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Leadership and
Skim Boarding
By Dan
Reiland
While
on vacation with my family over the 4th of July holiday at Panama City Beach,
Florida, I became fascinated with skim boarding. Of course, when Dad gets into
it then the whole family gets into it. So I bought the kids boards at Wal-Mart,
and we began to teach ourselves.
The
kids insisted that I go first. Big mistake. People my age should buy their kids
skim-boards, not ride them. I watched the other (young) skimmers and thought -
"nothing to it." Big mistake number two. I ran as fast as I could, tossed the
board down into the surf, and jumped. The next thing I knew was that an
incredible pain was shooting up from my hip and jamming into my brain saying,
don't even think about doing that again. Did I listen to that? No. Big mistake
number three. Five more times I ran, tossed the board, and jumped. Five more
times I landed on the same hip, now purple and green. But I'm here to tell you,
I stood tall, forced a smile, and was a hero, because I went first!
Like
any good student of leadership (or skim-boarding) I decided I needed to learn
more in order to get better; so I limped back to the safety of my
umbrella-covered beach chair and began carefully watching how it was done.
To my
surprise, the good skim-boarders fell too. They fell over and over again, and
hard. The difference was they got up quicker and seemed to enjoy it. I watched
them do their thing for a long time. They fell more times than they remained
standing. But they always got back up and did it again. That was the first
principle that reminded me about good leadership.
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Leaders
fail and make mistakes, but get back up and try again.
There is a strange catharsis
that comes when a group of veteran and successful leaders tell stories about all
the mistakes they've made. When these stories are told to young, emerging
leaders, a type of permission-giving freedom takes place. The leaders realize
that this permission to make mistakes is not an excuse for sloppy work, but how
leaders learn. In fact, it's how good leaders become great leaders. There are
some things, candidly many things that you cannot learn from a textbook. You
must get out of the classroom or conference center and get in the trenches to
become a good leader. And the moment you step onto the front lines of
leadership, you will make mistakes.
The important point to
understand is that when you make a mistake or fail in some way, that it is not
the end of the story. Instead, you get back up, dust off your knees, and get
back in the game. All the while, asking the question, what did I learn? And how
will I lead better?
Back on
the beach, bruised in body and slightly embarrassed by my six "crash and burns"
I decided to ask a skim boarder who knew what he was doing for a couple of tips.
I walked up to this tough and tan looking 18-20 year old. My kids turned and
looked away afraid of how the cool skim boarder would respond to this
middle-aged, pasty-white man, with a waistline that is closer to a "one-pack"
than a "six-pack."
The guy
responded graciously. I told him I was new at skim boarding, and he said: "I
know." I asked him what I could do to make progress and avoid killing myself. He
said, "Dude, the first thing is that you need to wax your board." WAX! No body
told me about WAX!!! He went on to explain that I would continue to slip and
fall until I got some board wax. Wax. OK, good what else? He said, "Dude, you're
trying to ride goofy foot." Goofy foot. What's that? He explained the importance
of putting my first foot to hit the board on the back of the board for better
control. OK, wax and first foot in the back. It worked! This gives insight to
the second principle.
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Leaders
learn from others to avoid making unnecessary mistakes.
Fortunately, we don't have
to make all our own mistakes. I have been a student of leadership for well over
twenty years. And though I've made plenty of mistakes I have also avoided untold
mistakes by learning from others.
We learn from the leaders we
respect. John Maxwell is my leadership mentor. He has coached me well. Yes, I am
fortunate to have such a mentor, but I am also a good student. Very early on
John taught me to come prepared with well thought thorough questions. It's one
thing to "hang around" good leaders, it's quite another to intentionally learn
from them. I don't ask generic or lazy questions. I ask specific questions that
I have already invested effort and energy to try to answer on my own. In other
words, learning takes preparation. There are no short cuts.
We learn from leaders we
don't respect. There are leaders that I do not want to follow. In fact, there
are leaders that motivate me to be the direct opposite of who they are and how
they behave!
It is not possible to avoid
all mistakes. It's not wise to avoid all mistakes. But by learning from others,
you can avoid unnecessary mistakes.
Seaweed
seemed to be an undesirable reality for the skim boarders. (For me, it just
broke my fall.) They were constantly moving and adjusting to find the clearest
water for the best rides. No one likes seaweed. For someone playing in the ocean
it's an annoyance, but for someone skim boarding, it impedes progress. Another
observation revealed that the timing of the wave was a huge deal. From personal
experience I can attest to the fact that it is extremely difficult to skim-board
on sand only! You've got to hit the right amount of water at the right time. The
ebb and flow of the waves and the tide made a big difference. You have to pay
attention to skim board well. Aha! Principle three.
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Leaders
study the landscape and become masters of timing.
So it is with leadership.
We've all met leaders who appear to be clueless. Far too often statements are
made about a leader like: "She just doesn't seem to know what is going on," or,
"He doesn't have his head in the game." The tides are changing but they don't
have a clue.
A good leader is not only
sensitive to the cultural and emotional landscape around him, but studies it
well. In this presidential election year, one of the factors that will give
Kerry or Bush an advantage is who appears to be most in touch with the realities
of the American culture and its problems.
Being in touch with what is
going on is good, but it isn't enough by itself. A good leader must also know
when to take action. It has been said many times: "timing is everything." It may
not be everything but its close! Like the skim-boarder who knows that a few
seconds one way or another makes a big difference, a leader understands that the
right decision at the wrong time is a problem.
Leaders must always face the
tension of moving too quickly or too slowly. Beyond your own intuitive
abilities, there are at least three things that help you master this skill:
gathering the wisdom from others, prayer, and experience.
I was
impressed with the tenacity and endurance of the young skim boarders. It was
easy for me to lie in my beach chair under an umbrella and read a book. It's
another thing to stand all day attempting to catch waves and get the best ride
possible. Especially when falling down is part of the package. Our vacation was
long enough that I actually saw some of these guys get better! They got longer
rides and the expression of exhilaration on their faces became brighter and
brighter. But their progress never came without a price tag. They really worked
hard at their sport...principle number four.
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Leaders can
achieve success but not without consistent effort and hard work.
There is no such thing as a
free lunch. While this may be an old saying, it is nonetheless true. Life
demands payment. No investment, no return. If you want to lose weight, you must
pay the price of diet and exercise. If you want success as a leader you must put
forth the effort.
This seems apparent, and
perhaps simplistic. I write this to you because so many leaders do not work
hard. Though I do not support workaholic behavior, I do believe that success
comes from working smart and working hard.
Drift is real in every
leader's life. It is natural. Only machines are capable of perfection and even
they need to be periodically recalibrated. Leaders drift toward their comfort
zone, toward the path of least resistance, and toward apathy. This process is
imperceptibly slow but it happens. Drift is not a leaders desire, but left
unattended it happens.
Leaders take hits and get
tired, so the fuel tank runs low. Working hard over the long haul is difficult.
Without intentional effort, zeal and commitment turn to duty and
self-preservation. Working hard is hard work! The irony is that in order to work
hard you must also rest and play hard. This is one of the reasons that led me to
my vacation on the beach in Florida. But I'm rested now, and ready to once again
work hard and smart.
It's
been a while now since my skim-boarding debut, and I'm walking better now.
Hopefully I'm also walking wiser as a leader. How about you?
This
article is used by permission from Dr. Dan Reiland's free monthly e-newsletter
'The Pastor's Coach' available at www.INJOY.com.
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