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Collaborative Leadership Group

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Category Archives: Uncategorized

Servant Leadership – What exactly is it?

22 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by Beth in Leadership, Uncategorized

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Please clicl below for a great summary of what Servant Leadership is by Trinity Western University.

Servant Leadership: A great synopsis

http://twu.ca/about/values/servant-leadership-life.html

Kevin Eikenberry – I Wonder

16 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by Beth in Uncategorized

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This is an older post but I just came across it.  Think about it – when was the last time we were in awe of something … wonderful?  Spring is here … take time and smell the roses.

I Wonder Where the Wonder Went

by Kevin Eikenberry on July 1, 2011

Yesterday I posted my weekly Powerquote – with questions, action steps and a commentary focused around a quotation from Francis Bacon about wonder (read it here).  As I was writing the post, I thought about a piece I wrote many years ago, that became a chapter in my book Vantagepoints on Learning and Life.

Because of the connection, I’ve excerpted this chapter from Vantagepoints (if you want a signed copy, you can do that here, or go to Amazon if you prefer!)

I was a fifth grader the first time I flew on a commercial plane flight  I remember being amazed that I could get all the soft drinks I wanted for free.  I remember the wonder of looking out at the clouds and the topography far below.  I remember watching us land.  The entire thing was a great adventure, and I was full of wonder.

In college I flew once in awhile, and I always got a window seat – I wanted to be able to watch the ground pass below me.  The wonderment of it all – the patterns and beauty of looking out the window was overwhelming.  Yes, I would sometimes read or do something else, but much of the flight I would sit… and stare… and be in wonder of it all.

Soon after I started working, I found myself flying a bit more, and it quickly became clear that during my business life I would fly – a lot.  I mentioned once to my Mom, who loves to fly, that I’d never lose that great feeling that an airplane flight brings – and that I would always get window seats.

Somewhere between flying once every couple months and flying 100,000 miles per year, I moved to the aisle, and I lost the wonder of it all.

Last week, I was booked in a window seat, and I stopped working or reading long enough to spend some time looking out the window.  Today, as I write this, I have just finished 20 minutes of window gazing.  Some of the wonder is back!

There are many things in our lives that we once considered wonderful (full of wonder). Many of those things we now take for granted.  All of this makes me wonder where the wonder has gone.

Where’s the Wonder?

I believe seeing the wonder in things around us is one of the ways we make our lives more meaningful and enjoyable.  This is one of the reasons we
go on vacations.  Yes, some vacations consist of little more than a beach (which can be wonderful in many ways), but many take time to learn new things on vacations, going to museums, art galleries or national parks.  Some travel to exotic places to marvel at sites, cultures and foods.  Wonder plays a big part in the allure of these trips and the satisfaction gained from the experiences.

You may be thinking, is wonder really such a big deal?

Yes!

Why? Think about it; the absence of wonder is often called boredom, or worse, cynicism. These hopefully are not things people aspire to!

Certainly, we all can experience wonder in new things – new locations, new experiences, new books, new ideas – but I believe I found an important key to a more enjoyable life just waiting outside the plane window.  That key is adding more wonder to life by re-capturing past wonder and finding new wonder in the things I do each day.

Re-discovering Wonder

There are several things we can do to add to the wonder in our lives – to make our lives more wonder-full.

  1. Look at things through fresh eyes.  Think about things that have become habit for you.  The next time you do them, do them as if you were a beginner again.  Start
    with your drive or commute to work.  Make it an exercise in finding wonder.  For example, perhaps you go by a school on your way.  Spend some time thinking about wonderful things from your childhood days in school.  Then try this “fresh-eyed” approach to other routine tasks.
  2. Make a list of things you found wonderful at different stages in your life.  If you write a journal do it there.  If not, make your list instead of watching TV one evening.  Once you have it, spend some time reveling in the wonders on your list. Think too about how you could re-experience those things again.
  3. Make a list of the wonders you find each day or week.  Again, a great journaling task or a great routine to add to your planning for a new week.
  4. Plan a mini-vacation or a day trip to someplace wonderful for you.  I grew up on a farm, so a drive in the country in spring or fall is particularly helpful in restoring my sense of wonder in the growing process.  Others might find your mini day to be boring – help them see your wonder – and in turn you will experience your own at a deeper level.  Then go with them when they try to recapture their own.
  5. Go to an old event and focus on different things.  The next time you go to a ball game, focus less on the action and more on the spectators, or vice versa.  Go shopping and shop for something entirely different than you usually would.  You get the idea.

These are just a few ideas to help you re-infuse your life with wonder. This idea is really taking hold in my life and each day is more wonder-full and more meaningful as well.  I believe when you choose to rediscover your wonder, you’ll benefit in the same ways.

You know, the Mississippi River is an awesome sight from 31,000 feet.

http://blog.kevineikenberry.com/creativity/i-wonder-where-the-wonder-went/

 

Use Your Imagination

25 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by Beth in The Best of Leadership: The best tidbits from other blogs, Uncategorized

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Useful Leadership Quotes? – You Decide

*****

Today’s world appreciates brevity.

Useful leadership quotes inspire, distill, or direct, quickly.

Will you bring your perspective and insights to this set of leadership quotes? Grab one or more and expand, correct, or modify it?

17 leadership quotes for you to play with:
  1. Great leaders don’t change people. They create environments where people can change themselves.
  2. You matter most when you make others matter. From: How to Start Right and End Well
  3. Great leadership includes leading people to self-discovery.
  4. Be predictable but reject conformity.
  5. Systems don’t complete projects people do.
  6. Conformity never inspires. From: 5 Surprising ways to Inspire Others
  7. Stop pretending you want change when in reality you want comfort.
  8. If you want to transform an organization, grow new leaders.
  9. The question that frees you isn’t what should I do, it’s what should I stop. From: Over Commit to One Thing
  10. Believe in those who believe in you.
  11. Leaders believe in others.
  12. If you can see the finish line it’s time to start again.
  13. If you aren’t learning you’re losing.
  14. Things that don’t make sense have more potential than things that do.
  15. Leaders give people permission to make a difference.
  16. Love gives meaning and worth to everything you do. From: From Low Impact to High Impact Leadership
  17. Opportunities hide in unmet needs.
Next level challenge:

Give feet to a quote by developing a set of hot-to’s. For example: Be predictable but reject conformity.

Be predictable:

  1. Treat everyone with equity; reject favoritism.
  2. Avoid flying off the handle.
  3. Think before you speak.
  4. Adopt and consistently observe policies and procedures.
  5. Prepare people for change.
Reject conformity:
  1. Invite outsiders in.
  2. Generate more than one solution.
  3. Predictably ask, “Why not?”
  4. Challenge inefficiencies.
  5. Eagerly explore new ideas. Say yes as much as possible.

**********

Which quotes speak to you? Modifications?

What how-to’s can you add to a quote?

**********

Visit Dan Rockwell at http://leadershipfreak.wordpress.com/

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