[Daily Om]: Cooperation seems simple: working
together toward a common goal for the benefit of all involved. But
amazingly it can be quite challenging, even when we have so many
successful examples all around us. Human society is based upon the
concept of cooperation, but finding a balance to ensure the good of all
members of society is difficult. In nature, symbiotic relationships form
between unlikely allies: a bee and a flower, a bird and a rhinoceros,
small fish and sharks. Yet nature also shows us instances of constant
competition in which only the strongest survive. Given the choice, it
seems most people would choose the more peaceful path of cooperation.
Intellectually, we know that together we can create something greater
than what one could do alone, but cooperation still seems to be one of
the greatest challenges people face. We don't always agree on how goals
can be reached. Our priorities may be different, or our methods, but in
the end, cooperation offers the best chance for success.
So how can we learn to cooperate with each other? We can gain greater
perspective by trying to understand one another's point of view, perhaps
even putting ourselves in their place. We can search for commonalities
as well as differences, and look for the good in different approaches.
There is always more than one way of doing things, and some approaches
are better suited for certain situations than others. All this is easier
when we let go of the necessity to be right and to call others wrong.
More important, we must believe that there is a solution that benefits
all involved, not just one side.
The results of cooperation can be as simple as effortlessly getting
everyone in your household to their appointments to large-scale social
shifts to changing minds and hearts or policies that affect the future.