· “The
self-evident, self-actualizing demonstration of purpose is the mark of a great leader.
· All that
is visible must grow beyond itself, extending into the realm of the invisible.
Thereby it receives true consecration and clarity and takes firm root in the
cosmic order.
· (The great
leaders) value their words highly. They accomplish their tasks; they
complete their work. Nevertheless, the people say that they simply
follow nature.
Leadership does
not come out of what we say we are going to do. It comes out of what we do. It
comes out of being who we are. If we try to be something specifically, we will
always fall short of what we are capable of being.
So much of who
we are and what is possible in each of us as human beings, is not known by any
of us. Who can imagine a butterfly coming out of a caterpillar? In truly being
oneself, this evolution, this change, becomes a natural process. The way we
consciously move in that direction is to give ourselves purpose and to act out
of the highest sense of purpose that we can imagine in everything that we do –
to have that purpose show up in everything that we do.
That is the
point of it all. If I am a leader, it is not because I have tried to be. I am
simply being myself. I am simply expressing myself to the best of my ability
and acting out of the passion and convictions that I feel. I am simply striving
to continually move myself forward, to move to higher ground, to live out of a
higher sense of purpose – and more and more, to have that constantly reflected
in all of my actions.
Yet, as the I
Ching says, “I am only following nature.” I follow nature by being true to
my natural self, my own inclinations, my own abilities, the things that
naturally interest me. I look at who I am and where I am, and I look at what is
going on in the world, and I see what I really want to do. I am only following
nature.
This is a time – almost more than at any other period in history- for each individual all over the planet- to play a leadership role.
It doesn’t have to come out of trying to be a leader or carrying the weight of the world on our shoulders. It need not be born out of the responsibility that someone else gives us or from attempting to live up to someone else’s sense of our responsibility. Really, the opportunity that is described in these passages from the I Ching is available to each and every one of us.
We live in a world where each one of us
has to educate ourselves to make conscious choices, to make commitments – and
to take a stand about living out of those conscious choices and commitments.
Conscious choice and commitment are at the heart of leadership.
…. It is as
simple as that:
· Follow
nature.
· Value your word.
· Accomplish
your tasks.
· Complete your
work.”
John Denver, 1990
[Excerpt of an
article in the Windstar Journal]





