Showing posts with label fight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fight. Show all posts

Thursday, January 31, 2019

Opposites Attract - An Essay

I am in school studying for my Bachelor of Science degree in Healthcare Administration and Management through Colorado State University - Global. My Applied Leadership Principles class has been very interesting and challenging. This essay earned me 100% but more than that, it really caused me to dial in tight to the perspective of how important it is my Love and I work together to raise our sons. (the highlighted parts are apparently where I copied and pasted and it shows up on this background, sorry about that.)





Opposites Attract – Management and Leadership at Home
Jennifer Bogdanowicz
18 WB (ORG300-10) – Applying Leadership Principles
 Colorado State University – Global Campus
January 27, 2019

 Opposites Attract – Management and Leadership at Home
We have been married for over 27 years. We are opposite in almost every way. We have a few things we are passionate about together and that is our middle ground. We agreed years ago to prioritize our marriage first, raising our sons, flying hot air balloons, and serving our community. We give generously, fight hard and laugh even harder.  We combine our efforts and extremely different skill sets to manage and to lead in our home. We have agreed we want to create a family culture of empowerment, encouragement and resilience. The way we approach the creation of that culture is extremely different.
I appreciated the plows vs. bulldozers analogy because it paints an accurate picture of our contrasting management and leadership styles (Rao, 2016). Erik’s bulldozer-like ability to power through resistance and obstacles is effective and gets the job done. There is a clarity and intensity to his purpose and focus that I admire. His hard leadership skills increase pressure, production, and perseverance to get to the desired result. My soft leadership skills bring a cultivating perspective, like a plow drawing to the surface great potential for positive, transformative, and creative results (Rao, 2016).
Management
Erik exercises executive, administrative, and supervisory direction of our family (Bârgau, 2015). When it comes to empowering, encouraging, and building resilience in our sons, he is very clear about his expectations and specific about the goals to be achieved. He manages our budget, researches and shops carefully for necessary equipment for our family, studies for his commercial pilots license and somehow manages to get our laundry done too. He finishes every task he starts. He believes “early is on time and on time is late.” He is methodical about teaching our sons how to work our hot air balloon burners, fan, and other flight equipment. He is precise when it comes to repairs and adjustments needed in our home. He expects the boys to do a thorough job of every task they are assigned. If they don’t meet his standard, there is a price to be paid. There is no cruelty, only accountability and follow through. The pressure to produce quality men who will take responsibility for themselves and their families weighs heavy on him. He is also an excellent teacher at our local mountain’s free ski school and was awarded Instructor of the Year two years ago. On the mountain I’ve heard him use soft and hard leadership techniques that could also be utilized more at home.
He consistently provides opportunities for our sons to advance in learning, take calculated risks and keep moving forward even when it’s hard. I particularly valued the insight about the benefits of high involvement management practices of information sharing, power sharing, skill development, and recognition that improve employee commitment because, while our boys aren’t his employees, that is what it looks like in our home (Doucet, Lapalme, Simard, & Tremblay, 2015). This stretches his soft leadership skills and has continued to be an opportunity for growth. For example, he took each of our sons on a ski trip in 5th grade. They discussed when, where, and what they would need to do to be at the skill level they would need to be to ski whatever runs they wanted. Each trip was both a challenge and reward for each son and their dad.
Leadership
I lead with the soft leadership skills mentioned by Rao (2016). I see our sons and their time in our home as precious and factor in their personality, behaviors, and attitudes in my instructions to them frequently. It is important to me that they recognize the value of their contribution to our family life. I believe time needs to be used wisely, but must be flexible to accommodate communication needs. I collaborate with them, teach creative ways to approach and accomplish tasks, and focus on the long term results I pray for – wise, kind, respectful men who will care passionately about their wives, families and community.
I cultivate empowerment, encouragement and resilience in our sons by being in their processes with them with my soft leadership skills (Rao, 2016). I remind them of their capabilities from things they have completed with excellence in the past, I motivate them to move forward into their goals and dreams by being persistent and committed. This support looks different for each son.
Our oldest son swims on the high school swim team. Early in the season he wanted to give up because it was extremely difficult to practice in the open water. I reminded him of how often he swam throughout the summer in the same place and how his capability was not an issue. He needed to be reminded of the courage he contains and the abilities he already has. He didn’t quit the team, instead he improved his times consistently throughout the season and his dad and I were there to cheer him on. Our middle son has always been very charismatic and gains a lot of attention with his witty sense of humor. Some adjustments were needed early in the school year to remind him of his academic and personal goals. We collaborated on solutions involving improvement of focus for his grades, his classmates needs, he recognized that a funny student with As gets treated differently than one with Ds and the importance of timing and self-control in the classroom environment. Our youngest son has struggled with his new teacher this year who is also new to teaching. She is quite gifted, as is he, and it took some careful negotiating to come to agreement with him on how his behavior can affect the students and staff around him. I reminded him of the many times he has courageously navigated making adjustments to fit in to a new classroom each year. I encouraged him to consider the benefits of pursuing his goals in conjunction with his grades. We agreed it would take hard work and persistence to make the needed changes, but in the end it would be worth it.
Our Strengths and Weaknesses
Each individual scenario took time and energy to work through. I see where my strengths of leadership shine and also how my weaknesses in management glare when it comes to how long it takes to make the necessary modifications soft leadership requires. My leadership style can accommodate conflict and differences of opinion. Erik’s management style does not have much room for those things and when they arise, so there is often a significant issue. How we work together to solve those issues is also a source of challenge since we want to apply our skill sets to the situation. It often requires us to back out of the ruts of our comfortable skills and move into the middle ground areas of shared priorities, combine our skill sets, recognizing they are complimentary processes and move forward (Bârgau, 2015). We choose to have the boys present when we face these challenges so they can learn about handling differences and conflicts with the skills we both taught them. I am confident we could not produce our desired results of empowered, encouraged and resilient sons with only his management and hard leadership skills or my leadership and soft leadership skills.
Conclusion
Our contrasted efforts to raise our sons with shared focus and different skill sets reminds us regularly that we have to work together to produce optimal results. Our boys will make their own choices as they grow. We hope our commitment to manage and lead as a team will give them the courage to embrace their own skills for management and leadership as well as find friends and a partner with valuable contrasting abilities.
References
Bârgau, M. (2015). LEADERSHIP VERSUS MANAGEMENT. Romanian Economic and Business Review, 10(2), 197-204. Retrieved from https://csuglobal.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://search-proquest-com.csuglobal.idm.oclc.org/docview/1700066847?accountid=38569
Doucet, O., Lapalme, M., Simard, G., & Tremblay, M. (2015). High involvement management practices as leadership enhancers. International Journal of Manpower, 36(7), 1058-1071. doi:http://dx.doi.org.csuglobal.idm.oclc.org/10.1108/IJM-10-2013-0243
Rao, M. S. (2016). Hard versus soft leadership? examples and illustrations. Strategic HR Review, 15(4), 174-179. Retrieved from https://csuglobal.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://search-proquest-com.csuglobal.idm.oclc.org/docview/1850797110?accountid=38569



