The first time I recall hearing
this term it rolls off the tongue of a Professor of Illuminating Engineering in
a capacious auditorium at the University of Illinois in the mid-1980s. The
coursework for my interior design degree back in the day includes material of
some substance, not just “coloring” as a not-so-kind acquaintance used to say. The curriculum is quite technical, and
fascinating at the same time. I wish I could
say I remember exactly its definition, but given that it’s been almost 30 years (eep!) since I’ve set foot in a university lecture hall, I’m leaning on the Department of Energy and Mineral
Engineering at Penn State, where they define it as “the ratio of light output from a lamp to the electric
power it consumes, measured in lumens per watt (LPW).” Translated
loosely into my words, it’s how
effective a light source is relative to the energy it takes to emit the light.
As the bewitching hour on this last
day of the year draws near, and we contemplate the resolutions we will declare at midnight, loudly (but for some maybe not so clearly), I’m thinking about change, and the energy we expend as
we strive for transformation.
Resolutions fail to come to
fruition because we burn out. We promise ourselves monumental change, and then
expend enormous amounts of energy in the name of attaining it: I’m not just talking about the physical energy
required to take action, but the mental energy we burn trying to infuse new and
foreign behaviors into our daily routines, and worse yet, the emotional energy
as we listen to the voice in our heads berating us for lack of follow through.
Most of us surrender without ever sustaining the outcome we’re desperate to reap.
I’m a self-described change agent. This week I contemplate my success at the
office this year, and over the past three years. A common theme materializes;
each team I lead looks dramatically different today than when I started, yet
without upheaval. They’ve all been reshaped, slowly over time. Just as I
have. I look at myself, who I was in April of 2012 when I wrote the very first
post for this blog, and who I am now. No raging infernos, dynamite or
explosives required, just a steady flame of conviction.
Transformation is about producing
a desired effect. It’s kind of scientific, too, because it’s also about producing a desired amount of that
desired effect. It’s pretty
normal to question whether we have the power or capacity to do this at all, yet
alone with precision. So instead of taking it on ourselves, we make our success
contingent. It’s easy to
say our results are dependent on what others around us do. And convenient to shift the blame when we don’t get the results we want. We let the accountability reside anywhere but
with us, because what does it say about us if we fail?
But here’s the thing, and it’s the same thing I’ve been saying over the course of the last 270 blog
posts: The power is within you. All you
need to do is want it. Someone else can’t want it for you, you can’t want it just because someone else does, and your
success is not predicated on the presence of that someone you think you need around.
You've got this.
I’m encouraging you to think differently about your
resolutions this year. What is the change you want to make in your life for no
one other than yourself? This is the
only resolution to make. It’s the only
one guaranteed to increase your lumen output, and the very best one to make for
those around you. Because when you burn brighter you make the world a better
place.
beep...beep...beep
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