Brilliant TED Talk: “Everyday Leadership”
Enjoy! Well worth 6 minutes. It is not about behavioral integrity directly, but it is powerful about leadership… and I suspect it is a mechanism that ultimately promotes integrity.
Be the Guy
This may be a re-post — but it is a story worth repeating.
My friend and colleague Kevin Basik has been involved in leadership training for Air Force at the Air Force Academy, The Citadel, and nationally for Air Force ROTC. When he teaches, he tells the following wonderful story.
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I was a young lieutenant in the Air Force in San Antonio, playing a rare round of golf with my father in law, when we got paired up with another two-some. The other gentlemen were Ed, a successful computer consultant from the San Antonio area with a thick Boston accent, and his friend, “Snake” (honestly), a Marine Corps officer, visiting from out of town.
During the round, my father-in-law and I learned to truly like and appreciate both Snake and Ed, and could see why they had been successful in their respective careers. We occasionally swapped seats in our carts and chatted with Ed and Snake. Over the course of the 4-hour round, we learned that Ed had also been in the Air Force – originally enlisted, got out, earned his bachelor’s degree, and then served 4 years as an officer. I could tell that Ed appreciated this Air Force bond we had, and he really took me under his wing during our round.
With 18 holes complete, both Snake and my father-in-law had to leave, but Ed and I stuck around for a beer or two in the clubhouse. Thinking that I would be getting out of the Air Force in a couple years, I was interested in getting mentored by a very successful executive – and one I could relate to personally.
After the first beer, I turned to Ed and said, “OK, you’ve walked the path I’m on, got out, and have obviously been very successful in the transition. I’m not looking to brown-nose or back-stab to get ahead, but I figure you can help me set myself apart in my career, whatever it is. Give me a nugget…what is it that you did that set you apart from the others who didn’t rise to your level?”
At first he sounded like he was answering a different question. “When I first made $20,000 in a year, I thought, ‘Man, I’ve made it. I’m single, have no real expenses, and have money to burn. This is easy!’ The first time I made $75,000 in a year, I thought, ‘I am really on my game. I’m a hard-working professional, but this is pretty easy.’ The first time I made $200,000 in a year, I got scared. I thought, ‘What the hell is going on? I’m sure not the smartest guy in the room, and there are others who are struggling a lot more to get less in the same business.’”
One of the endearing things about Ed is that he doesn’t come off as one of the smartest guys in the room. He might very well not be. But here he is, nonetheless. Successful and flawed. So I could appreciate his insight. Then he offered up what I thought was going to be the jewel of knowledge…
“It was then that I started paying attention to what I was doing that other people weren’t. And once I noticed it, I couldn’t believe how often examples of it popped up over and over. Kid, do you want to set yourself apart as a leader? You want to be the trusted guy that people want to go to for all the right reasons? Here it is…”
I waited for pearls to dribble off his tongue.
“Be the guy who actually DOES what you SAY you’re going to do.”
Wait, what? That’s it?!
He repeated more slowly. “That’s it. Be the guy who actually does… what you say you’re going to do. You think it’s simple, but it’s not. You think you do it already, but you don’t. Start paying attention to it, and you will realize
(1) how seldom people do what they say – simple promises, appointments, deadlines, and a hell of a lot more important stuff too – and
(2) how comfortable we’ve gotten about not doing it. We don’t expect it.”
“And here’s the answer to your question…when you pay attention to it, it will start bothering you when you’re not doing what you say. You won’t get it right 100% of the time, but it better be like a splinter in your brain when you don’t deliver. And guess what happens? When you DO start to become ‘that guy’ – the one who actually does what he says – it’s so unusual that people can’t help but notice.”
THAT’s how someone becomes the go-to guy! Not because he’s a suck-up, but because you know what he stands for. That’s why bosses and customers and spouses appreciate you and stick by your side — Ed had been happily married for over 20 years. The curse of this ‘nugget’ is that you will now be more irritated when other people are so comfortable NOT doing what they say. Pay attention to this rule, set this as a personal goal, and even the dumb guy in the room can become the leader.
Writeup in The Daily
WHERE’S ROCKET NOW?
Episode 1: Firewalking
Ithaca, N.Y.
Anyone can walk on fire — really! It doesn’t even hurt all that much. The secret is taking slow, steady steps that distribute weight across the entire foot. That’s the lesson firewalking guru Tony Simons teaches at his hot-footed workshops in Ithaca. It may sound like ninja training, but Simons is a peace-loving professor of organizational behavior at Cornell University in town. Instead of kicking butt, his how-tos are about overcoming the fears that hold us back in life. After all, if you can stroll barefoot across flaming coals, you can certainly ask the boss for a raise.
Watch 4-minute Video:
http://www.thedaily.com/page/2011/08/01/080111-news-raa-episode1-1-2/
March Firewalk Rocked
The March 12 firewalk at Foundation of Light was another extraordinary event. Eyes shone as participants realized more and more of their personal power. Larry Bear Watts brought a glass walk that we did as a special treat. Nobody hurt. The “pings” of the glass breaking underfoot as one slowly steps across are really striking — a different flavor of firewalk. Daniela Hess Scholl took extraordinary photos, which are up on Flikr. As always, a few testimonials:
This was an extraordinary evening. It was filled with exercises that were fun, surprising, and some took me to my limits. The balance between content and exercises was perfect. I would highly recommend this to anyone!
