“ ... he took to business as if it were war."
Cornelius Vanderbilt: Bare-Knuckled Capitalism
Cornelius Vanderbilt: Bare-Knuckled Capitalism
The Economist
(London, UK) Apr 16, 2009
In the unperturbed moment, it’s easy to lose focus … to take
your eyes off the goal … to let things slide … to become caught up in trivia
and machinations ... to lose traction … to lose points … to lose a game. Nothing focuses our attention like confronting
an overt threat to our wellbeing! Unfortunately,
many are not sufficiently aware or close enough to the action to visualize the
risk and never see it coming.
Point to Ponder
If you don’t understand or accept a “War” metaphor for life,
you may not have been to the front lines or anywhere near the
mainstream.
Alternative Views
If you understand “Capitalism” and the importance of being
“competitive”, you may prefer a sports metaphor.
If you subscribe to more nouveau
corporate templates, you may prefer to think in terms of “teamwork”; but
someone has to lead, and one of any
account at all can’t forever be a “follower”.
If you prefer the sports metaphor, consider what the
end-game score might have to be if you are to win. The difference between that score and where
you are now is the number of points
DOWN you are … never mind what the other team has on the board. To get to the endpoint on your ledger, you only have whatever time
there is left in the game to make up the difference; and you have only the
skills and experience now to do what
you can do NOW. The only things standing
between you and the goal are the opposition, your own limitations and the clock.
Can you compete? Are YOU a worthy competitor? What is your “Edge”?
“Life is a game, and if you aren’t in it to win, what the heck are you
still doing here?”
Linus Torvalds
Finally, it helps to know what “league” you’re in. One can’t forever be a “sandlot” player. Civilization has tried to equip you to
achieve your full potential. One dares
to ask: “What did I do with the awesome
opportunities I’ve had to this point?”
But the WAR metaphor for life becomes more compelling as the
stakes get higher, as we move beyond our cocooned beginnings into the
mainstream, and as we strive or are pushed closer to the edge. There IS an EDGE!
To be sure, the war metaphor has its dark side and encrypted
limitations:
“War makes
the world understandable, a black and white tableau of ‘them’ and ‘us’. It
suspends thought, especially self-critical thought. All bow before the supreme
effort. We are one. Most of us willingly accept war as long as we can fold it
into a belief system that paints the ensuing suffering as necessary for a
higher good, for human beings seek not only happiness but meaning. And,
tragically, war [i.e., winning and/or sacrificing all for a perceived “greater
good”] is sometimes the most powerful way in human society to achieve meaning.”
Chris
Hedges
in
Fields of Blood: Religion and the History of Violence
Karen
Armstrong, Alfred Knopf, 2014
But let’s turn the kaleidoscope ever so deliberately upward
until, first, we find something tied
to a legitimate belief system with tractionable meaning – e.g., a mission …
a passion … a Dream – and then
declare war on whatever stands in the way of making it happen. That includes injustice, prejudice,
small-mindedness, parochialism, excuses, rationalizations and blind
obeisance. It also includes our own frailties,
flusterings, blusterings and bullheadedness!
Then, and only then, can we become a Top Dog warrior in the
most positive and life-affirming sense.
The fight for our truest Destiny is one we can’t afford to lose. Let’s DOIT!
Quartermaster
[Precipitating reference: Take Command Lessons in Leadership by Jake Wood (former member of
the elite Marine Scout Sniper Platoon) Crown Business, October 14, 2014]
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