Japan is a chrysanthemum. Many petals. One flower. The meta language of the chrysanthemum is deeply rooted in Japanese history and culture. It is the official mark of the Japanese Emperor’s family. It symbolizes happiness.
A disaster like the quake that literally shifted the planet on Friday in Japan gets us to focus on what is most important. At times like these improvisation—a system for generating positive outcomes from unforeseen circumstances—is especially critical.
I have a feeling that in the coming days, we are going to see the power of the flower. As the Japanese people face the challenges confronting them, we will see the creative potential of the group mind, especially when a group as large and connected as the Japanese are are given a sense of purpose like the one they have now.
We will see that improvisation consists not of making it up as you go along, but of making focused and productive moves at every opportunity. Here, for example, via our friend, Michelle James (@creatvemergence), is a list of suggestions from Time Out Tokyo, for how the Japanese people can respond to the crisis.
Already, we can see that there is structure to the process defined by TOT. The objectives, environment, roles and rules of the game are clear. Process is clean. Everything is achievable and scalable. In short, the advice consists of:
Give money–being present in spirit is more important right now than being present in person;
Give blood–to be healthy is an obligation to care for the infirm;
Conserve electricity–the people are in this together.
Though it’s seldom as sudden and concentrated like it was on Friday in Japan, natural destruction is happening at all times, all over the world. Lives end. Rivers flood. Mountains slide.
At the same time, nature’s creativity is expressing itself with equal energy. Lives begin. Rivers heal. Mountains rise.
How can we improve the odds that our creativity will triumph over our destruction?
We can play the Chrysanthemum Game. Find our purpose. Believe in happiness. Bloom as one.


There is a terrible rip in the fabric of the planet. The Earth has buckled under