–Kai S., 31, graduate studentAs I arrived, I felt anxiety building — almost as if something inside was aware its death was coming. As each event unfurled, the anxiety lessened and a boldness grew. By the end of the night, it was completely calm with a quiet strength. I will never forget this night when a piece of me died and another was birthed.
–David Post, 51, teacherTony is a thoughtful and encouraging instructor. Thank you for a wonderful evening and for helping me believe I can do anything.
–Lucy Rain, 36, teacher
Next firewalk will be April 8. Join us to celebrate spring with renewed power. Discover you are unstoppable! As a special treat, Michelle Berry and I will run an optional next-morning debrief about how to carry the firewalk experience into your life. In other words, “What would you do if you knew you were unstoppable?”
Firewalk Heroes
The women this is about asked me to print their actual names. To say they gained courage from their firewalk workshop experience is a major understatement.
About three weeks before my October firewalk, I received this email:
Hello, My name is Pamela.
A while ago, my daughter Cheyenne read an article about your classes. She seemed very interested and we visited your web site and saw that you have an upcoming session. I was wondering about your scholarship. My daughter and I are both living in a shelter for women. Cheyenne has experienced a lot of trauma in her life and I am in awe of her constant and steady determination and compassion for others. She is a beautiful 16 year old artist in a very difficult situation. I think this might be a good healing experience for her. If you could e-mail me back to let me know that would be wonderful.
Thank you for your time, Pamela
I was intrigued. I decided that I could accept a 16-year old walker with a parent present, didn’t care that they did not have money, and loved the idea of being able to support their healing by offering a firewalk. I emailed back that they should come and pay only what they felt comfortable paying. According to Pamela, Cheyenne could not stop talking about it. They asked if they could bring the grandparents along just to watch and I said only if they come to the whole workshop. The grandparents did not come.
So the day of the workshop arrives, and Pamela and Cheyenne arrive a half hour early. An assistant who signs them in comes to me to tell me Pamela says I okayed them paying $10 for her daughter’s admission. I send back word that $10 is fine, but both she and her daughter are in the workshop — and she can choose whether or not to firewalk or do any of the other exercises. The two of them sit quietly in their seats as the workshop beginning approaches. They join in the workshop. Pamela keeps her coat on and does not say much. A short ways into the workshop, there is a big hug exchange around the room. Pamela and Cheyenne are really tentative with their hugs. Cheyenne takes on the remaining exercises with a growing sense of enthusiasm. Pamela holds back more. She is often last to take her turn. She declines to do the trust fall. Nobody pressures her, or even mentions it.
Both of them walked through the fire. Cheyenne walked fairly quickly when given the opportunity. In fact she walked several times, often with both hands above her head, with fingers raised in peace signs. Pamela waited until most of the group had walked. And then she walked. Simply, without drama. Across the coals. With no burns.
Afterwords, when people were saying what they experienced, Pamela said she was not yet ready to share. Cheyenne just crowed and thanked everyone around her. But what was really striking was what they wrote. After I run a firewalk, after I clean up, I get to go home and read what participants wrote as comments, feedback and testimonials. It is the cherry on top of my evening. I love leading firewalks.
Pamela wrote as a testimonial, “Indescribable, almost euphoric…life changing.” Not bad, I thought. Then I saw she had writtem a letter to me in a sealed envelope.
Tony
I wanted to say this to the group, but this experience was sooo personal for me. When I first contacted you I thought this would be a good experience for my daughter. I never thought about how much I needed this until it was over.
I left a very abusive relationship after 21 years. Some physical and much verbal abuse. One of the things he would say to me was that I would burn, he hoped I would burn, he threatened to burn our house down. I realized tonight that I can walk through fire and not get burned. I have a feeling that things are going to get better very soon. That I will be on the other side of this struggle, with a home, much love, and hope for the future.
I can see myself there.
Thank you
Pam
Wow. The abuser’s threat rendered hollow — no burning. Instead, hope.
And then there is 16 year old Cheyenne. Her testimonial read,
A life-changing experience. I suggest it for anyone who suffers abuse or any other kind of suffering. People have forgotten what it is like to trust and love. This event will make you feel powerful, at peace, and more outgoing to strangers.
Thank you so much for this chance to remember how it should always be!
Believe it or not, this gets better. Pam sent a sweet thank you email. After a few days I decided to email back to ask permission to share her letter, with names changed, to point a way for people in similar need of the firewalk experience. She granted it (ultimately requesting names not be changed) and added the folowing:
….I am looking at my experience from a whole different point of view. Instead of living in fear, I choose to be brave and use what I have learned to help other people. Doing so may also help with our own healing process.
I want to share with you something Cheyenne wrote a few days after the firewalk, (she has given her permission )…she writes….
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When I fell,
I was caught by strangers.
When I was afraid,
I “broke” through my silence.
When I was the main target,
I devoured the arrow with my throat.
When I forgot love,
I got a room full of hugs.
When I could hear you screaming inside my head,
I walked through the hot coals with peace signs in the air.
Nothing can get to me.
I am unstoppable………..I am a firewalker.
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I write this with tears of joy. I am soo proud of this beautiful, brave young woman – Thank you soo much for this experience.
I am proud of both of you, Pam and Cheyenne! Congratulations, firewalkers!
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