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THE EXPONENT: Volume 01, Number 1
"When You Care Enough To Be Your Very Best..."
With apologies to Hallmark Cards, Inc for modifying their tagline to suit my
own needs.
I believe this is a pretty good definition of Brotherhood. It says something
about each man doing the right things and doing those things right -- or at
least giving them a solid try. No one's perfect. No one's expecting that
anyone be. All anyone expects is that we each strive for it in our behavior.
Contents
- B
- Tim Eiler minn87
At the top of this article is a capital letter. Words, especially in the
vocabulary of an intelligent person, are powerful tools. A word beginning
with a capital letter, such as the letter above, can convey even more
importance, as such words most often refer to a particular person or thing of
importance. For instance: United States, George Washington, Doctor, Mom,
Triangle.
As members of Triangle Fraternity, we are called upon to give the same status
as family to our fellow members. If we each recall the wisdom in the Ritual,
we'll also recall the special emphasis Triangle's Founders felt that this bond
deserved.
Many non-Greeks with whom I've talked about Triangle and Greek membership
don't comprehend the full feeling nor the true value in that bond we all
share. Some grasp it but don't quite get it more than just intellectually.
Most don't even begin to understand.
It is a lifetime bond. It is a bond of mutual helpfulness. It is a bond of
the deepest friendship - friendship deeper than normal friendship and far
deeper than mere acquaintance.
Therefore, it deserves the status normally provided by a capital letter:
Brotherhood. That capital letter not only signifies the intrinsic value of
Brotherhood and the Brothers that share in it, it represents a challenge to
each of us who have elected to become Brothers in Triangle. That challenge to
each of us is to be the best possible Brother and the best man possible.
- Do You Have the Will to Lead?
- by Polly LaBarre, from Fast Company, issue 32, page 222
Philosopher Peter Koestenbaum poses the truly big questions: How do we act
when risks seem overwhelming? What does it mean to be a successful human being?
Who hasn't stared out an airplane window on yet another red-eye and thought,
What exactly is the point of this exercise? Or sat through a particularly
senseless meeting and wondered, How in the world did I get here? Or wrestled
with a set of strategic choices -- all of which seem hard and unpleasant --
and said, What happened to the fun part of being in business? According to
Peter Koestenbaum, those uncomfortable questions -- those existential
quandaries -- are at the root of issues that great leaders deal with all the
time, and they influence every decision that must be made.
A classically trained philosopher with degrees in philosophy, physics, and
theology from Stanford, Harvard, and Boston University, Koestenbaum has spent
half a century pondering the questions that give most of us headaches: Why is
there being instead of nothing? What is the ultimate explanation of the
universe? What does it mean to be a successful human being? After fleeing pre-
World War II Germany with his parents, Koestenbaum was raised in Venezuela;
later, he emigrated to the United States to pursue his studies. He taught at
San Jose State University for 34 years, and during that period he focused on
creating a "practical philosophy" -- a philosophy that is linked to education,
psychology, and psychiatry. His many books include "The Vitality of Death" (Greenwood,
1971), "The New Image of the Person" (Greenwood, 1978), and
"Managing Anxiety" (Prentice Hall, 1974). One of his books, "Leadership: The
Inner Side of Greatness" (Jossey-Bass, 1991), has been translated into
several languages, and Koestenbaum is now at work on a new book, tentatively
titled "Diamond Reverse Engineering."
More than 25 years ago, Koestenbaum traded the cloistered halls of academia
for the front lines of the global economy. It's not unheard-of for this
philosopher, now a tireless 71-year-old with thick glasses and a flowing
beard, to visit clients across three continents in a single week. His agenda:
to apply the power of philosophy to the big question of the day -- how to
reconcile the often-brutal realities of business with basic human values --
and to create a new language of effective leadership. "Unless the distant
goals of meaning, greatness, and destiny are addressed," Koestenbaum insists,
"we can't make an intelligent decision about what to do tomorrow morning --
much less set strategy for a company or for a human life. Nothing is more
practical than for people to deepen themselves. The more you understand the
human condition, the more effective you are as a businessperson. Human depth
makes business sense."
