Sunday, March 17, 2013

The Brilliance of St. Patrick

Helloo0O Ladies and Gentlemen!

Welcome back to Graceland Ontario, your one stop location for success advice from the greats. Today we’re going to talk about St. Patrick’s Day and the brilliance of the metaphor.

So, today, as you probably know, is St. Patrick’s Day. Even in Canada everyone has a great time, partying and drinking far more than they should.

But there’s more than that and green ribbons to the legend of ol’ St. Pat.

St. Patrick was born in Roman Britain but kidnapped to Ireland where he supposedly escaped through the instructions of God through a dream. He studied to be a priest in Gaul and returned to convert the mainly polytheistic Irish to Christianity. After some years in practice, he passed on.

But his teachings never did.

Originally the colour of St. Patrick (and generally of Ireland) was blue but, even as early as the seventeenth century, that turned to green because of the shamrock, St. Pat’s foremost choice to teach with.

You see, he’d find a three leaf clover to explain the holy trinity. The clover was green, so became the colour of the day.

But the brilliance comes through his use of metaphor. Clearly a shamrock has nothing to do with the holy trinity, but associating something as common as it with what he wanted to persuade people towards, Catholicism, made it easier for his teachings to pierce the old Irish. Even more brilliantly, the shamrock had been used in the prior circulating religions and so was already a religious symbol. You see, people are less likely to fight something they know, like a shamrock in ancient Ireland, than they are a new concept, like an unheard of religion. Instead of coming out with the old “you’re all sinners destined to burn in hell!” line, he gently persuaded them through things they knew. And now, for centuries past, people’ve broken the lent fast to feast in St. Pat’s name.

Learn from St. Pat: there’re plenty of things people know, use all the time, and trust that can be likened to your idea. There are things they’ll understand when you talk to them long before they’ll get your dream. Now the idea is not to lose your dream, it’s just to turn it into a metaphor, like the shamrock to the cross, to get people to understand something easier. You don’t have a very long time to get a point across in a pitch. The quicker you get them to understand it through metaphors and similar events or ideas, the more likely you’ll win their support.

Have a fantastic St. Patrick’s Day and good luck persuading!

Alex H.
 
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