‘Five S’ for the Mind

by damith
January 12, 2025 1:10 am 0 comment 109 views

With the “Clean Sri Lanka” initiative, multiple focal areas have been identified in line with an overall improvement expected. It obviously goes beyond physical cleanliness. Digging deeper into the popular Japanese house-keeping concept of “Five S,” I have been contemplating and communicating on the “Five S for the Mind.” It is high time we revisited the essence of it and today’s column attempts to do so.

Overview

Better housekeeping, higher orderliness, enhanced productivity are some of the ways the benefits of a popular approach called “five S” have been described. It is no stranger for the Sri Lankan workplace. I think it has much more depth and breadth than that.

“Five S” originated in Japan and stands for five Japanese words that start with the letter ‘S’: Seiri, Seiton, Seiso, Seiketsu and Shitsuke. An equivalent set of five ‘S’ words in English have likewise been adopted by many, to preserve the “Five S” acronym in English usage. These are: Sort, Set, Shine, Standardise and Sustain.

Five S offers a systematic approach in keeping things in order. It is a visual technique of ensuring the proper housekeeping as well. As Hiroyuki Hirano (1995) states in “Five Pillars of the Visual Workplace”, five S forms the bedrock for productivity. Takashi Osada, (1995) highlights in” The Fiv5S’s: Five keys to a Total Quality Environment”, it offers a pathway for quality and productivity improvements.

Understanding the mind

As the first stanza of the revered text Dhammapada states, “mano pubbaagma dhamma, mano setta manomaya.” This essentially means that the mind is the forerunner for all things. Whilst its supremacy has always been undisputedly accepted, what is mind has been a perennial question.

Philosophers strived to describe it while psychologists struggled to define it. As one relatively simpler definition says, the mind is the human consciousness that originates in the brain and is manifested especially in thought, perception, emotion, will, memory and imagination.

Psychologists such as Sigmund Freud and William James have developed influential theories about the nature of the human mind. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries cognitive science emerged and developed many varied approaches to the description of the mind and its related phenomena.

In Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalytic theory of personality, the conscious mind consists of everything inside of our awareness. This is the aspect of our mental processing that we can think and talk about in a rational way. The conscious mind includes such things as the sensations, perceptions, memories, feelings and fantasies inside of our current awareness.

Why and how

Why the mind needs Five S? This has been a question on my mind for a while. Removing clutter from the workplace is fine but more clutter remains in the mind, in the form of negative emotions, inaccurate perceptions and false opinions. Even though Five S has been successfully implemented in many Sri Lankan workplaces, the depth it contains in making the participants disciplined has not been adequately captured.

Let’s discuss each S in detail.

Seiri (Sort)

This is the starting point. Typical workplace activities include going through all tools, materials and so forth in the plant and work area. Keeping only essential items and eliminating what is not required, prioritising things per requirements and keeping them in easily accessible places, are other key actions. Everything else is stored or discarded.

It refers to the act of throwing away all unwanted, unnecessary and unrelated material in the workplace. People involved in Seiri must not feel sorry about having to throw away things. The idea is to ensure that everything left in the workplace is related to work. Even the number of necessary items in the workplace must be kept to its absolute minimum. Because of seiri, simplification of tasks, effective use of space and careful purchase of items follow.

The way I think, the deep relevance of Seiri to the mind is purposefulness. To ensure clarity over clutter with “right seeing” (Samma Dhitti), one needs to identify positive thoughts, constructive emotions and unbiased perceptions with a clear purpose in mind. This is much more difficult than sorting things in a workplace.

Seiton (Set)

This typically means arranging workplace, equipment parts and instructions in such a way that the work flows free of waste through the value added tasks with a division of labour necessary to meet demand. It follows the practice of “everything has a proper place.” It is all about efficiency.

When applied correctly with flow established this step eliminates the majority of the non-value-added time and allows the rest of the zero defect philosophy to be enabled. In essence, until there is an orderly flow, you cannot avoid flaws in tackling problems and the notion of zero defects is not possible at all.

As I observe, the deep relevance of Seiton to the mind is prioritising. It requires focusing on value creation. Connecting thoughts in a logical manner with proper analysis is a need. It in fact helps oneself to focus on tasks linked to targets in the context of overall purpose. What is connected to the purpose has to be a priority. The rest have to be “set aside” to be done only when time permits.

Seiso (Shine)

This involves cleaning the workspace and all equipment and keeping them organised. In a typical factory, at the end of each shift, clean the work area and be sure everything is restored to its place. This step ensures that the work station is ready for the next user and that order is sustained.

In fact, Seiso invites us to become our own janitors. As the Japanese advocate, cleaning must be done by everyone in the organisation, from the directors to drivers. Everyone should see the ‘workplace’ through the eyes of a visitor – always wondering if it is clean enough to make a good impression.

The way I see it, the deep relevance of Seiso to the mind is purity. This is where the spiritual dimension looms large. Pure thoughts devoid of malice, jealousy and other negativities are what is required. A shining mind is a spiritual mind empathising with others compassionately.

Seiketsu (Standardise)

This is all about uniformity and consistency. In a typical workplace, uniform procedure need to be ensured throughout an operation to promote interchangeability.

Seiketsu can also be viewed as “conformance to consistent clean-up.” It consists of defining the standards by which people must measure and maintain ‘cleanliness’. Seiketsu encompasses both people and environmental cleanliness. Personal tidiness can be a good starting point.

I think the deep relevance of Seiketsu to the mind is perseverance. So many start-ups might end up halfway through without proper completion. A mind that is geared towards perseverance will ensure continuity of a recommended habit, preferred value, or a best practice. One needs determination and dedication to sustain noteworthy initiatives.

Shitsuke (Sustain)

This refers to ensuring the disciplined adherence to the previous four Ss. It assists in preventing a possible backsliding to where thing was prior to the implementation of five S.

The key word here is discipline. It denotes practising five S as a way of life. As the Japanese say, the emphasis of Shitsuke is elimination of bad habits and constant practice of good ones. Once true Shitsuke is achieved, people will keep things naturally, without reminders and warnings.

The way I see it, the deep relevance of Shitsuke to the mind is pro-activeness. A disciplined mind is much more proactive than being reactive. It anticipates challenges and adapts itself for answers with awakening needed. With a proactive mind, purposeful, prioritised, pure actions can be continued with perseverance. In essence, it sums up the overall application of five S to the mind.

From Five S to Five Ps

As we have seen clearly so far, five S for the workplace can be applicable in a deep way as five S for the mind. In such an approach, it can even be called five Ps. They are purposefulness, prioritising, purity, perseverance, and pro-activeness. Table 1 captures this comparison of Five S for matter and Five P for the mind.

Table 1. Elaboration of Five S

Source: Author’s adaptation

Sri Lankan managers can embrace the above five Ps and then engage in five Ss so that mind and matter can be both organised in a better way.

The sad state I have observed in some of the Sri Lankan workplaces is that five S has become an award winning exercise overly focusing on the workplace forgetting the deeper aspect of the mind. I would say that five S should begin with the mind and then be applied to matter.

Let me revisit the first stanza of the Dhammapada as per the “Treasury of Truth” (Buddhanet.net) to conclude.

Mind precedes all knowables,

mind’s their chief, mind-made are they.

If with a corrupt mind

one should neither speak nor act

dukkha follows caused by that,

as does the wheel of the ox’s hoof.

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