I’ve addressed the issue of leadership before in SurvivalBlog. I’d like to expand on that a bit, in this essay:
True leadership is a status conferred by knowledgeable persons whose choices reflect their recognition of ability, experience, integrity, character, and a full commitment to a common cause or endeavor.
Being chosen as a leader generally is a result of a decision that they will be supported and enabled by the leader to be successful and secure in the common group efforts.
Often the new group members have made their choice of membership based on their confidence that the current leader is the person they need to provide access for them to the means and support necessary for their success in a common effort or cause.
My definition of who and what a leader is has come to me through 65 plus years of personal experience starting with my enlistment in the US Army, in January of 1958, at age seventeen. I was a Smart Alec kid who was a high school dropout with a severe speech impediment, stuttering.
Immediately after basic training, the Army, in its infinite wisdom, sent me to Fort Sill, Oklahoma to the Signal Corps school to learn radio communication equipment repair.
I learned a lot about the realities of life and true leadership during two years, July 1958 -1960, in the 25th Infantry Division in the then Territory of Hawaii, not yet a state. In that environment I was able to earn two promotions in the first year of active duty. I worked within a specific plan to be a success in spite of my then disability. I believed then, and now, that being disabled is not being unable. Plus two more years of stateside duty, all in communications, and a good discharge in March 1962. I am old enough to have great-grandkids already.Continue reading“More About Leadership, by Old Bobbert”
