paradigm
Opportunity in the Void - Societal Paradigm Shift
Posted February 25th, 2009 by Gena Rotstein
This is the Chinese word for crisis - weiji. Many new-agers believe that it is made up of two characters - danger and opportunity. In reading an essay entitled, "Danger + Opportunity≠ Crisis" by Victor H. Mair, professor of Chinese language and literature at the University of Pennsylvania, with contributions from Denis Mair and Zhang Liqing, I learned that this is not the case. According to Dr. Mair, the second character means incipient moment or crucial point. As I interperate it further - it is a time in space for change to occur.
We are facing this time of Ji. A time where as society, we have choices we can make that will further entrench us in our crisis - social, environmental, financial, etc. or choices that can elevate us out of these situations thereby "saving our neck." It is in the latter that I see the opportunity of the Ji.
A friend of mine - Chris Hsiung, has created his business helping individuals reshape their businesses and themselves by looking at the crisis points of the human venture and shifting the thought process. In a recent posting on his blog, Chris points out as humans we can justify anything even if it contradicts who we are as an individual.
When we are looking at crisis management, whether it is addressing funding issues as a result of Madoff or a national stimulus package as reiterated by Obama in his speech to Congress last night, we can either choose to keep ourselves in the boxes that we have self-defined. Or we can choose to take this JI and flip it over, turn it inside and come up with a new paradigm.
What is this new paradigm?
We can no longer depend on the traditional models that ran society, because in front of our eyes, those models are falling apart. The people and institutions that we held as pillars are crumbling. Many people are talking and writing about the social shifts. The impact that Twitter is having through its Twestivals. Or the business models that are being tested by social entrepreneurs. Or, the new ways that people are seeking out venture capital.
So, unlike what Victor Mair states that ji is not opportunity. I believe that the space that surrounds ji is definitely one for opportunity. It just depends on how we chose to use it.