Friday, October 12, 2018

Five Minute Friday: PRAISE God We're Still Married!

Today's Five Minute Friday Prompt is PRAISE.

I've been pondering that word since it posted last night and honestly, all I can think of is:

PRAISE God We're Still Married!

In keeping with my commitment to transparent honesty, I've decided to be real about how freaking hard my hubby and I work to stay married.

We have fought our whole marriage. Like, our WHOLE marriage. We have windows of peace and we make each other laugh usually every day at least once, but we fight:


- How clean is "clean"
- What is important after God, each other, family and friends
- When too much is too much - time or money spent on something/someone
- Who is working the hardest - at our relationship, around the house, with the kids, etc.
- Who is in charge
- What we should spend time or money on
- Who is being too hard on the kids - we trade off, so this is always different

If there is a fight to be had, we've had it.
The main themes are: Vying for Power/Control and being Offended by each others attitudes or responses (real or perceived). This BOOK has been a huge blessing regarding being offended.

I'd love to say we'd matured enough over the years to not fight (some of the above aren't an issue anymore) but we still do. Where the maturity comes in - the recovery time. I go from. "I cannot do this for the rest of my life!" to "Well, I'm not easy to live with either!"

This verse we picked to be our life verse for our marriage has proven to be Truth in ways we never imagined we would need it to be. Guarding our hearts and minds against the pressures, temptations, pain, suffering and challenges is no small feat. When I've felt vulnerable, this verse has tucked me into God. It has saved my life at times.

