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Friday, June 18, 2010

SILENCE

My dear readers,
It's been sometime since there have been any posts.
Well,busy schedules at the university ,brain raging with thoughts about our education system , coupled with the growing fever to abandon all and seek spirituality as the path of the remaining part of my life's journey, whilst wondering whether silence should be my medium of communication, the flow paused.

So with a thought of silence for your reflection it would be a pleasure to know the importance of silence as given hereon.

Wishing you a happy reading,
with best wishes,
A.S.Prasad

The Subtle Form Of Leadership

The tough moments in our organizations are not when we deal with complaints and opposition from within. These you may grapple with and resolve. Once the problem surfaces we provide resources, negotiate, and communicate or bargain and come to terms. The real challenge comes from the units that are generally silent, not vocal and who even when neglected never crib nor complain. As leaders we tend to take silence for granted or wrongly believe that all is well. Such leadership is not equitable and surely enormous harm may erupt in the organization without warning.

How does this happen despite our best effort to do be fair and just toward all the constituents in our organizations? A Chinese parable translated by W. Chan Kim and Renee A. Mauborgne captures the ‘unseen space of leadership’ to explain this beautifully in the “Sound of the Forest” story which also appeared in the HBR in 1992.



Sounds of silence

“Back in the third century A.D., the King Ts’ao sent his son, Prince T’ai, to the temple to study under the great master Pan Ku. Because Prince T’ai was to succeed his father as king, Pan Ku was to teach the boy the basics of being a good ruler. When the prince arrived at the temple, the master sent him alone to the Ming-Li Forest. After one year, the prince was to return to the temple to describe the sound of the forest.


When Prince T’ai returned, Pan Ku asked the boy to describe all that he could hear. “Oh Master,” replied the prince, “I could hear the cuckoos sing, the leaves rustle, the humming birds hum, the crickets chirp, the grass blow, the bees buzz, and the wind whisper and holler.” When the prince had finished, the master told him to go back to the forest to listen to what more he could hear. The prince was puzzled by the master’s request. He wondered if he had not discerned every sound already?

For days and nights on end, the young prince sat alone in the forest listening. But he heard no sounds other than those he had already heard. Then one morning, as the prince sat silently beneath the trees, he started to discern faint sounds unlike those he had ever heard before. As keenly as he could listen, the clearer the sounds became. Feelings of enlightenment enveloped the boy. “These must be the very sounds that the master wished me to discern,” he reflected.

When Prince T’ai returned to the temple, the master asked him what more he had heard. “Master,” responded the prince reverently, “when I listened more keenly, I could hear the unheard — the sound of flowers opening, the sound of the sun warming the earth, and the sound of the grass drinking the morning dew.”

The master nodded approvingly. “To hear the unheard,” remarked Pan Ku, “is a The Subtle Form Of Leadership, necessary discipline to be a good ruler. For only when a ruler has learned to listen closely to the people’s hearts, hearing their feelings un-communicated, pains unexpressed, and complaints not spoken of, can he hope to inspire confidence in his people, understand when something is wrong, and meet the true needs of his citizens.

The demise of states comes about when leaders listen only to superficial words and do not penetrate deeply into the souls of the people to hear their true opinions, feelings, and desire”.

Extremely eloquent as a parable, it brings out a supreme truth – the real challenge of leadership lies in the intangibles. We go for the obvious and the rational- as our senses are hardly tuned to ‘hear the unheard’.