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Fitness

Be a Lighthouse: Lessons on Leadership

It is the people and situations we tend to avoid that can teach us the most and promote our own growth.

Alysa Horn

Written by Alysa Horn Last updated on August 20, 2018

For the majority of my life, I have been blessed to have wonderful teachers, coaches, and role models. These teachers didn’t always come in the classroom either, they oftentimes came in unwelcome forms, such as a difficult boyfriend, a disagreeable teammate or coworker, a class bully, or an unhappy client. The world is a complete wealth of knowledge, and it is the people and situations we tend to avoid that can teach us the most and promote our own growth the best.

On a congruent note, there is a strange paradox that we have run into this past year in terms of leadership. An air of hypocrisy, double standards, and lack of appropriate role models to look up to hangs in the air, from our current president on down.

We all need to stop settling for what society has deemed to be a normal standard—doing the minimum, instant gratification, limited accountability, mediocrity, discrimination, laziness, sexism, and the list goes on. Our world needs great leaders, and that starts with each and every one of us. Here are some summarizations of things I’ve read and experienced that have helped me immensely in my own quest for self-growth.

“What you are shouts so loudly in my ears, I cannot hear what you say.”

– Ralph Waldo Emerson

Be Who You Say You Are

This is an important character quality to possess. No one respects someone who says one thing and then does the opposite, that’s obvious, right? To lead others, you must take an inside-out approach, meaning you first need to be able to lead yourself.

This requires discipline, commitment, openness to change, and the willingness to grow. A famous quote by Ralph Waldo Emerson reads, “What you are shouts so loudly in my ears, I cannot hear what you say,” or as we would say in modern times, walk it like you talk it.

Don’t Compare

On the subject of quotes, I heard a beautiful saying this summer, “Comparison is the thief of joy.” How simple and true is that? If we live comparing ourselves to our peers, to social expectations of who we should be, or to our own glorified self-image, we will continually be disappointed.

This is one area I admit I have really struggled with through my twenties and it has robbed me of self-confidence and happiness too many times. Some of the most influential and effective people I’ve read about or met all agree, don’t waste energy or focus measuring yourself up to anyone else, keep your eyes forward and only measure yourself against who you were yesterday. To grow, we must take advantage of the lessons and opportunities we are given every day.

Lead So Others May Follow

If you are in a leadership position now and were to experience a day through the eyes of someone who works under you or looks up to you, would you like what you saw? Would you be a leader that you would like to follow and who treats others how you would like to be treated? All of these are important questions to continually ask yourself, as power can play negatively on our human tendencies and has potential to cause complacency, ego inflation, and blindness.

?An outstanding leader will radiate integrity, empathy, justice, patience, and humility. An outstanding leader will expect of themselves what they expect of others and are lighthouses in the darkest of storms. They get people to follow because they are willing to do even the most simple and “puny” of tasks to accomplish the overall team goal.

They are willing to deeply listen and provide direction when needed. An outstanding leader will push people to be better by showing them how, not dragging them along like a tugboat, trying to get them to where they want to go.

Be Able to Self-Reflect

I will just open this section by shamelessly saying that no one likes a know-it-all. I will be the first to admit that the majority of the principles outlined in this post have not come from my own experiences.

I love to read and learn from others with great reputations, or who I trust and respect. Some of my favorite books are listed to the right, with brief summaries of each outlined in a separate post worth another five minutes of your time.

Personally, these books have all helped me self-reflect on the choices I make, whether large (what direction I want to take in life) or small (how to approach someone with an issue). Many are written from the author’s personal experiences, how they overcame certain things to survive, become successful, be a great leader, and so much more.

Make Excellence a Habit

The final take away from this post is the age-old principle that we are what we repeatedly do. Your thoughts lead to your beliefs, which lead to your actions, which become your character. No matter how small or unimportant a task may seem, our resolve to do everything to the best of our ability creates habits of excellence.

Thus, something as small as tying your shoes properly to as large as leading a team to a championship should be done as best as we can. If you make excellence a habit, and not just a now and then decision, you will become the author of your life and not the victim of circumstance, “bad luck,” or the hardships that you’ve endured because of other people. Become a leader from the inside out.

Alysa Horn

About Alysa Horn

Alysa is an Alaskan entrepreneur, former professional basketball player, and former collegiate women's basketball coach. She is now a self-employed personal and performance trainer as well as a basketball skills coach. She will be taking a full time position with the University of Alaska Anchorage in the fall as one of their strength and conditioning coaches. She has a Bachelor's Degree in Health, Physical Education & Recreation with a minor in Athletic Training and Nutrition, as well as being a NSCA Certified Strength & Conditioning Specialist with an ACE Personal Trainer Certification. She loves to write about anything and everything self-improvement related, particularly in regard to physical, mental, and emotional health.

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