“An army of principles can penetrate where an army of soldiers cannot.” — Thomas Paine, 1797
Leaders are expected always to have the answers.
The question doesn’t matter, nor do the circumstances, nor even the urgency of a crisis.
We look to leaders we respect to help us make sense of things and to provide a plan of action.
I almost wrote “to tell us how to feel.” But that would have felt disingenuous. No one can tell you how to feel — even a leader you admire.
What they can tell you is how they feel. And how they imagine you might be feeling.
This isn’t just for leaders, either. Anyone can practice this kind of vulnerability, honesty, and empathy.
These sensitivities soften the blow, creating a connection and a common bond. They make us more relatable, more human. Even in the most dire of circumstances.
I heard from a lot of readers and listeners last week, all sharing a similar set of feelings: dread, despair, disappointment, sorrow. Heavy stuff.
The realization sparked that I needed to say something. If not to provide answers, then to provide insights or at least words of encouragement.
But did I have it in me? I mean, I felt those same feelings (along with resignation, grief, and even creeping cynicism). Who was I to provide solace or solutions, sympathy or sagacity, inspiration or insights?
A leader, that’s who.
My own lethargy or hesitancy didn’t matter; there was a need for words of encouragement.
Trying Times
In December 1776, George Washington and his troops were encamped at McKonkey’s Ferry on the Delaware River opposite Trenton, New Jersey.
In August, they suffered major defeats at the hands of the British in New York City and by early December, nearly 11,000 men had deserted Washington’s rag-tag army.
Washington was desperate. The contracts for his men were up at the end of the month, at which point he would have lost them all. He didn’t have any peers per se, as he alone was in command of the Continental Army, and he rested on his shoulders to boost morale.
As luck would have it, Thomas Paine published a new work on December 19, called The American Crisis (Bookshop.org | Amazon). It included these rousing words:
“These are the times that try men’s souls; the summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.”
It did the work of rallying morale, and we all know what happened after Washington crossed the Delaware River on Christmas Night.
Even after Americans successfully defeated the British, established a government, and elected their first president, Paine felt it necessary to remind his fellow citizens that they ought to engage in critical thinking. In The Rights of Man (1791) he wrote:
“Reason obeys itself; and ignorance submits to whatever is dictated to it.”
Three years later in The Age of Reason (1794), Paine observed the damaging nature of widespread lies, in a prescient reflection of our own post-truth era:
“It is an affront to treat falsehood with complaisance.”
Words that ought to inspire people of any station.
Leadership Doesn’t Have to Be Lonely
At the pinnacle of an organization, there is only one CEO. While they have other members of the C-suite to turn to, those are direct reports rather than peers.
Unique roles are similarly isolating. In my time as an executive at Ford leading social media and digital communications, there was no one else within the company who spoke the same language, as it were.
I sought out mentors and colleagues outside of the company in similar situations — professional councils, loose networking, and executive coaching to help me process some of the situations in which I found myself.
In doing so, I found myself less uncertain (even when we were notching all kinds of firsts in the industry) and more confident in my abilities.
This is what led me to establishing an executive coaching practice in which I provide counsel and support for executives who need the advice and counsel of someone who’s been there, done that.
It may seem lonely at the top. The reality is, you’re supported by more people from the present and the past than you realize.
If you have an army of principles, you’re never alone.
There’s so much to learn,
Thank you! I have an army of principles. I will hold to that to stave off cynicism and despair. If those soldiers at valley forge could wrap their feet in rags and march on, I guess we can figure this out and bring about that better (albeit later) triumph of those principles.