Happy 27th Anniversary Erik! I'm so glad we fight together FOR our marriage. I PRAISE God for making you exactly the way you are and I am grateful you love me, exactly the way I am. I love you.

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

Being Brave and Living Courageous


I’ve loved the ocean and water my whole life. It’s been a part of the metaphors of my battle with Depression and my battle with my weight. The ebb (low intensity) and flow (high intensity), high tide (eyebrow deep), low tide (all open and exposed), and rip currents (stuff you don’t see coming but if you fight it you sink and drown).

I’ve hated my body since I started puberty in 4th grade. Yes, that young.

I’ve been much thinner, and I’ve been fatter than I am now. Regardless, the wrestling match over my body weight has felt ridiculously long and obscenely consuming.

I’m listening to Sara Bareilles sing “Brave. The lyrics have fed my soul since I heard it for the first time – a friend sent it to me as an encouragement in a deeply tragic and painful time. I forgot how powerful it is. Therefore, I write. Honestly. Letting you in on the process.

Continuing to fight, wrestle, wrangle the weight I lose and gain and will lose again takes courage. Facing the SHAME of the decades of dieting, lifestyle changes, workout routines, planning, preparing and careful grocery shopping, and even weight rebound gains after having 85% of my stomach removed requires me to be BRAVE.

See, I know now, after doing this for my entire adult life, that I don’t hate myself, I hate the FIGHT with my body. When I back off and let my guard or my intensity down the fat rises with the predictability of the rising tide.

Shit.

I know. Potty mouth.

Then I read this blog yesterday and I found all the answers.

Anywhere I look to you or anyone else for my value or identity is going to put me on a pendulum – swinging one way or another - trying to behave/live/be a certain expected/preferred/desired way. I’ve done the big “Bird” to the world before and said I don’t care, but I do. I always do.

I can’t be the only one struggling here. We all need hope. We all need to know victory is possible. If I don’t shoot for victory will you have the courage to? Maybe. Hopefully. I hope I’m not the ONLY one you look to for complete inspiration – yikes! But we should look to each other for hope, right?

And of course, some of the spiritual ones would quote the scripture from my beloved Bible that says, 

“Such hope [in God’s promises] never disappoints us, because God’s love has been abundantly poured out within our hearts through the Holy Spirit who was given to us.” Romans 5:5 (Amplified version-one of my favorites).

But what if I AM disappointed?

I am no Bible scholar, so this is just me talking, I’ve hoped in God’s promises almost all my life. There must be nooks, crannies, hidden passages of my heart where the disappointments hide. The abundant Love washes through my heart but doesn’t penetrate the places I’ve tucked away to hide my hopelessness and disappointment.

So, what to do?

Do I invite Spirit who was given to me to pour through even those places? I have before. It’s happened. I’m not just typing. I truly KNOW it’s real. The healing Power is real. By my own doubts, I give in to the “feel”, but I don’t stand firm on the Truth I know. Again, the tide pushes forward, sometimes only splashing hard enough to shake my balance, and other times with such might that I’m leveled. Flooded. Pondering surrender to the whim of the “feel”.

There is no easy way out. No easy solution. I am what and who I am. I like me. I don’t find me ugly or disturbing. But I am SICK OF THE STRUGGLE. SICK OF THE SHAME. SICK OF THE GUILT.

In the past I would have curled up and cried and said, “I can’t” a lot. Now, I have too much to do and I’m angry that these current things are slowing me down. I’m angry about the energy it sucks from my life instead giving life.

Now, because I’ve learned to “Own It” (take FULL responsibility with no excuses) I’m focused on moving forward despite the waves crashing at my throat. I can swim in rough waters. I can hold my breath and wait to float to the surface. I can push through yet another wave - physical, mental, or emotional, to reach the oxygen and breathe, if I stay steady on Truth.

When I don’t, I go under again. Thrashing for the surface while gasping for air.

I started my company, Live Courageous Coaching because I knew I wasn’t the only one struggling, wrestling and tangling with areas where I feel like I can’t seem to get traction. Owning, running, and LIVING Courageous keeps me honest about who I am, where I’m going and how I’m getting there. One day at a time, no matter the tide.