Koestenbaum's wisdom makes sense to leaders at such giant organizations as
Ford, EDS, Citibank, Xerox, Ericsson, and even one of Korea's chaebols. All of
these companies have welcomed him into their offices to roam free as a
resident sage, company therapist, and secular priest. His involvement with
them ranges from one-on-one coaching sessions to decade-long engagements
featuring intensive leadership seminars. At Ford, Koestenbaum contributed to
the company's 2,000-person Senior Executive Program throughout the 1980s. In
more than a decade at EDS, he led seminars and coached hundreds of top
executives, including then-chairman Les Alberthal. He also coached Alexander
Krauer, a prominent Swedish industrialist, when Krauer was chairman of Ciba-
Geigy. Picking up on that momentum, another leading Swedish industrialist,
Rolf Falkenberg, founded the Koestenbaum Institute to disseminate the
philosopher's teachings across Scandinavia.
"Everything I do," says Koestenbaum, "is about using themes from the history
of thought to rescue people who are stuck." His logic: Change -- true,
lasting, deep-seated change -- is the business world's biggest and most
persistent challenge. But too many people and too many companies approach
change by treating it as a technical challenge rather than by developing
authentic answers to basic questions about business life. "We've reached such
explosive levels of freedom that, for the first time in history, we have to
manage our own mutation," declares Koestenbaum. "It's up to us to decide what
it means to be a successful human being. That's the philosophical task of the
age. Nothing happens unless you make it happen. As a leader, everything is
your responsibility, because you always could have chosen otherwise."
In an interview with Fast Company, Koestenbaum explains how age-old questions
apply to the new world of work.
Why does being a leader feel so hard today?
Because reckoning with freedom is always hard -- and the powerful paradoxes of
the new economy make it even harder. We're living in a peculiar time: It's
marked by a soaring stock market, the creation of tremendous wealth, an
explosion in innovation, and the acute alienation that occurs when the global
economy hits the average individual. What I call the "new-economy pathology"
is driven by impossible demands -- better quality, lower prices, faster
innovation -- that generate an unprecedented form of stress. People feel
pressure to meet ever-higher objectives in all realms of work, wealth, and
lifestyle -- and to thrive on that pressure in the process.
This condition is exacerbated by the pornographic treatment of business in
media and culture. The message is, You're living in the best country in the
world at the best time in history; you have an amazing degree of freedom to do
what you want, along with an unprecedented opportunity to build immense wealth
and success -- and to do it more quickly than ever before. Of course, the
average individual has as much of a chance of launching a skyrocketing IPO as
he or she has of becoming a movie star.
What's even more disturbing is that the ascendancy of shareholder value as the
dominant driving force in business has resulted in a terrible insensitivity to
basic human values. That's the real "stuck point" for leaders: How do we cope
with a brutal business reality and still preserve human values? How do we
handle competition without becoming either the kind of fool who allows it to
crush us or the kind of fool who forgets people?
Resolving that paradox requires something like an evolutionary transformation
of who we are, how we behave, how we think, and what we value. We've reached
such an incredible level of freedom that, for the first time in history, we
have to manage our own mutation. It's up to us to decide what it means to be a
successful human being. That's the philosophical task of the age.
In some sense, of course, that has been the task of every age. There's nothing
in today's economic disruptions that equals the horror of World War II.
According to some estimates, nearly 100,000 people were killed during every
week of that war. In 1935, when I was a seven-year-old boy, I once stood in
the Alexanderplatz, a square in Berlin, and watched Hitler parade by in his
Mercedes, just a few feet away. I'll never forget the mothers with babies in
their arms, the children holding up swastikas. That leaves a mark on you that
can't be erased -- and it leaves you with questions that you have to confront:
Who am I to have witnessed such acts? How am I to live meaningfully in a world
such as this?
The new economy just happens to be the form that our existential challenge
takes today. As always, the real obstacle is existence itself.
That's a heavy burden to place on leaders. They must not only guide
organizations but also wrestle with basic philosophical questions.
There's a terrible defect at the core of how we think about people and
organizations today. There is little or no tolerance for the kinds of
character-building conversations that pave the way for meaningful change. The
average person is stuck, lost, riveted by the objective domain. That's where
our metrics are; that's where we look for solutions. It's the come-on of the
consulting industry and the domain of all the books, magazines, and training
programs out there. And that's why books and magazines that have numbers in
their titles sell so well. We'll do anything to avoid facing the basic,
underlying questions: How do we make truly difficult choices? How do we act
when the risks seem overwhelming? How can we muster the guts to burn our
bridges and to create a condition of no return?
