Focus on what matters the most, thats leadership
"Brace for impact”
The captain announced.
The plane had just hit some birds , only a few minutes after taking off from New York.
There was no time to return to the airport.
The only way was to land on the Hudson river.
For Ric Elias, the few minutes of this horrifying incident changed his life forever.
Not because the captain managed to land the plane safely, but because of what he realized as he was preparing for death.
He thought of how everything could change in just a few moments. Dreams, plans, ambitions, concerns, worries, problems, priorities...
Everything takes a different perspective when we understand that we are mortal, and that our journey could end at any moment without prior warning.
I guess that’s why it is called the moment of truth.
So consider these questions:
What matters most in your life?
Please don’t deflect the questions. The sooner we determine the answers, the less regrets we will have.
To what extent are you spending your time, resources and energy on what matters most? Compare that to everything else that is of second, third, fourth...degree of importance importance.
Do the current fights, arguments, conflicts, and worries that are consuming your life really matter compared to your top life priorities?
All these questions came to Ric in his moment of truth. The reality of our very short life forced him to answer. He gained back his life.
I don’t know if one can say he was lucky to have this nightmare that woke him up.
I don’t know if we should wish for our wake up nightmare.
But I know that we will face these questions, sooner or later.
Are we ready?
We better be. Not everyone is as lucky as Ric
Finding Your Hummus: Discover your personal and organizational purpose
The captain announced.
The plane had just hit some birds , only a few minutes after taking off from New York.
There was no time to return to the airport.
The only way was to land on the Hudson river.
For Ric Elias, the few minutes of this horrifying incident changed his life forever.
Not because the captain managed to land the plane safely, but because of what he realized as he was preparing for death.
He thought of how everything could change in just a few moments. Dreams, plans, ambitions, concerns, worries, problems, priorities...
Everything takes a different perspective when we understand that we are mortal, and that our journey could end at any moment without prior warning.
I guess that’s why it is called the moment of truth.
So consider these questions:
What matters most in your life?
Please don’t deflect the questions. The sooner we determine the answers, the less regrets we will have.
To what extent are you spending your time, resources and energy on what matters most? Compare that to everything else that is of second, third, fourth...degree of importance importance.
Do the current fights, arguments, conflicts, and worries that are consuming your life really matter compared to your top life priorities?
All these questions came to Ric in his moment of truth. The reality of our very short life forced him to answer. He gained back his life.
I don’t know if one can say he was lucky to have this nightmare that woke him up.
I don’t know if we should wish for our wake up nightmare.
But I know that we will face these questions, sooner or later.
Are we ready?
We better be. Not everyone is as lucky as Ric
Finding Your Hummus: Discover your personal and organizational purpose
Published on November 13, 2017 03:31
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Tags:
finding-yourhummus, leadership
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