My Break in the Hospital

By | February 22, 2020

[February 22, 2020]  It’s been a week since I posted last here in my leadership blog.  In the early morning hours of Saturday morning, last week, I drove myself to the Emergency Room for what I thought would be a quick in-and-out after a doctor looked at what was hurting in my back.  After a CT scan, the… Read More »

Clearing the Spindle: Leader Failures

By | February 15, 2020

[February 15, 2020]  I’m a little late posting today because of a trip to the local hospital emergency room.  All is well, not to worry.  Readers over the next couple of days might see minor interruptions in my website postings. Now, for the issues where leaders have failed and people suffered. Good leadership could have foreseen these issues… Read More »

Discipline Comes from Within You

By | February 14, 2020

[February 14, 2020]  Navy Commander Joe Gallagher was the kind of man that you would want to meet in a bar and have an entertaining, fun evening.  He was smart, funny, and had that kind of personality everyone wanted to be around.  But, Joe couldn’t control his alcohol consumption one-night last year and he assaulted a police officer. … Read More »

‘Rules Don’t Apply to Me’

By | February 13, 2020

[February 13, 2020]  The roof was cratered by a JDAM 500-pound bomb1 and it had crushed the support columns of a three-story Iraqi ministry building.  Back in early 2004, my Army Engineers were studying the building as a possible site for an Infantry Brigade Headquarters.  Sitting inside at the time was a young sergeant from the 1st Armored… Read More »

Reading List (Update):  on Character

By | February 12, 2020

[February 12, 2020]  I know what you’re thinking already if you skipped this intro and went straight to read this Reading List choice.  How in the world could he write a review on “The Autobiography of Calvin Coolidge”?  Does he think we’re boring or ahistorical or just plain brain dead?  “Silent Cal”?  Come on!  My good readers, please… Read More »

Always Train Your Crew

By | February 11, 2020

[February 11, 2020]  A tradition in the U.S. Navy upon the retirement of a sailor is to give a paddle as a gift.  The paddle (or oar) is symbolic of the naval team on which that sailor gave their time and devotion.  It is also a long-standing tradition for naval leaders to be responsible for training their crew. … Read More »

Great Leaders Dramatize Ideas

By | February 10, 2020

[February 10, 2020]  The idea that senior leaders aggressively promote their people, organizations, and missions is not new thinking.  These leaders also dramatize ideas that are at the core of what they do. Years ago, in 1964, Italian journalist Luigi Barzini, Jr. wrote the popular book The Italians.1  In his book, he delved deeply into the Italian national… Read More »

Things That Don’t Matter

By | February 9, 2020

[February 9, 2020]  One of the desirable attributes I find among combat veterans is they are skillful at judging what is essential, in contrast to those things in life that don’t matter.  Perhaps the reason is they have seen truly horrific destruction and death and can understand that there are small things in life that are mere distractions… Read More »

The Most Destructive Leader Trait

By | February 8, 2020

[February 8, 2020]  Growing up in the rural Deep South, my grade-school teachers often told us stories about the history of the United States.  For little kids like my friend Wilson and me, we remember being mesmerized by the Benedict Arnold story and how he betrayed our fledgling nation. We were raised as Christians, attending church everyday Sunday… Read More »

An Imaginary Speech

By | February 7, 2020

[February 7, 2020]  The official political relationship between the American Colonies and the British Government in the mid-1700s was not always “gentlemanly,” but it was a time that the expression of sentiments was open and honest.  I find that reading the letters and publications can give us an education in wittiness, clarity, and honesty. Benjamin Franklin’s life and… Read More »