There's nothing wrong with all of those technical solutions. They're
excellent; they're creative; they're even necessary. But they shield us from
the real issues: What kind of life do I want to lead? What is my destiny? How
much evil am I willing to tolerate?
Reflection doesn't take anything away from decisiveness, from being a person
of action. In fact, it generates the inner toughness that you need to be an
effective person of action -- to be a leader. Think of leadership as the sum
of two vectors: competence ( your specialty, your skills, your know-how ) and
authenticity ( your identity, your character, your attitude ). When companies
and people get stuck, they tend to apply more steam -- more competence -- to
what got them into trouble in the first place: "If I try harder, I'll be
successful," or "If we exert more control, we'll get the results we need."
The problem is, when you're stuck, you're not likely to make progress by using
competence as your tool. Instead, progress requires commitment to two things.
First, you need to dedicate yourself to understanding yourself better -- in
the philosophical sense of understanding what it means to exist as a human
being in the world. Second, you need to change your habits of thought: how you
think, what you value, how you work, how you connect with people, how you
learn, what you expect from life, and how you manage frustration. Changing
those habits means changing your way of being intelligent. It means moving
from a nonleadership mind to a leadership mind.
What are the attributes of a "leadership mind"?
Authentic leaders have absorbed the fundamental fact of existence -- that you
can't get around life's inherent contradictions. The leadership mind is
spacious. It has ample room for the ambiguities of the world, for conflicting
feelings, and for contradictory ideas.
I believe that the central leadership attribute is the ability to manage
polarity. In every aspect of life, polarities are inevitable: We want to live,
yet we must die. How can I devote myself fully to both family and career? Am
I a boss or a friend? A lover or a judge? How do I reconcile my own needs with
those of my team? Those paradoxes are simply part of life. Every business
interaction is a form of confrontation -- a clash of priorities, a struggle of
dignities, a battle of beliefs. That's not an invitation to wage an epic
battle of good versus evil or right versus wrong. ( Chances are, your boss is
less of an SOB than he is an agent of the cosmos. ) My point is, you have to
be careful not to bang your head against the wrong door. Polarities are in
the nature of things. How we act, how we respond to those polarities -- that
is where we separate greatness from mediocrity.
That doesn't mean that we don't have to make decisions. Tough choices are a
daily requirement of leadership. Leaders have to hire and fire, to sign off on
new strategies, and to risk investments -- all of which can lead to stress and
guilt. The presence of guilt is not a result of making the wrong choice but of
choosing itself. And that is the human condition: You are a being that chooses.
A young, ambitious guy whom I worked with at Amoco got a double promotion that
required a transfer to Cairo. He went home to his new wife and young baby and
said, "Great news, we're moving to Cairo." Appalled, his wife said, "You're
moving alone. I'm going home to my mother." That was the first test of
leadership in that family. There was no viable compromise: If he relinquished
his promotion, he would resent his wife for ruining his career; if she just
went along with the move, she would hate him for squashing her ideals for her
baby and herself. What to do?
After some discussion, they might have been tempted to believe that maturity
required them to deny their feelings and to sacrifice on behalf of each other.
But that actually leads to illness, depression, and the end of affection.
Instead, they went back to the fundamentals: Is it my career, or is it our
career? Is it your baby, or is it our baby? Are we individuals, or do we
operate as a team? What are our values? That marriage had to grow up by the
equivalent of five years in about two weeks. They ended up going to Cairo, but
their relationship had been transformed: She understood that his career was
important to her; he recommitted to his values as a participant in the
family. What matters is not what they ended up choosing, but how. They took
the courageous step to redefine, from the inside out, who they truly were. The
how is what gives you character. The what, which at first appears paramount,
is ultimately of no emotional significance.
Managing polarity teaches us that there are no solutions -- there are only
changes of attitude. When you grapple with polarities in your life, you lose
your arrogant, self-indulgent illusions, and you realize that the joke is on
you. To get that message makes you a more credible human being -- instantly.
