Towards a 2-part solution: Trust is a 2-way street.Β I encourage those of us on the sidelines to recognize our own reactivity, our own distrust of authority, and remember thatΒ we are the UUA. Β The people we tend to point fingers at care very, very deeply about our faith tradition and are hard at work trying to ensure our future. Β We do a thorough job of holding them accountable, but can we practice occasionally cutting them some slack? Apparently, this new logo wasnβt a whim and wasnβt created out of thin air, but has been a year-long process of dialogue with 50 different UU stakeholders (according to the recent VUU episode available here, particularly at 30:49).
And, for the UUA Administration, it would be much easier to cut some slack if we had confidence in where we are going. Β I am reminded of a GPS I use which wonβt ever give me the whole map of where I am going, but only shares one turn at a time. I hate it because I never really know if it is directing me to my desired destination. Β Give me the whole map at once (rather than just pieces at a time) and then I will be more likely to trust each individual turn. I want the same from my UUA Administration. You seem to have been working from a plan β please share it in more detail.This week, another dear friend and colleague, Erika Hewitt, writes (here and again on Tom Shade's blog here) about being engaged in a "Very Large Project" for Unitarian Universalism, and finding herself "armoring up."Β She says:
We find ourselves bracing for criticism not because our Very Large Project is controversial nor because we have paranoid temperaments, but rather because of the cultural patterns that we witness in the larger UU world (much of it online):Erika and Dawn point to a very real problem of a lot of criticism that the people who lead in our movement are faced with.Β We do need to give them more of a a measure of goodwill.Β
Often, our people respond to brave risk-taking by shaming the risk-takers.
Too often, our people respond to the vulnerable expression of creativity or vision by criticizing the creation or vision, and naming the ways it failed to suit their personal taste.
But I agree more with Dawn's prescription for dealing with it, recognizing that it's a two-way street.Β In the 2/13/14 UU World article on the logo, it says, "And the UUA is developing other resources for congregations, regional groups, and the national association to use. This effort is about much more than a new logo and a new look for the website, Cooley said." And on my 2/13/14 blog article, Deborah Neisel-Sanders from UUA youth/young adults comments, "I can say that the new logo is just the tip of the iceberg; a good number of wishes that the logo reveal has generated are already in development or scheduled to be."Β Three months after Dawn's request for the "whole map," the fuller picture about the UUA Brand has not been released.Β The answer may be that there is not a whole map yet -- but then tell us so, and tell us the points you know along the way.Β Instead of providing more information, my sense is that people have "armored up" instead.Β Information-seeking is not critique--but it's difficult to tell tell the difference when you're on the defensive.Β And the defensive posture is understandable when you've been heavily critiqued.Β It's a vicious cycle, but Dawn points the way out of the cycle.Β
To Erika, then, I would say, you're right.Β But at the same time, you need to tell us more about your Very Large Project rather than armoring up.Β Surprised people react poorly, and wishing they wouldn't and telling them they shouldn't isn't going to change everyone.Β Rather than preparing for the fight, avoid the fight by bringing people along with you on your journey.Β You begin by showing us your map, and engaging us in the Very Big Questions that your Very Large Project is addressing.Β Share the vision.Β As you say, "Creativity and courage are contagious."Β
You're so right to point us to a path towards trust -- but trust is something created between us.Β Trust is a two-way street.Β