Thursday Thought – Slow Down and Ride

Note: Each Thursday I will post a little something to inspire us to finish the week strong. These Thursday Thoughts will be a quote, piece of music, artwork, or inspirational video.  Congratulations, you made it over the hump and let’s finish the week together.

I have not posted a Thursday Thought for weeks and well today is a Friday.  No worries, let’s roll with some inspiration from the seat of bicycle.  My bike commuting is becoming the norm and indeed I find inspiration from riding through the city to work each morning.   It is time to think and observe the world at a speed that seems right.

Enjoy your day and this weekend dust off that bike of yours and go for a ride.  I invite you to watch the video below for some inspiration. 

Driven By Skepticism

What makes you think you can teach us how to lead?

That is the question a student asks his college professor on the first day of the leadership course.    A fair and brave question to ask of the experienced teacher standing in front of the lecture hall.  If you were the professor, how would you respond?

Today I read an article (Who Can Teach Leadership?) in the Harvard Business Review by Gianpiero Petriglieri, a college professor in Organizational Development.  In the article he does admit that indeed no student ever asked this question.  Yet he is insightful to imagine such a question and how he would respond.

I too have taught leadership.  We sat in a conference room for days reviewing theory, best practices and assessments detailing our leadership style.  We were in pursuit of the ideal and I was the fool standing in front of the room.   Honestly I do not know how I would have answered that question years ago standing in front of that workshop group.   Today I would be excited to hear such a question, much like the author of this article.

How do we learn about leadership?  By leading.  By  following. 

By gaining one experience after another. 

Yet there is more.  We learn by our exposure to others who lead and yet are different from us.  Their style is different.  Their approach is different.  Their results are different.  This exposure allows us to check our own leadership practices and critically test ourselves.   A good leader-in-training is a skeptic.  He or she questions knowledge and beliefs as presented.  What is true for me?  What is my unique expression of leadership?

By the way, we are all leaders-in-training.  This skepticism should stay with us for life.    As the article points out, while skepticism is useful, cynicism is not.  Be critical and evaluate.  Do not prejudge and assume the worse.

What makes me think I can teach you about leadership?   Here is my story … the path I have taken.   What can you take from it?  I work to earn your trust and I listen to your story.   I commit to broaden your experience and then help you to pause, think and decide on your next step.  I walk this path with you.

I do not teach leadership.  We learn together.

Raised By Wolves

 In my last post I looked at the full cosmos to focus and gain perspective.  One can not observe space and the cosmos without thinking about time.  To look at the stars is to be a time traveler.  Thousands of years ago light from a distant star pointed toward Earth and reached out to me as I look to the sky.

Today I am thinking about my own life and origin.  We all have an origin story, unique and ours.

A bit of inward time travel if you will - how I was raised and the influences in my life.  As I focus on leadership I can not forget the influence of my origin story on my unique brand of leadership.  We work to create models, best practices and programs that show us the way of the effective leader.  While all this is important, let us not forget the unique expression each of us brings to our leadership.

The title of this post, Raised By Wolves, refers to my upbringing where I was heavily influences by my father and his coworkers.   My father was a Police Officer (now happily retired) and those he worked with were more than coworkers … they were brothers, they were family.   As a young kid, teenager, and early in my work career I was nearly always around my father’s extended family in the police department.

There were gatherings, celebrations, difficult times, and simple days when I just hung out with these men.   As I got older I worked at an Athletic and Social Club for Police Officers that my father founded.   I witnessed first hand how these men and women interacted and lead their lives.   Over time it became clear that I would not grow up to be one of them.  My path involved college and eventually a business career.  Nonetheless, my white-color bleeds blue and I am grateful for the way I was raised and the Police Officers who shaped me.

Here are some items I learned from my “family of wolves” that has influenced me as a leader:

  • Family and Community - Police Officers act as family and maintain a strong community.   I had many favorite uncles, none of whom were related to me.  Why not the same for our work environments – a stronger sense of community and yes, even family.
  • History and Stories – With Police Officers there is a strong sense of history and the generations who came before.  They want to remember and pass on hard learned lessons to the next generation.  A Police Officer has a difficult job these days which is often thankless.  They learn from each other and through their stories, they understand how to do their job and carry on the history.  I talked about it before – the importance of story, legacy and history for our leadership practice.
  • Be Prepared and Ready to React -  Police officers are not proactive beings.  Nonetheless, they are ready.  They practice often for many scenarios.  They go to work each day ready to react to the circumstances they face.  Yes, sometimes they make poor decisions, but far more often they make important and correct decisions under difficult circumstances.   In business we focus on being proactive.  Alas, this ideal does not always work out and at times we need to react to a situation.  A true leader while focused on the proactive, will be ready to react as necessary.  In fact it is how we are ultimately judged.  Yes, he was a strong proactive leader, but when needed he also reacted quickly, with authority and saved the day.
  • Take Corners Wide – This tip has always stuck with me.  When chasing a bad guy down the street always take the corner wide when turning as he may be waiting right around the corner to ambush you.    In business we have our own versions of the ambush – unknown and difficult issues right around the corner.   With confidence we do our own version of charging around the blind corner.  Remember to take it wide and be ready for anything.