It's one thing for a leader to embrace the contradictions of the new economy.
But how does he or she persuade colleagues to go along with this kind of
thinking?
The best leaders operate in four dimensions: vision, reality, ethics, and
courage. These are the four intelligences, the four forms of perceiving, the
languages for communicating that are required to achieve meaningful, sustained
results. The visionary leader thinks big, thinks new, thinks ahead -- and,
most important, is in touch with the deep structure of human consciousness and
creative potential. Reality is the polar opposite of vision. The leader as
realist follows this motto: Face reality as it is, not as you wish it to be.
The realist grapples with hard, factual, daily, and numeric parameters. A
master in the art of the possible, the realist has no illusions, sees limits,
and has no patience for speculation.
Ethics refers to the basic human values of integrity, love, and meaning. This
dimension represents a higher level of development, one ruled not by fear or
pleasure but by principle. Courage is the realm of the will; it involves the
capacity to make things happen. The philosophic roots of this dimension lie in
fully understanding the centrality of free will in human affairs. Courage
involves both advocacy -- the ability to take a stand -- and the
internalization of personal responsibility and accountability.
The real challenge of leadership is to develop all four of these often-
contradictory modes of thinking and behaving at once. Leaders tend to operate
on two dimensions at most -- which has more to do with a lack of insight into
human nature than with corrupt intent. Reality dominates, and the second-most-
common attribute is ethics: Consider the statement "People are our most
important asset." Unfortunately, those are often empty words -- not just
because too few people make the connection between profits and human values,
but also because there is no adequate understanding of what it means to be a
human being in a brutally competitive environment. "Vision" might be one of
the most overused words in business, but in fact vision -- in the sense of
honing great thinking and fostering the capacity for ongoing inventiveness --
is rarely practiced. And courage is demonstrated even more rarely.
When we talk about courage, we usually mean having guts or taking risks. But
you talk about courage as if it were an almost mythic quality -- one that lies
at the heart of leadership success.
It goes back to the beginning of our discussion. Aristotle believed,
correctly, that courage is the first of the human virtues, because it makes
the others possible. Courage begins with the decision to face the ultimate
truth about existence: the dirty little secret that we are free. It requires
an understanding of free will at the archetypal level -- an understanding that
we are free to define who we are at every moment. We are not what society and
randomness have made us; we are what we have chosen to be from the depth of
our being. We are a product of our will. We are self-made in the deepest sense.
One of the gravest problems in life is self-limitation: We create defense
mechanisms to protect us from the anxiety that comes with freedom. We refuse
to fulfill our potential. We live only marginally. This was Freud's
definition of psychoneurosis: We limit how we live so that we can limit the
amount of anxiety that we experience. We end up tranquilizing many of life's
functions. We shut down the centers of entrepreneurial and creative thinking;
in effect, we halt progress and growth. But no significant decision --
personal or organizational -- has ever been undertaken without being attended
by an existential crisis, or without a commitment to wade through anxiety,
uncertainty, and guilt.
That's what we mean by transformation. You can't just change how you think or
the way that you act -- you must change the way that you will. You must gain
control over the patterns that govern your mind: your worldview, your beliefs
about what you deserve and about what's possible. That's the zone of
fundamental change, strength, and energy -- and the true meaning of courage.
Does developing the will to transform mean that you can actually will others
to change?
Taking personal responsibility for getting others to implement strategy is the
leader's key polarity. It's the existential paradox of holding yourself 100%
responsible for the fate of your organization, on the one hand, and assuming
absolutely no responsibility for the choices made by other people, on the
other hand. That applies to your children too. You are 100% responsible for
how your children turn out. And you accomplish that by teaching them that they
are 100% responsible for how they turn out.
So how do you motivate people? Not with techniques, but by risking yourself
with a personal, lifelong commitment to greatness -- by demonstrating courage.
You don't teach it so much as challenge it into existence. You cannot choose
for others. All you can do is inform them that you cannot choose for them. In
most cases, that in itself will be a strong motivator for the people whom you
want to cultivate. The leader's role is less to heal or to help than to
enlarge the capacity for responsible freedom.
Some people are more talented than others. Some are more educationally
privileged than others. But we all have the capacity to be great. Greatness
comes with recognizing that your potential is limited only by how you choose,
how you use your freedom, how resolute you are, how persistent you are -- in
short, by your attitude. And we are all free to choose our attitude.
