New book, Women's Ways of Leading, features Gail Taylor

Linda Lambert and Mary E. Gardner have crafted a wonderful book about the changing nature of leadership. "While highlighting the vision and characteristics that women are bringing to the table, Women's Ways of Leading offers value for both sexes throughout the book," writes Gail, "The authors have included many tables (what I call shift papers) indicating both subtle and dramatic changes in what matters as one steps up to take a leadership role in shaping both the present and the future." Gail is included in the book under the sub-title, The Transforming Woman. Here the concept of sapiential leadership is featured. We've added the book to our bookshelf, where Gail comments further.</p>

The Other Side of Complexity

I would not give a fig for the simplicity this side of complexity, but I would give my life for the simplicity on the other side of complexity.   Oliver Wendell Holmes, Former US Supreme Court Justice

It used to be that most people hated the SCAN process. They just felt we should get down to business and get results.  Today, far more participants enjoy this process of reaching out; reaching beyond the known for new possibilities. They see the value in looking at a problem from many different vantage points.  Many realize the art of Play as well.  Still for some people SCAN is difficult and probably will always be, even though they come to recognize its usefulness and integrity to good results.  Each of us have different thinking patterns and a truly great group process accounts for all kinds of thinkers, knowing that aspects of going from SCAN to FOCUS to ACT will be frustrating at some time or another to a majority of participants. 

But I truly love it when someone who really did not like the process comes up after we are done and says, "We got really good results. But surely we could have cut out the first day and a half and done the work in half a day."  Well, you see, they don't understand what Oliver Wendal Holmes was trying to convey.  True simplicity comes after you have climbed that hill of complexity.  We are not after simple answers that have been gotten by cutting out most of the things that cannot be seen up front.  Simple answers and answers with simplicity are two very different things. 

David Bohm's ideas about play are so important. When will schools, conferences, and all too many workshops stop pounding play out of process? It is vital to our ability to survive and thrive. 


If science always insists that a new order must be immediately fruitful, or that it has some new predictive power, then creativity will be blocked. New thoughts generally arise with a play of the mind, and the failure to appreciate this is actually one of the major blocks to creativity. Thought is generally considered to be a sober and weighty business. But here it is being suggested that creative play is an essential element in forming new hypotheses and ideas. Indeed, thought which tries to avoid play is in fact playing false with itself. Play, it appears, is the very essence of thought.


 

Long-Term Visions Once Again!

Our imagination is stretched to the utmost, not as in fiction, to imagine things that are not really there, but just to comprehend those things that are there.
Richard Feynman  The Character of Physical Law

The last five projects I have been asked to participate in are all long-term visions! A breath of fresh air.  It seems to me that people are reconnecting with their natural hunger for projects that matter, not only to them, but to the larger world.  I can feel the excitement in the voices of project leaders. Most are willing to reach out 25 to 50 years in the future and imagine the difference their projects are making.  A new form of strategic plan is taking place.  No one is trying to do linear goal-setting plans; rather they are leaping out into the future, envisioning the networks to help in their undertaking, and asking themselves "What is it we need to do today to make our journey into an unknown future succeed?" The MG Taylor axiom: "You can't get There from Here" is being used and lived.  During the years where only the next quarter earnings mattered, no one paid the slightest attention to the future.  It was so disheartening, boring, and of course, detrimental to life itself. 

I do feel that a new paradigm is unfolding. Perhaps the fast and slow are getting back in sync.