Commanding or Leading?

Some people love badges, especially badges of authority. They love hats, medals, uniforms, big offices, and pageantry. If you stand back and watch them you’ll quickly see that these people are needy and insecure and use “bossing around” to feed their own deep needs.

And then there are true leaders. Many, perhaps most, of the great leaders dress and carry themselves modestly, eschew pomp and happily work out of very simple spaces. If you stand back and watch them you’ll quickly see that they rarely think about themselves and their own needs, but are constantly affirming everyone on their team and building them up. “If it weren’t for you girls and guys, nothing would get done around here!” is the type of thing you hear said constantly and sincerely. They love their people, they mentor, and they care.

Interestingly enough, leaders are there in the hard moments and step right up there where the bullets are flying. Commanders are more likely to be found back in the bunker, saving themselves for another day.

Are you a leader or a commander?

Similar Posts

  • On Squirrels

    We hadn’t eaten in three days, being in the dead of a winter of very deep snow. But now at last we were chasing down a very promising meal– a heavy buck who wasn’t as fast as he thought he was. In moments Alfred and King, Blackie, Thunder, Lupo and Misty, and I would pull…

  • Train Wrecks

    Who can forget the train wreck scene of The Cassandra Crossing (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cassandra_Crossing) ? In an otherwise forgettable movie, we are frozen in horrified silence as the engine and passenger cars tumble in a dance macabre, like children’s toys flung carelessly into the gaping chasm. Train wrecks of all kinds have a terrible fascination for us….

  • Rabbit Trails

    Almost all of us get distracted and go chasing down rabbit trails from time to time. Some of us spend our entire lives exploring rabbit trails and never seem to accomplish much. As a general rule, rabbit trails are counterproductive. They distract us from focusing on the job at hand, and they lead to yet…

  • Losing the Edge

    In just a few weeks I will have been retired from the active practice of law for three years. To be sure, getting Career 3.0 (writing, speaking, coaching, consulting) up and running eats up an inordinate amount of time, so retirement so far has worked out to be a little busier than reading the paper…