That is my story.  As you read this think of your own story.  Be a time traveler and go back to check your influences.   Let us not forget how each of us is unique as a person, as a leader.

Children of the Earth and the Sky

A day for perspective.   Words from the late Carl Sagan.  A reminder that indeed, We Move Together.

As the ancient myth makers knew, we are children equally of the earth and the sky. In our tenure on this planet we’ve accumulated dangerous evolutionary baggage — propensities for aggression and ritual, submission to leaders, hostility to outsiders — all of which puts our survival in some doubt.

But we’ve also acquired compassion for others, love for our children and desire to learn from history and experience, and a great soaring passionate intelligence — the clear tools for our continued survival and prosperity.

Which aspects of our nature will prevail is uncertain, particularly when our visions and prospects are bound to one small part of the small planet Earth.

But up there in the immensity of the Cosmos, an inescapable perspective awaits us. There are not yet any obvious signs of extraterrestrial intelligence and this makes us wonder whether civilizations like ours always rush implacably, headlong, toward self-destruction.

National boundaries are not evident when we view the Earth from space. Fanatical ethnic or religious or national chauvinism are a little difficult to maintain when we see our planet as a fragile blue crescent fading to become an inconspicuous point of light against the bastion and citadel of the stars. Travel is broadening.

An astrophysicist and a poet … Carl Sagan.  As time allows I invite you to watch the video below as a further reminder, The Pale Blue Dot.

Potluck Math

Okay, I need to be honest with myself.  This will not work.  I tried to tie-down a crockpot to the rack on my bike.   There is no way I would make it to work without spilling the contents stored in the crockpot.

Alas, today I need to drive the car into work - it is potluck day.  A serious workday indeed.

You have to understand, I work with professional potluck folks who know how to plan and execute on a great department potluck.  I love to cook and always contribute to these potlucks.

Yet truth be told … I love to eat more than cook and a well put together potluck is a dream.

As usual there was more food than we could eat today.   It was enough food for an army.  It got me thinking … how can we look at a typical potluck mathematically.   We should be able to plan our potluck to have just enough food.

Here is how I work out the numbers:

  • Start with 50 people bringing in food for the potluck

  • Each person generally makes enough for 10 people

  • As such we have 500 portions

  • Yet as we line up to grab food to fill our plate, each person takes maybe 5 servings

  • So we use 250 servings or half of the total available

As such we planned for a one time department potluck and finish with enough food for a second day.  Maybe it is just good food with good people.  Maybe it is more and a lesson for each of us.

Contribute more than you consume. 

We Move Together

True Leaders Are Hardly Known

In the spirit of servant leadership comes a beautiful vision of leadership from author Ursula K. Le Guin.

She was a favorite author of mine as a child.  Her Earthsea books kept me up late at night dreaming of discovering magic for myself.  I continue to look.

Ursula K. Le Guin wrote on many topics including Taoist scripture.  She wrote her own rendering of the Tao Te Ching.   One may view this ancient writing as the oldest known on what we call leadership.

Maybe this vision is an ideal … maybe it is naive in today’s world.

I choose to smile, nod my head, and understand as I read it.  It speaks to me.  Leadership is influence.  Nothing says that influence needs to be recognized.

True leaders are hardly known to their followers.

Next best are leaders who are loved.

Next those who are feared.

And the worst are those they despise.

To give no trust.

Is to get no trust.

When the work is done well,

The people say:

We did it ourselves.

My Standard Job Interview Question

“What lessons have you learned in your work experience that you wish you knew when you started your career?”   This is one of my standard interview questions for job candidates and I always look forward to the answer.

Of course there is no wrong answer, but I have noticed that the responses all have something in common.  Each person speaks about themselves with no mention of others.   The answers range from getting organized, setting priorities, and learning Excel along with other software.  Some speak to the importance of meeting deadlines and delivering more than what the boss is asking.  I have even heard the answer, “I learned to keep to myself, get my work done, and leave co-workers alone”. 

In truth none of the answers have inspired me.   The above responses are fine, but it is an interview and a chance to stand apart from other candidates for the job.  My question is open-ended and I am looking for someone to expand, share more, and show me a spark.  My business environment is similar to nearly all workplaces, we have teams of people each with specific jobs, but work success demands folks connect and work together.   As managers we focus on individual performance.  As leaders we focus on the total being more than the parts.

As such, yes my bias, I would love to hear an answer to my question that involves how the person learned to work with others and succeed by working together.   I was once told that “we are hired for our technical expertise; we are fired because we can not play well in the sandbox”. 

Tell me how you learned to play well in the sandbox.

How would I answer my own interview question?  Sure, I would start with learning the importance of organization and setting priorities.  Yet I would expand my answer.

 “People will surprise you.   Where others can not work with some one, I find a way.   I look for the good in everyone and how they can contribute to our success.  Sometimes it does not work and we need to cut our loses, but we need to first try to make it work.  It starts with me.”

How would you answer the question?   Remember no wrong answers.  Really.

