|

Leaders
build fires that warm, yet sometimes get burned by them
The statement is a classic, editorialized as only my father could
do: "He who builds a fire warms himself twice -- and sometimes burns
himself."
Well, at least the last part is his.
Our family loved fires in the den fireplace. What is more restful
and tranquil than a cold winter's evening, a crackling log fire,
coffee brewing gently nearby, and the family lazily doing whatever?
But, by the time you get an old-fashioned fire laid -- using dry
softwood, scrap paper, crisscrossed splintered slabs, topped with
large logs -- you are warmed, if not hot and exhausted, from the
labor.
Then you strike the match and watch the first brilliant blaze of
paper. The softwood catches onto the plan and does its job, tickling
the hardwoods above it. Soon the big logs get in rhythm with their
role in the process and, like proud men busting their buttons, throw
out heat that moves you to a more distant spot in the room.
But sometimes things don't go exactly as planned. The paper burns
but the wood refuses. So you go poking around, repositioning first
one log, then another. And sometimes, before you know it, you burn
yourself.
"He who builds a fire warms himself twice -- and sometimes burns
himself."
And that's true in building fires in people, too, especially if
you are a leader.
And who isn't a leader in some areas?
Friends or family members come to you for help in addressing an
issue. Or, perhaps you are head of an organization or business. Or
you have an expertise or experience that makes your input valuable.
Folks seek you out for guidance, direction and leadership. In
short, they need a fire built for them and in them.
And you do your best. You teach, stimulate, encourage and hope
somehow to strike a flame of personal motivation within them. Often
it works. The fire catches and burns. And you are twice warmed.
First, by stimulating and teaching others, you often learn more
than you teach. Guiding others can be a laborious but enlightening
experience as you struggle to find just the right elements for a
good fire.
Second, it is a powerful experience to see the fire catch on,
where the carefully laid words of advice have sparked independence
and fueled growth. Others begin to self-motivate, and that warms
you.
But sometimes, the plan backfires or doesn't fire just right. And
you get burned in the process. Sometimes the person to whom you give
your best energies and most attention burns you after the process,
if not during it.
Parents often get burned as they build fires of stimulation,
motivation and expectation in their children. It happens also
between husband and wife in marriage.
Yet every leader is in the fire-building business. We should
anticipate being twice warmed and yes, sometimes burned.
It simply comes with the complex territory of leadership.


9/29/2007
The Herald-Dispatch
|