Sidebar: Fear and Trembling in the New Economy
You don't need a philosopher to tell you that anxiety is one by-product of
what Peter Koestenbaum calls "the brutality and promise" of the new economy.
But you do need a philosopher to explain how anxiety rules the human condition
-- and how it can serve as a powerful, productive force in your life. The best
thinker for the job, says Koestenbaum, is Soren Kierkegaard, a Danish
philosopher who did as much for the analysis of anxiety as Freud did for the
analysis of the subconscious. Here's a short course from Koestenbaum on the
value of anxiety.
Anxiety generates knowledge. "As Kierkegaard explains it, anxiety is the
natural condition. It's a cognitive emotion that reveals truths that we would
prefer to hide but that we need for our greater health. In an essay called
'The Concept of Dread,' Kierkegaard draws a connection between anxiety and
free will. We cannot prove that free will is true -- because we freely choose
the meaning of truth in the first place. But our anxiety tips us off to the
existence of our freedom: It reminds us of our huge responsibility to choose
who we are and to define our world."
Anxiety leads to action. "Kierkegaard wrote that the most common form of
despair occurs when one does not choose or 'will' to be oneself -- when a
person is 'another than himself.' The opposite of despair is 'to will to be
that self which one truly is.' That's the experience of anxiety. It is
choosing life in the face of death; it is the experience of thought becoming
action, reflection becoming behavior, and theory becoming practice. Anxiety is
pure energy."
Anxiety makes you a grown-up. "Anxiety is the experience of growth itself. In
any endeavor, how do you feel when you go from one stage to the next? The
answer: You feel anxious. Anxiety that is denied makes us ill; anxiety that
is fully confronted and fully lived through converts itself into joy,
security, strength, centeredness, and character. The practical formula: Go
where the pain is."
- The Genius of AND
- Tim Eiler minn87
Until fairly recently, the philosophy in manufacturing has been that making a
quality product costs more than making one without much quality. The
prevailing philosophy, however, is that it is easier to make a product that is
of high quality AND low cost. High quality and low cost are not inversely
related. They are, in fact, directly related!
Recently, there has been discussion in Triangle that scholarship and the
learning of life skills are competing opposites; that getting excellent grades
means that one can't learn anything else or participate heavily in other
activities because if you do participate in other things, you will find that
grades suffer at the cost of learning life skills.
Grades are important. Without good grades, you will have a harder time
obtaining a job. A person with low grades is more likely to be relatively
lower paid than someone who had higher grades. Lower GPA is also a good
measure of how much a person actually learned in classes, so it would be easy
to surmise that lower GPA also means that it will be much more difficult to
actually perform well in the job.
Life skills, things like knowing how to lead, how to follow, how to organize a
project, how to manage establish and manage a budget, how to obtain and keep
friends, how to behave in many situations, etc, are important. A person
devoid of even a few of the needed life skills is at a severe disadvantage in
comparison to those who do have them. Without these, one will find it hard to
find a job and the job he does receive is more likely to be low paying.
A person without one or the other of grades and life skills is like a car
without an engine or a car without wheels...it isn't very likely that there
will be much progress. It is up to each of us to help himself and Triangle to
be extremely good at BOTH developing life skills AND good grades.
ALUMNI, THIS ARTICLE IS FOR YOU ALSO!!! If you are an alumnus, you should
read "good grades" as developed intellect and every man needs to continue
development of those life skills he will need to succeed. What does that
mean? Just a few examples: educated participation in the various levels and
realms of politics, being an excellent parent and spouse, being a better
public speaker, being a better organizer, being a better follower, being a
better leader, having more knowledge of various subject (including non-
technical subjects), etc.
You owe it to yourself, to your family (or potential family), and to your
Triangle Brothers to achieve more than just the bare minimum! You can do it,
but only if you choose to...
Hope you enjoyed this issue!!! If you have questions, feel free to email the editor (
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
).
Tim Eiler
Exponent Editor
Pursue Excellence Relentlessly
- TRIANGLE FRATERNITY
- Is Serious about Scholarship
- Sets and Demonstrates High Standards
- Celebrates Achievement
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