Do Not Surrender Fierceness

I am reading a John Steinbeck book called, Travels with Charley, In Search of America.   The book chronicles a journey John Steinbeck took across America in the early 1960′s.  He was older and thought he lost his connection to people.  Born and raised in the fertile agricultural area of California, he wrote amazing tales of common folk born from his deep connection to people.  Think “Of Mice and Men” or “Grapes of Wrath” or “East of Eden”.

John decided to hit the road to reconnect with people and himself.  He bought a custom pickup with camper shell.  With this truck he could go anywhere, sleep anywhere and just be anywhere.   His companion was only his faithful dog named Charlie.

I am working my way through this book.  The writing from John Steinbeck is amazing and I can not wait to finish the story.  Just today, my blogger friend David posted on his site Lead.Learn.Live a wonderful piece on “where do sentences come from”.  As I read it I thought of my current reading … this novel by John Steinbeck.  Without doubt John Steinbeck can write a sentence and another sentence and so on to fill a novel and create a compelling story.

Here is a short piece from Travels with Charley.  It reminds me that each of us need to hold our passion throughout our full lives.  Do not ever give up.  We are told that life is a journey.  John Steinbeck drove off one day to continue his journey and rediscover himself in the process.

Each of us need to decide when we may need to drive off for ourselves and rediscover.  Yes, life is a journey and while we may think we are alone, we are not.  John Steinbeck discovered he was not alone and we are not alone either.  Indeed, we move together.

I did not want to surrender fierceness for a small gain in yardage.  My wife married a man; I saw no reason why she should inherit a baby.  I knew that ten or twelve thousand miles driving a truck, alone and unattended, over every kind of road, would be hard work, but to me it represented the antidote for the poison of the professional sick man.  And in my own life I am not willing to trade quality for quantity.  If this projected journey should prove too much then it was time to go anyway.  I see too many men delay their exits with a sickly, slow reluctance to leave the stage.  It’s bad theater as well as bad living.

 

You Like Me … Very Inspiring Blogger Award

Thank you to Sandy at Another Lovely Day for nominating me for the Very Inspiring Blogger Award.  I write to inspire myself and it is a blessing to inspire others through my writing.    What a great way to support and honor those in our blogging community.  It is also a great way to find more wonderful blogs to follow.

Oh, there are rules for this nomination – cool:

  1. Link Back to the person nominating
  2. Post the award image on your blog
  3. Tell seven facts about myself
  4. Nominate 10 other blogs and let them know

Seven facts about me (Michael):

  1.  My new car is a bike.
  2. I love to cook and live in the kitchen.
  3. I studied primate behavior in college.  Yep, a great training ground for Corporate America.
  4. I started life as a dog person and got recruited to the other side.  Meow.
  5. The few, the proud … born and raised in San Francisco.
  6. Love to read.  My best way to relax.  It is my meditation.
  7. I think Doctor Who really exists.  Okay, maybe not, but it would be really cool.

Here are 10 wonderful blogs that inspire me.  If you have not checked them out already, please do so.

  • Lead.Learn.Live - David is the man.  The Man.  The Man!  I love his posts to inspire me daily.
  • Outside Air - Kari is one of the best writers out there.  Wow, read her stuff.
  • Goal Habits - Nearly daily great quotes to make me think.
  • Ranting of an Amateur Chef - Pat the amateur chef.  I love to cook and he does too.
  • Art of Manliness - Deep site with so much history and great writing.   This site helps me maintain my man card.
  • Another Lovely Day - Sandy nominated me and I love her writing too.  She inspired me to get serious about my six impossible things.  (guess what, nothing is impossible).
  • Leadership Freak – Dan’s site is a must for anyone focused on leadership.   I learn a lot from this site.
  • About Zen - Where ever you start, do end up with some Zen in your life.
  • Bucket List Publications - Lesley is great with one adventure after another.  I dream to do half of what she does.
  • Boyonabike - I am a bike commuter now and love the life of riding the bike.  Great to read this site and go deeper into the ride.

To everyone reading this post … do something today to inspire someone.  We all move together.

When A Nation Stands As One

The Irish love stories and this is one hell of a story.  It is the Olympics and the Irish need a winner.  The rescission has hit Ireland hard and the people need a reason to believe.  Their girl … their daughter … their friend became their hero as she won the gold medal at the Olympics in the first showing for women’s boxing.

She fought for Ireland, and a country stopped to watch.     Her name is Katie Taylor and she will be forever a legend in Ireland.

Dan Wetzel, a sports writer from Yahoo Sports wrote a touching and telling article about the incredible Katie Taylor and her impact on a nation.  Ireland stands on her shoulders.  I do invite you to read the full article yourself (read here).

They came because of Katie. In a nation of writers, they couldn’t dream her up. Every possible positive attribute the Irish want to see in themselves, she delivered. “Talented, modest, unaffected, lovely,” the Irish Times wrote. Throw in tough, religious, hard-working, humble, and loyal. “Warrior Hero,” the Irish Independent dubbed her.

I am proud of Katie as well and find her story amazing.  As an American I have heritage in several countries, but my Irish is strongest from my name to my love of a great story.

Congrats Katie Taylor.  For you and Ireland … WeMoveTogether.