Mom Leadership: May 2009 Archives

Last weekend, I had the honor of joining Satellite Sister Lian Dolan in her studio (aka her closet) for an interview about how leadership skills can translate into great parenting at home.  Join Lian (who also happens to be my favorite, hilarious, smart sister-in-law)  and me for a lively and fun 20 minute conversation about everything from how to pull out good leadership when we're flat out exhausted to how thinking like a leader can help us rise above the relentless demands and drudgery of the job, revive our motivation and make us feel more satisfied and effective.
http://www.chaoschronicles.com/podcast.html
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
I have recently collaborated with a dynamic leadership expert, Laura Lopez who wrote a practical guide teaching you how to achieve better results at work by applying lessons from home:  The Connected and Committed Leader.  I especially like what she has to say about creating environments in which people are engaged, something we all struggle with whether at home or at work. Here is her guest post and her website: http://laura-lopez.com/


I used to believe that we could only have one mother.
 
I was wrong.
 
That's because my definition of the word "mother" was based on it being a noun.  Four years ago when we adopted our daughter Leila from Russia, I realized that the word "mother" was actually a verb.
 
Once I realized this, I saw that in my life I had many mothers, not just my one biological mother. Several people, actively "mothered" me into who I am today.
 
Being a mother, like a leader, is more than just a role.  In fact too many leaders, like mothers, rely too heavily on the title and do little-to-none active, verb-like "mothering" at all. 

That's because mothering, like leadership, takes a lot of effort and time.  It is always easier to slip into an 'I said so", authoritative, noun-like stance that a role usually relies upon.
 
It is no surprise that when I became a late-in-life mother, I finally understood the true meaning of leadership.  Prior to that, I wasn't the best leader that I could have been.
 
Motherhood has taught me a ton about leadership and now through my book, The Connected and Committed Leader, I teach my lessons from home as a way to achieve better results at work and in life.  I see leadership as a life practice for success that is relevant in any realm of our lives.
 
Mothering, the verb, is the ultimate leadership experience.
 
After all, as mothers we have to get results on a daily basis with often unwilling or unmotivated participants!  And, at the end of the day, we want our children to reach their highest potential with an empowered belief in themselves.  Sounds like the job of a leader, doesn't it? 
 
Yes.  No doubt.
 
Here are some tips for redefining both leadership and motherhood into active verbs and leaving the rigid, role-like nouns of these two terms behind:
 
1.  Practice active observation.
When we observe others, we are able to suspend judgment and be present with them.  We stop asserting our will onto them.  Being actively present for someone will make another person feel appreciated for who they are and is likely to want to give you their best. 
 
2.  Engage in actively receiving others.
When we receive others actively, it means that we give them room to be themselves.  Their ideas, their perspectives and their choices have room to grow and expand without ours being threatened.  This is especially difficult when we don't agree with their perspective.  However, when we are able to actively be receptive to others, they will grow to reach their full potential in our presence. 
 
3.  Actively guide others.
Guiding and teaching others requires time.  There is no such thing as lazy leading or mothering.  When it isn't active, you aren't doing it.  Every interaction is a leadership and teaching opportunity.  When you are passive, you often aren't guiding others.  You may be teaching the absolute opposite thing that you want to.  When you guide, you invest yourself and your time into the development of another person. 
 
So, what's your definition for the word "mother"?  Hopefully you will agree that it has a lot to do with inspiring you to be the best you can be.  Sounds like the role of a leader, doesn't it?
 
You bet.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=view_from_the_bay/parenting_babies&id=6787238 <http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=view_from_the_bay/parenting_babies&amp;id=6787238>

Check out the ABC View From the Bay Mom-in-Chief segment about how to make things easier on Mom on Mother's Day...and everyday! 

Like most holidays, Mother's Day is full of expectations and good intentions. It's meant to be a day of respite, a chance to put your feet up and bask in the glow of your family's appreciation and adoration. Unfortunately, that idealized vision of Mother's Day rarely bears any resemblance to its reality. Your "special day" might start well with flowers, gifts, cards, and maybe even breakfast in bed, but it quickly morphs into "business as usual." You spend the rest of the day breaking up sibling fights, preparing kids for the school week, and going to bed early before your own workweek begins.

 

Leadership expert and author Jamie Woolf says this is the year for Mother's Day makeover of sorts. She suggests that by using Mother's Day to make a few changes to the "way things are done around here," families everywhere can make things easier on Mom everyday, not just the second Sunday in May.
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

About this Archive

This page is a archive of entries in the Mom Leadership category from May 2009.

Mom Leadership: January 2009 is the previous archive.

Mom Leadership: May 2010 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.