Friends,
I asked my daughter - who's got her first fulltime job - if she had seen
some good or bad leadership this week. She said a team of people had been working
on the solution to a problem, and when the manager came in and asked what ideas
they had, one of the people said, "I was thinking…I'm
pretty sure…I think this will work, etc.," as if he had been figuring
it all out himself. All five at our dinner table acknowledged the depressive
effect when someone doesn't realize there's no "I" in
team.
Her story prompted me to tell them about how Jim Knaus tried to teach me a
lesson 10 years ago. I had authored a letter that went out to Jim and a couple
hundred people. He sent his copy back. It was marked with red
marker the way our tyrannical Advanced Placement English teacher Fr. Polakowski
would savagely attack our every mistake. Jim had circled every "I"
in the page-and-a-half letter. Yeeesh, there were an embarrassing number of
red circles.
In both cases the multitude of I-statements were at the very least a major
distraction to the work. Can you imagine the number of organizational problems
that have a direct link to EGO? It happens a lot because who doesn't
have an ego in play? Often, likely in both cases above, ego
takes over quite unconsciously. Getting conscious really matters, because
when ego is out front, we get in the way of good teamwork. What we don't
realize is - paradoxically - the focus-on-me also gets in the way of our
own growth, fulfillment, and peace. If you are up for a remarkable, onion-peeling
look at how YOUR ego works - and works against you - pick up Eckhart
Tolle's somewhat misleadingly named best-seller, A New Earth: Awakening
to Your Life Purpose. Reading this book was like having someone circle my inner
thoughts with a big red pen. Yeeesh again. You can't read Tolle and not
see some things you might not want to see. But the upside is you'll have
ten times more awareness, opportunity and possibility when you see how you may
be letting the little "me" of ego get in the way of much greater
purpose and a powerful and life-giving "we."
For those who have read Tolle, I'd love to read your
comments about what you learned from him. Were you blown away by his quotation
of the fourteenth century poet Hafiz? You can find Hafiz at the top of this
week's RFL blog.
Pay attention to your "I's" this week. You can never get
too much self awareness if you want to
Lead with your best self!
Dan