Friday, August 23, 2013

How to thrive with drive: The secrets of the highly motivated motivators: You need a spark, not a push.

How to thrive with drive: The secrets of the highly motivated motivators:  You need a spark, not a push. 

There is a huge misunderstanding that motivation has to do with the carrot or the stick. Bonuses and threats are not motivators. They are external forces that can at most MOVE you but not really MOTIVATE you. There was a farmer in the Western Cape who once said: ”I have a five point plan for motivating people – and it works like this …” – and he showed his fist and open hand as if he wanted to slap you in the face.  The people moved when he was near – but the problem was – when he was not there his farmworkers didn’t work.  When he sent his son to university, the son failed miserably because dad, the source of fear that forced him to study was many miles away.  The problem is: Fear and bonus can move you, but not permanently motivate you. When the source of fear is gone, or the bonus gained, then the ‘motivation’ is gone.


Leaders and parents must realize: Motivation is not about pushing or pulling a wheelbarrow – it is about turning wheelbarrows into self-driven vehicles.


A former CEO of Sasol in Secunda, mr Bram de Klerk told me once: “I don’t want my people in my plant to be cogs in a well- oiled machine. I want them all to be little engines – engines the can drive themselves and the company to new heights.” He knew the secret of lasting motivation namely that his people and his company will thrive with drive – the internal drive of igniting their internal combustion engines. It was a great insight from the man who once manufactured most of the petrol used by motor vehicles in South Africa. (Through the Sasol Coal-to-Liquid [CTL] process in Secunda).

He also knew that the task of a leader, a CEO or even a motivational speaker, is not to push or pull people, to threaten (rule by fear) or only to incentivise people, but rather to serve as an engine starter and a spark plug. Leaders and motivational speakers must ignite the inner engine:  your passion, purpose and your spirit. It is not about kicking butt. Bob Wilson said: "You get the best effort from others not by lighting a fire beneath them, but by building a fire within." 

Let’s recap: External temporary motivation such as:
(i)            Fear:  I want to avoid …(e.g. poverty, etc.)…
(ii)          Bonus: I want to achieve/get/have  .....(e.g. a nice house/car, etc.)....
can move you.
Bonus and fear motivation combined with a bit of passion (the inner drive of emotion) may turn you into a go-getter and even take you to some heights  - even the peak of success or the top of the Maslow triangle of self-actualization (overcoming the fear of hunger, insecurity, loneliness, anonymity and the fear of not using all your potential). But that is as far as it can take you.

Inspiration motivation, on the other hand, will take you beyond the summit of success, to significance. It will turn you from a go-getter into a go-giver: 
                           

To ignite your inner engine of passion, purpose and spirit you need to activate your permanent internal (even eternal) motivation: Leaders and inspirational speakers must facilitate processes to ignite the following: :
(i)            The Motive (the WHY?) of your existence:  Why do you get up in the morning? What do you live for? What will you sacrifice for? What are the important relations you are living for? What will you give your time and your life for willingly?
(ii)          The Purpose: Why on earth am I on earth? You find your purpose in your design. You have talents that must be connected to a specific need in the world. There-in lies you purpose.  You are demotivated when you live against your grain, but you are in ‘flow’ and motivation comes easy when you are doing what you are designed (even destined) to do.
(iii)         Dan Pink said the profit motive must never be divorced from the purpose motive. But he added two more things to purpose: Autonomy & Mastery: What is it that thing, if I have autonomy, I would like to master? E.g.: playing the guitar. Doing my own thing which I instinctively feel is true to myself! Dan Pink even pointed out that bonus motivation demotivates people if used for complex tasks!
(iv)         E-motion: Can I manage my emotions well and get the inner energy of emotions to work for me? Emotion is energy that, if managed correctly can drive you to great heights. It doesn’t matter if it is intense emotions of joy or sadness – the energy can be harvested and channelled to achieve/create great things. One person said: To be a great poet, you must be miserable or in love.  The ability needed to harvest any emotion for your own gain, is the ability to focus on the opportunity in all situations and not on the threat.  
(v)          En-thusiasm & In-spiration:  All of us admire and enjoy inspired and enthusiastic people. How is it possible that they are always motivated? Did you know that the word ‘inspiration” comes from the two Latin words: “in” + “spiritus” = ‘the spirit inside’. And did you know that the word ‘enthusiasm’ comes from the two Greek words:  ‘ev” + “theos” . [ev = in and theos = god.] Enthusiasm has to do with “God inside”. Enthusiastic and inspired people discovered the secret of being connected to the source!  Do you expect an electric light to shine that is not plugged in? Now why do you expect your people to shine without being connected to the source – the source of life?  I like to give recognition to the fact that I got life as a gift – a gift from God – the creator and source of life.  I can do my work as a motivational and inspirational speaker because I am connected to the source – the source of life and love. My belief, my chosen truth, is that God is love.  Because I am inspired by his Spirit I don’t have to do it out of my own energy. Therefore I am always motivated – yes, sometimes physically tired, but always motivated.   It is to be a channel, a pipeline, a fountain of energy. I am not the source of energy – merely the channel – but because of that you can never be depleted. .  
It is almost like St Francis of Assisi of old who said“ .. make me an instrument of your peace; where there is hatred, let me sow love; …; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; and where there is sadness, joy. Grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console; to be understood, as to understand, to be loved as to love; for it is in giving that we receive, …”.    
When speakers/leaders/helpers/psychologists think they are the source –   that is when and why they burn out – because they try to do it in their own strength – and they are depleted before they even realize.


