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Shadow Work
Summer is not a season of shadow but it may be the
perfect time to consider the shadow side of leadership. What are
the challenges, obstacles, and blocks that we face as leaders? And,
perhaps most important, what are those personal issues that leadership
brings out in us?
Taking a good hard inventory of what is negative
and difficult about leadership is no one's favorite task but it
is a necessary one. And summer, when we often find our work life
slower and more relaxed and when the weather is anything but shadowy,
may be just the right time to set aside time to explore what holds
us back, what keeps us from accomplishing all that we wish to accomplish.
Many of us would rather "accentuate the positive,"
as the old song goes and most of the time looking and building on
what is good works best. But ignoring or hiding the shadow sides
of ourselves and our organizations can be the best way to ensure
failure of our missions. Those skeletons in our closets may do us
a lot more good if they are dragged out, cleaned up, fed heartily,
and put to good work.
In fact, it is possible to look at and reflect
on what we have in the shadows and put those very things to work
for us. As light casts a shadow, so every shadow comes with a light.
We can capitalize on what we consider our worst, weakest, and most
negative but to do it, we must take a good hard look at all of those
skeletons to discover their potential for good.
Leading an organization or a group, working as catalyst
and mapmaker can be a heady and exciting job but it is also one
that carries a heavy burden of responsibility and the potential
to create as much destruction as growth. Delving into our shadows
can ensure that we emerge able to provide positive and creative
leadership.
Do you have other questions on perspiration and
leadership? Write your questions here and we will include them in
future Helping Hands columns.
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