Tag: TIme

Leaders and the Art of Undoing

“Leaders do.”

“Do what?”

“You know, they do stuff.”

“They get stuff done.”

“Oh.”

“See there goes one now, off to a meeting or something.”

“Do they ever stop?”

“I don’t know, it’s kinda frowned upon.”

“Well, how do they know if they’re doing the right stuff?”

“I suppose they get a raise or a promotion.”

“That’s it?”

“Yeah.”

“If I was a leader I’d stop doing so much stuff.”

“What do you mean?”

“I think there’s too much running around.”

“Um, I don’t think they can just stop.”

“Well, then maybe they should try undoing some stuff.”

“Huh?”

When you think about your day today.

And if you were really honest.

How much time was invested in leadership?

I’m sure there was much doing.

Doing and doing.

But how was the leading?

Who did you connect with today?

Who did you serve?

Influence?

Ok, lots of activity towards goals and results?

Of course, that counts.

But take a closer look.

How much of it was mindless?

Rituals and routines with long-forgotten origins.

Time unexamined.

Time.

That most precious and limited resource.

The Art of Undoing requires a new relationship to time.

Be aware that how you live this moment, is how you live your life.

Start to pay attention to now.

“What am I doing now?”

“Is this the best way I could be spending my time?”

Give more weight to your intentions.

More balance to your decisions.

Learn to view time as your guide, not your master.

(Pause: Time as a guide, not a master - how does that change your perspective?)

A few considerations for your to-undo list:

  • Undo Busyness - You can start to undo things that aren’t really contributing to the kind of experience you want for your life. Things that aren’t contributing real value to the people you lead or to the organization. Things that might make you feel better in the short run but leave you exhausted and unfulfilled. You can press the reset button - unpack your schedule, unsubscribe from lists, uninvite yourself to meetings, unclutter your inbox, underperform on the trivial and overperform on what’s meaningful.
  • Undo Noise - As organizations, we can examine the activities, processes, procedures, meetings, etc. that consume our collective energy and creativity. Often we don’t even recall why we started them in the first place. We can undo those activities that no longer make sense. Have an “undoing event” and invite everyone to share ideas on things it’s time to stop. Add “let’s undo that” to your corporate conversations. Reward undoing. You can undo a lot more than you think. Undo until it’s uncomfortable.
  • Undo distractions - Put down the phone. Close the browser. Quiet your mind. Do make eye contact. Do listen. Do focus. Do finish.

Thoughts On Being Available

with-arms-wide-open-jpg

“We’re in this life, and if you’re not available, the sort of ordinary time goes past and you didn’t live it. But if you’re available, life gets huge. You’re really living it.” - Bill Murray

Wondering if I’m available for life.

To open a door.

Make me laugh.

Make me cry.

Challenge me.

Inspire me.

Thinking about the minutes I spend lost in my mind.

Carelessly grinding through the task at hand.

Paths that never cross.

Blank space.

Literally,

Killing time.

What if I made it my intention to be available for life?

Open.

Aware.

Ready.

Anticipating.

Expecting life to surprise me.

Unexpectedly.

Sometimes I treat life like a movie recorded on the DVR. I just want to fast-forward to the good parts and skip all the less-interesting stuff. But with life…I only get to play the movie once.

This can really change your perspective.

Do you feel it?

I think I’m getting there.

This isn’t “available” like an open door policy or time on your schedule.

It’s being present with the person across the room, excited about what you might discover about you, or them, or something completely off the agenda. Going into a meeting with a sense of curiosity instead of dread. Approaching the problem with fascination instead of frustration. Managing your interpersonal conflict with compassion instead of judgment. Making space for love to sneak in and catch you unprepared.

Letting each experience open before you as if it were brand new and filled with possibility.

A familiar song you’re hearing for the first time.

(OK that sounds kind of hard but what if you just made it your intention?)

Change your perspective on the good parts of the movie.

Life is calling you to a bigger story.

Right now.

Don’t miss it.

Be available.

 

*How could this mindset impact your life, your relationships, your leadership, your work?

 

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