A Considerable Speck

A Dialogue of Self & Soul

Browsing Posts in Life

“The linchpin is able to invent a future, fall in love with it, live in it—and then abandon it on a moment’s notice.”

Every once in a while a book comes along that challenges you to stop and look at the world around you and to reflect on the way you engage with and interact with the world. That book, for me, is Linchpin: Are You Indispensable? ,the latest book by Seth Godin. So what is the book about? Quite simply Linchpin is a concise book about what it takes to become indispensable. It’s about how business and our world has rapidly changed and how treating employees like factory workers (or doing your job like one) doesn’t work any longer. We must make choices and take action to “chart our own paths” and add value that others do not. We cannot wait for a boss or a job description to tell us what to do, rather we must just take the initiative ourselves. Only then can we become indispensable “linchpins,” rather than replaceable “cogs.”

This is a personal manifesto, a plea from me to you. Right now, I’m not focused on the external, on the tactics organizations use to make great products or spread important ideas. This book is different. It’s about a choice, and it’s about your life. This choice doesn’t require you to quit your job, though it challenges you to rethink how you do your job… You have brilliance in you, your contribution is valuable, and the art you create is precious. Only you can do it, and you must. I’m hoping you’ll stand up and choose to make a difference.

The book is well worth a read if for no other reason than to provide a few “B-A-M” moments (those little moments when you can feel your brain explode a little). Godin’s style is very easy to read mainly because he is able to condense much of what he is trying to convey into short chapters with some great quotes that one can take away. Here are some of my favourites:

  • The ability to see the world as it is begins with an understanding that perhaps it’s not your job to change what can’t be changed. Particularly if the act of working on that change harms you and your goals in the process.
  • Leaders don’t get a map or a set of rules. Living life without a map requires a different attitude. It requires you to be a linchpin. … There is no map. No map to be a leader, no map to be an artist. I’ve read hundreds of books about art (in all its forms) and how to do it, and not one has a clue about the map, because there isn’t one.
  • “I don’t know what to do”—this one is certainly true. The question is, why does that bother you? No one actually knows what to do. Sometimes we have a hunch, or a good idea, but we’re never sure. The art of challenging the resistance is doing something when you’re not certain it’s going to work.
  • The linchpin is coming from a posture of generosity; she’s there to give a gift [no-strings support of your efforts to succeed]. If that’s your intent, the words almost don’t matter. What we’ll perceive are your wishes, not the script.
  • Virtually all of us make our living engaging directly with other people. When the interactions are genuine and transparent, they usually work. When they are artificial or manipulative, they fail.
  • Art is unique, new and challenging to the status quo. It’s not decoration. It’s something that causes change. Art cannot be merely commerce. It must also be a gift.
  • Real change rarely comes from the front of the line. It happens from the middle or even the back. Real change happens when someone who cares steps up and takes what feels like a risk. People follow because they want to, not because you can order them to.
  • What does it take to lead? The key distinction is the ability to forge your own path, to discover a route from one place to another that hasn’t been paved, measured, and quantified. So many times we want someone to tell us exactly what to do, and so many times that’s exactly the wrong approach.

Some other books by Godin that are worth reading…

Post to Twitter Post to Digg Digg This Post Post to StumbleUpon Stumble This Post

Elizabeth Gilbert, the author of Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman’s Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia , muses on the impossible things we expect from artists and geniuses — and shares the radical idea that, instead of the rare person “being” a genius, all of us “have” a genius. It’s a funny, personal and surprisingly moving talk.

In case you can’t see the embedded video, click here to see it on TED.com.

Hat-tip to Bob Carlton at The Corner for pointing this out.

Post to Twitter Post to Digg Digg This Post Post to StumbleUpon Stumble This Post

“Music takes us out of the actual and whispers to us dim secrets that startle our wonder as to who we are, and for what, whence and whereto.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

“When I arrive at Derek Paravicini‘s home, he is giving a glittering rendition of Cole Porter’s It’s De-Lovely on his shiny, black piano. When I leave three hours later, he is being spoon-fed lunch from a plastic bowl. Derek is 27, blind, has severe learning difficulties, cannot dress or feed himself – but play him a song once, and he will not only memorise it instantly, but be able to reproduce it exactly on the piano. One part of his brain is wrecked; another has a capacity most of us can only dream of. … The piano is his world – and his salvation.”

So begins this article I recently stumbled on from The Guardian about an amazing musician and his gift. continue reading…

Post to Twitter Post to Digg Digg This Post Post to StumbleUpon Stumble This Post

6 visitors online now
6 guests, 0 members
Max visitors today: 6 at 05:14 am UTC
This month: 13 at 09-01-2010 09:43 am UTC
This year: 48 at 08-03-2010 01:13 pm UTC
All time: 54 at 12-30-2009 02:42 am UTC

Twitter links powered by Tweet This v1.6.1, a WordPress plugin for Twitter.