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September 2008
Change of Character
Sam's Itinerary
September 5-7
Destiny Christian Center
Centralia, Washington
September 5-6 (Vicki)
Grace Assembly Ladies Retreat
Wake Forest, North Carolina
September 13-14
Christ Chapel
Woodbridge, Virginia
September 21
Hope Church
Charlotte, North Carolina
September 27-28
Evangel Pentecostal Assembly
Edmonton, Alberta
Contact Us Sam Farina 14553 Greenpoint Lane Huntersville, NC 28078 Office: 919.696.0184 Fax: 800.588.1085 Email:
sfarina@samfarina.com Website:
www.samfarina.com
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Change of Character

Mahatma Gandhi, Indian
nationalist and spiritual leader who developed the practice of nonviolent
disobedience that forced Great Britain to grant independence to India in 1947
I can think of all kinds of ways to change my son,
my associates, my wife Vicki, and lots of other people in my life. But that's
not the place to start. The place to start is with changing me. The Nobel Prize
winning physicist, Albert Einstein, observed that we can't solve a problem with
the same level of thinking that created it. The same principle applies to
influencing and leading people around us. I can't influence others to change
what they're doing with the same behavior that contributed to their current
behavior.
The longer I've been with others who I'd like to
improve or change, the more this applies to me. Something I've been doing, or
failing to do, has contributed to their current behavior patterns. If I am going
to shift their behavior to a new level, I will need to change my behavior. To
change them, I need to change me. As the 18th century French writer, Francois
Fenelon, put it, "We can often do more for others by correcting our own faults
than by trying to correct theirs."
This key leadership principle is useless if we
think that we can control others. It's especially easy to believe this if I am
the boss, parent, owner, teacher, coach, project leader, director, or in some
similar position of authority. I will always be stuck at the superficial level
of "doing my leadership thing" as long as I try controlling others through
position power. I am ready to move to the deeper levels of leadership being (and
greater effectiveness) when I give up trying to control. I can then shift my
focus to influencing and guiding others by what I do, as well as by what I say.
To create something we must be something. For
example, becoming a parent is easy; being one is tough. We can't teach our kids
self-discipline unless we are self-disciplined. We can't help build strong
organizational teams unless we're a strong team player. We can't help develop a
close community if we're not a good neighbor. We can't enjoy a happy marriage if
we're not a loving partner. We won't have a supportive network of friends or
colleagues until we're a supportive friend or collaborative colleague.
In The Heart Aroused: Poetry and Preservation of
the Soul in Corporate America, David Whyte writes, "All things change when
we do." Writer Gautama Chopra elaborates, "By changing our beliefs, our
perceptions, we cause our experience to change, and in this way we change the
world around us. There is no true boundary or limit to the self; there is no
separation from the world that encircles us. When we master the forces within,
we influence the forces without."
When I am asked to coach leadership development I
use a simple exercise to help participants connect the changes they'd like to
see, to the changes they need to make in their own behavior. Draw a line down
the middle of a page. Title the left column "Changes I'd Like Them to Make."
List the four or five biggest changes you'd like to see in others.
OK, that's the easy part. Now title the right
column "Ways I Can Exemplify These Changes." Brainstorm ways you can influence
"them" with your personal behavior. This is the hard part. It means I must face
up to what I have or haven't been doing to influence their behavior.
It's much easier to be a victim — to blame
all their behavior on them and refuse to accept any responsibility at all. But
how honest and true is that — really? I may need more feedback from them
to clearly see my role in their behavior. I likely need to reflect further and
deeper on our relationship. Is my Influence Index weak? The big (and often
painful) leadership question is; what do I need to change about me to help
change them? Instead of just wishing for a change of circumstance, I may need a
change of character.
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