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BLG Leadership Insights Proactive Stories

SATs & Global Change: The Power of Vision

My room was dark and cold as I contemplated whether the chill I felt was through the lack of heating or the cloud of fear floating over me. I pondered on the darkness being a result of the lights going out or simply the confusion and uncertainty that plagued me. For the third day that week, the electricity had been interrupted. With inflation over one thousand percent and unemployment rising to over seventy percent, my beloved country Zimbabwe, was now a sea of corruption, broken hopes, and dreams. I looked down at the wax candle and sadly viewed the fading candle as my own personal representation of losing hope of ever achieving my dreams and visions.

I remember this defining point in my life because it was the day I decided that with an eternal flame of hope inside my heart I would take action towards achieving my vision of staring a new life in the USA and attending college. I almost dropped out of high school because I could not bear to see my parents suffer working daily for meager salaries. Although, I had a deep burning desire to go to college, our local University was constantly closed due to political violence. I then took on the responsibility of helping pay the bills at home. Our money never really had any value so anything we earned was always spent on daily expenses. Since childhood, I had clear visions of where I wanted to go and what I wanted to do but I almost lost hope and accepted defeat as the situation in my country left me powerless.

Joel Barker writes about how action without vision just passes time. My life at that point felt exactly like that, passing time. Dreaming about moving to the USA and attending college, I would imagine the journey, meeting new people, and the academic heights I would reach. Yet, that is all they were, dreams. That night, watching the candle fade, I kept hearing my mother’s words about how the universe would always provide us with everything. With these words echoing in my mind I made a list of actions that I would take to ensure my path to studying in the USA. I analyzed my situation and immediately changed my way of thinking. Nothing was going to stop me from achieving my vision.

I wrote to my aunt in Dallas and asked her to send me practice books on the SAT and information about colleges in Dallas. I explored my options on making more money by changing jobs and industries, accepting a new challenge of a commission based salary. Initially, it was difficult, but I remained focused on my vision of going to the USA and attending college and worked harder and harder as time progressed. My determination impressed my boss and he promoted me to a sales manager. I actually started making enough money to save up for a plane ticket to the USA. Every night before I went to bed, I would voraciously study my SAT handbook and the universe also noticed my positive actions and I was graced with winning a green card lottery. My SAT score was in the top ten percentile and I had saved enough money to move to USA and finally realize my once forgotten dream.

I truly believe that if you develop a vision and follow it through with action you can change your life, you can change your community, your nation and the world. Leaders such as Gandhi and Mandela had positive and inspiring visions, so well developed, that when followed through with action, they changed the history of the world. Vision with action helped achieve my dreams.

Picture Credit: Pure9

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BLG Leadership Insights

Proactive Leadership and the Successful Artist

PaintsOver the last number of years, I’ve had occasion to interview a number of artists who in many ways have to be considered a success. While success in the art world is subjective, I would consider a successful artist as someone who does not simply define themselves as an artist, but as a person who pursues artistic development as a career and who lives, for the most part, off an income directly or indirectly supported by their artistic pursuit.

What struck me the most about the artists I’ve interviewed is their persistence. Most have pursued their artistic careers for well over thirty years, but all share a continuous commitment to their artistic pursuits.

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BLG Leadership Insights

When Is Anything Better Than Nothing? Or, Visionaries Vs. Rube Goldberg

rubegoldbergIn proposing change and new agendas, visionaries often tend to reach far, and sometimes they overreach.  In overreaching, they fail to establish the coalition of support they need to implement their vision.  That is when negotiation begins.  That is when chipping away at the vision results in reformulation and compromise, often leaving the vision as a reconstituted and at times, unrecognizable, Rube Goldberg contraption made up of remnants, spare parts, and those practical essentials that give the vision some sense of minimal forward movement.

A choice leaders often face is simple: Fight for the vision and stay stubbornly committed to your intention or survive with that contraption that emerges from the chipping-away compromise process.  The tactical alternatives are just as simple.