing your hometown paradise has great things to recommend it, too. Re-watch the Wizard of Oz if you need more of a reminder.
3. The Gift of Personal Treasures. You may have family heirlooms, antiques, collectibles, artwork or jewelry that someone else would treasure, too — especially since it once belonged to you. This is true also of crystal, wood carvings, geodes or similar pieces of nature as art. They contain part of your story and lots of sentimental value, two things you can’t buy anyway.
4. Special or Healthy Edibles. This is when “homemade,” or hand-crafted with heart, is something especially good. Pies, cakes and cookies, barbecue or hot sauce (perhaps complete with the old family recipe) or even fresh or dried herbs from your garden are easy on the environment and convey your heartfelt wishes through the effort you put into exercising your culinary skills. Making up a few batches as gifts probably won’t take more time than trudging to and through the shopping mall, and it will be time more pleasantly spent by you, especially if the weather outside is frightful. And you never know what the effort might produce – see our Legacy Story this issue.
