On
August 28, 1963, 250,000 people from across the country descended on
the Mall in Washington, D.C., to hear Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. give his famous “I Have a Dream” speech. The organizers
didn’t send out 250,000 invitations and there was no Web site to check the
date. How did they get a quarter of a million people
to show up on the right day at the right time?
Dr.
King was not the only person alive during that time who knew what had to change to bring about civil rights in America. He
had many ideas about what needed to happen, but so did others.
And not all of his ideas were good. He was not a perfect man;
he had his complexities.
But
Dr. King was absolute in his conviction. He knew change had
to happen in America. His clarity of WHY, his sense of purpose, gave
him the strength and energy to continue his fight against often
seemingly insurmountable odds. There were others like him who
shared his vision of America, but many of them gave up after too
many defeats. Defeat is painful. And the ability to continue head-on,
day after day, takes something more than knowing what legislation
needs to be passed. For civil rights to truly take hold in the
country, its organizers had to rally everyone. They may have been
able to pass legislation, but they needed more than that, they needed
to change a country. Only if they could rally a nation to join the
cause, not because they had to, but because they wanted to, could
any significant change endure. But no one person can effect lasting
change alone. It would take others who believed what King believed.
The
details of how to achieve civil rights or what needed to be
done were debatable, and different groups tried different strategies. Violence
was employed by some, appeasement by others. Regardless of how or what was being done, there was one thing everyone
had in common—WHY they were doing it. It was not just Martin Luther King’s unflappable conviction that was able to stir
a population, but his ability to put his WHY into words. Dr. King
had a gift. He talked about what he believed. And his words had
the power to inspire:
“I
believe.”
“I
believe.”
“I
believe.”
People
heard his beliefs and his words touched them deep inside. Those
who believed what he believed took that cause and made
it their own. And they told people what they believed. And those
people told others what they believed. Some organized to get that
belief out more efficiently.
And
in the summer of 1963, a quarter of a million people showed
up to hear Dr. King deliver his “I Have a Dream” speech on the
steps of the Lincoln Memorial.
But
how many people showed up for Dr. King?
Zero.
They
showed up for themselves. It was what they believed.
It was
what they saw as
an opportunity to help America become a better
version of itself. It was they who
wanted to live in a country that
reflected their own values and beliefs that inspired them to get on a bus to
travel for eight hours to stand in the Washington sun in the
middle of August to hear Dr. King speak. Being in Washington was
simply one of the things they did to prove what they believed. Showing
up that day was one of the WHATs to their own WHY. This
was a cause and it was their cause.
* * *
I have been inspired by Martin Luther King and how he inspired a movement. I have learned that a cause must be organic; if it is to have an impact it must belong to those who join the movement and not those who lead it.
Not too long ago, a student at TCU in Texas named Katie Jones started posting comments on my blog and Facebook fan page. She would often share her thoughts and offer some inspiring words. She also showed up on one of my left-sider's conference calls, where she shared her vision of the world. Though I have never met Katie in person, I have come to appreciate her energy and her belief in the movement to inspire people to do the things that inspire them...to help reverse the statistic that 80% of people don't love what they do...to create a world in which the vast majority of people wake up everyday inspired.
And then it happened.
Katie has taken this cause and made it her own. She started a website called liveyourwhy.com to collect stories of people who have found their Why. Her aim is to inspire others to find and live their Why by sharing the stories of those who do. I plan on sharing a story with her and I encourage you to also. The more we help Katie, the more people she will inspire to find their Why. And the more people she inspires, the more people take the cause and make it their own. And the movement will grow and grow...and together we will change the world.
Thank you Katie...you inspire me.
Download a PDF of this post
Simon - daily inspiration here - you are feeding us. just watched your Ted like 5 times.
Posted by: chrisitian louboutin | 05/26/2011 at 05:41 AM
I agree with you . Now all became clear, I thank for the help and I hope to see more such articles.
Posted by: christian louboutin | 12/13/2010 at 12:51 AM
Great article. It's inspiring.
Posted by: Savina Cavallo | 08/23/2010 at 03:11 PM
Thanks for sharing this, Simon. And Katie, I'll be in touch with you soon!
Posted by: Laura Lee Bloor | 08/05/2010 at 06:40 PM
Yes Man. Seriously a solid contribution to the quality of life Simon. Kudos to you and Katie for taking brilliant ideas into action.
Posted by: SiMo fo'Life | 08/04/2010 at 10:08 PM
i love your site Katie.. would love to steal you... maybe you can feed us.
Simon - daily inspiration here - you are feeding us. just watched your Ted like 5 times.
i totally agree with Katie's home page.
i have been in ed 20 years - i see the 80% daily.
we believe there is a better way to spend 7 hours a day.
we believe we all want to do good but we are trapped in rules/systems/organizations.
we believe if we are freed to be ourselves - we will learn and give back stuff that matters.
public ed involves a massive amount of people. help us http://redefineschool.wordpress.com/imagine/ and make the world a better place.
{very bold to post a site on your site Simon... i know. my why is not only the reason i get up exhilarated every day... seeking a scalable change... it keeps me up at night. my why gnaws at my soul...it keeps me starving and craving ...and bold.}
Posted by: Monk51295 | 08/03/2010 at 05:02 PM
Thank you for this. I especiallt love how you put that a movement must belong to those who follow & not those who lead it. So true!
As an educator I see the perils of today's test & punish policies and reduce to number data mongering as the civils rights movement of our generation. My Why is this: I wish to make grading and other ranking systems so impossible to justify that we all had to focus on real learning.
I blog about education everyday at www.joebower.org
Thanks
Joe
Posted by: Joe Bower | 08/03/2010 at 04:29 AM
Simon, reading this made me grin. I hope that everyone reading this takes the chance to open up and share how they live their Why for the benefit of those who don't know how to live theirs, yet. I hope, also, to get to meet many more people who are just as inspiring to me as you are :) (That includes you, Chris Jones!)
A couple of incredible people have already e-mailed me their stories today.
I just want to say that if anyone needs help gathering their thoughts, I will be more than happy to help you out. Just shoot me an e-mail at katie@liveyourwhy.com. My whole purpose is not to ask anyone to write any essays, but rather to ask people to be themselves -- their truest, most authentic, down-to-earth selves. That's what's most amazing, and that's what's going to change the world. :)
Posted by: Katie Jones | 08/02/2010 at 11:54 PM
And through the miracle of blogs and social media, I now can know Katie as well. This is why I stick around here. Thanks for the tip!
Posted by: Chris Jones | 08/02/2010 at 06:03 PM