October 2013 – They’re called “occupational hazards.”
By definition (compliments of Wiktionary), an occupational hazard is an unpleasant, inconvenient, or unusual circumstance which occurs or is likely to occur during the course of one’s employment.
Let me paint a picture.
If you are a carpenter by trade (or by weekend), you know that smashing your thumb with a hammer is an occupational hazard. It’s just gonna’ happen. Someday the law of averages catches up with you and you flatten your thumb creating “an unpleasant and inconvenient circumstance”—to put it mildly. If you’ve been there, you know the excruciating pain at the get-go, followed by the throbbing pain for the ensuing hours, followed by the black-and-blue thumbnail, etc., etc. (Why do I know these things so well?).
Have you ever called time-out to think about the occupational hazards of leadership? What are the “unpleasant circumstances” that can slowly and subtly, yet steadily, worm their way into your life as a leader?
Allow me to roll out several hazards for your reflection.
A leader is called to go further than anyone else.
Truth be told, that’s just page one of what could very well be a long chapter.
So I’ve got a question: As you lumbered down that list, which one of those “occupational hazards” slammed your mental thumb—made you wince a bit? Or maybe a lot?
And I’ve got a challenge:
At the end of the day, your ultimate leadership deliverable is a life that is constantly being remade after the One who said, “Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant, and whoever wants to be first must be slave of all.”
What “occupational hazards” do you wrestle with?
Join the conversation. Post your comments below.
Chuck Olson
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Written by Chuck Olson
Written by Chuck Olson
Written by Chuck Olson
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