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God Save the King
On
Jan. 15, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., would have been 77 years
old. He would have lived through decades of amazing
technological changes, and continuing progress in Americas
quest to close gaps and narrow inequalities between races,
genders, persons of different sexual orientations and persons
of different languages and national origins.
He
would have seen tens of millions of immigrants continuing to
come to America to realize their own versions of the American
dream. Its hard to even imagine how much more progress would
have been made in creating a great and equitable society if he
had been able to continue as a passionate advocate.
Conventional wisdom recounts that
his great contribution to the world was in the advancement of
civil rights through non-violence. The HR Doctor, however,
will focus in this article on another lesson from Dr. King
that all of us as managers and administrators, not to mention
as parents, community members and friends, need to learn and
practice every day: the importance of creating a vision and
enlisting others to share in that vision to help make it a
reality.
The
greatest weakness in public service, in this writers opinion,
is the narrowness of our vision. We spend too much time
counting paper clips and not enough time looking at the
long-range vision of what our city, county or community could
be like. We focus on the memo of the day and not on the
momentous changes which could happen in our world if only we
created the opening in thought and action to make these
changes happen.
Dr.
King was able to speak with amazing eloquence about what he
saw in his own mind when he went to a metaphorical mountaintop
and looked at the "promised land."
That land could be a county or a
country in which all children had health care coverage. It
could be a place in which senior citizens are not prevented
from enjoying their final years in dignity because of the cost
of prescription drugs, or the lack of health insurance or the
scourge of loneliness. It could be a society in which no one
dropped out of school or in which the unemployment rate was
statistically insignificant.
The
only hope for visions to become real is to create a vision of
the future that is so compelling and so articulately presented
that persons throughout the society agree to put aside lesser
divisions to focus on the higher loyalty.
We
have done this historically in times of war, and we have done
this historically in times of other national opportunities,
such as the mass polio vaccination program of the 1950s. In a
sense, we do it every day. In commercial America when we
create cultural icons or heroes or products which sell in the
millions.
The
HR Doctor recently received a gift of the book by Neenah Ellis
entitled, If I Live to be 100, which explores what
common characteristics long-lived individuals share. Based on
the interviews in the book, the overriding common theme is not
diet, occupation, genetics or fish oil. The common
characteristic is optimism.
This is also the enduring legacy
of Dr. King. In his case, the optimism was focused on closing
racial and economic divides. However, his legacy can also be
profoundly positive for us as individuals. It can mean a
commitment to career development and personal growth on the
job, or it can mean looking at a vacant lot filled with litter
and imagining a new senior citizens health and recreation
facility. It can mean a personal commitment to stop smoking,
begin exercising or finish that college degree.
There is no end to the number of
positive visions that can turn into reality if we learn to
move with commitment and optimism to make the changes
happen.
Here are a few of the HR Doctors
favorites:
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Make a commitment as a manager
or executive in government to be a mentor to subordinates at
work and children in the community. Be a Big Brother or Big
Sister or a high school mentor. Be a teacher and a champion
of the career development and success of
others.
-
Find a teacher as well as being
one. Commit to learn new skills. Learn to speak Spanish.
Learn to take up hiking, photography or one of the HR
Doctors favorites, music. Review the HR Doctor article
"Learn as though you were going to live forever" to be
reminded of the importance of this concept.
-
Commit to personal health
improvement by getting a check-up and following through on
actions to reduce health risks by regular exercise, weight
loss, smoking cessation and other steps already
mentioned.
-
Do these things and do them
soon. While youre at it, take someone with you such as a
colleague at work or a member of the family. It is easier to
succeed in a plan if you have support from an understanding
friend.
-
Make a major difference in the
community. Be the catalyst to turn that vacant lot into a
senior health center. Be a United Way champion. Be a "go-to"
person for charities so your own reputation is enhanced and
your own leadership skills are developed.
-
What better way to improve
these personal elements in your life than by also helping
other people on the way. There are no shortages of charities
in the neighborhood, in the county or in the world that need
your help.
-
Spend time with people you care
about, including private time with yourself away from the
excessive intrusions of the modern world. The HR Dog,
Kamala, and I make time almost every morning for this
purpose by taking walks together. Its harder and harder to
find privacy, meditation - call it what you will -
but the more our lives are intruded upon by cell phones,
horns honking, telemarketers and loud neighbors, the more we
lose some part of the essence of our
individuality.
-
Spend some time away from the
television and away from the computer to pursue some
personal passion.
-
Plan ahead for what your own
life may be like after retirement. Invest energy in not only
saving for financial security but in taking steps to
increase your long-term "intellectual security" as well.
Think about things like where and when you might retire, and
what active steps, including other employment, you will take
to keep alert, alive and contributing.
Do
all these things and you will have a significant set of New
Years resolutions. You will also be walking in the pathway of
Dr. King. Each of us can individually make the choice of
whether to live our lives surrounded by large piles of paper
clips or surrounded by a legacy that will make our children
look back at us and say that we stood for something
wonderful.
The
HR Doctor wishes Dr. King a very happy birthday and hopes that
you will spend some time reliving the great "I Have A Dream"
speech and remembering the power of those words.
Best Wishes,
Phil Rosenberg The HR
Doctor http://www.hrdr.net/
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