The need for “Motive cleansing”:  But there is one more thing. The world is not just a great place full of good things. No, there are also many negative forces at work, stemming from the worst inner drives you can imagine.  That is why all of us must also do “Motive cleansing”:
The strongest motivation comes from inner drive. But be careful:  There are two kinds of inner drive: The positive drive of love, and the negative or neorotic drive of hatred and deficiency.  Hatred for the enemy can drive a suicide bomber to give his life and take as many people with him – in the hope of gaining some sort of bonus at the expense of others. Love, on the other hand, can drive you to give your life to save others.

The neorotic drive to compensate for a deficiency can consume people, get them to work themselves to death, and turn them into obsessive compulsive seekers. They have an emptiness inside that can never be filled:  that re-actively want to fill a gap, instead of pro-actively living from the core of their being and talents. They are the VDP’s: The Very Draining People. Time for them to do 'motive cleansing' otherwise they will always be stuck in losers motivation. 

Losers motivation is about hatred and gaining at the expense of others. It is a neorotic drive to gain fame and possessions and throw it in the bottomless pit of deficiency. The only conclusion there is Mick Jagger’s: “I can’t get no satisfaction”!  

Winners motivation is fountain motivation. It is about giving love (loving your neighbour and the enemy) because you are connected to the source of love. It is the only motivation that can take you beyond yourself and your own needs, beyond the summit of success, to significance. They are the VIP’s. Not the very Important people but the Very Inspirational People. They are the true motivators that help you to ignite this spirit in you.

Bad motivational speakers create a surge of emotion for people to clap hands and cheer. I call them them the cheerleaders, the feel-good speakers.
Great motivational speakers on the other hand ignite the fire. Adlai Stevenson related once that in classical times when Cicero had finished speaking, the people said, 'How well he spoke,' but when Demosthenes had finished speaking, the people said, 'Let us march.' "


The elusive secret of lasting life-long motivation is after all not that big a secret. It is just to ignite the inner engine:  your passion, purpose and your spirit. It is to thrive with drive. 



Dr Gustav Gous  is an International Motivational Speaker and 
Executive Life Coach with experience on 5 continents. In the past he 
was the in-house counselor for the petro-chemical company Sasol 
for 9 years. He facilitated in numerous Trauma counselling sessions
after industrial accidents. He is known for his Transformational leadership 
programmes on Robben Island, titled the “Short Walk to Freedom”. 
He is a Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) and past President 
of the Professional Speakers Association of Southern Africa and a 
member of the APSS (Asia Professional Speakers Singapore).  
Currently he is heading up the Diversity Intelligence Institute, 
specializing in rolling out Diversity Intelligence interventions for 
international companies.   www.gustavgous.co.za , www.diviin.com ,
www.diversityconference.co.za    gustav@gustavgous.co.za    drgous@iafrica.com
Follow him on Twitter: @GustavGous  or on Facebook and LinkedIn .






Thursday, July 25, 2013

Delivered of (?) a prince. By George! George of Cambridge, Mandela of South Africa and the trauma of farm murders. Connecting the dots …

Delivered of (?) a prince. By George!  George of Cambridge, Mandela of South Africa and the trauma of farm murders.
Connecting the dots … 
  
By George! Lesson # no. 1: Baby delivery is not a DHL-style delivery of a parcel but rather to be delivered from something that can harm you if it stays too long inside.

Was it only me who found the wording of the royal baby announcement displayed on the easel in front of Buckingham Palace strange? “ …the Duchess of Cambridge was delivered of a baby ….” 

In older video footage they said Diana was ‘delivered of a prince’.  Delivered of (?) a baby?  Perhaps it was my bad English (my second language) that caused me to think that a baby is delivered almost like a parcel, not necessarily by a stork (although the picture did enter my mind), but almost like a DHL delivery. My expectation was that the delivery agent in this case was Duchess Catherine and that she laboured hard through a painful process to deliver a royal baby to the British nation, a heir to the throne, a future king to a number of commonwealth countries. But the actual wording on the easel has more of a ring of the wording in the Lord’s prayer: “…deliver us from evil …” Delivery here in the sense saving you from something that can harm you.

Having being fortunate to be physically present at a number of births, I am to this day still in awe of the miracle that plays out when a child is born. The pain of separation brings not only new life to the baby but also new life to your wife who can now recover and continue with her life without having to carry the one she nurtured inside her body forever. I should have known: In my mother tongue an Obstetrician is called a “verloskundige” – literally translated as a ‘saving-scientist/doctor’! Perhaps we forget the fact that it is dangerous for the health of the mother and the child if the baby stays too long on the inside: 266-270 days normal – anything more than 285 days is dangerous and detrimental to the health of mother and child. Then the childbirth must be induced by the doctor – the ‘saving-doctor’  - to deliver her of the baby.

So Kate was delivered of the baby, and young prince George Alexander Louis of Cambridge was delivered from the womb, which could have become his prison if he stayed in too long. Little George is now free to be a great leader one day. Who knows:  Perhaps he (like all princes and kings in story books of my children) will do great deeds in years to come: With a lion-heart he will be brave and he will deliver the goods by delivering his nation in critical moments in history from whatever is threatening them. 

Lesson # no. 2: Delivery comes from within: Leaders must be liberated before they can lead.

This is where Nelson Mandela comes in. His most famous quote:  “As I walked out the door toward the gate that would lead to my freedom, I knew if I didn't leave my bitterness and hatred behind, I'd still be in prison.” His greatness lies in the fact that he was liberated from within. In other aspects he is just like other leaders with their good and bad points. But he was great because he knew he had to be delivered of hatred before he could lead. Without being delivered from within, he could have been consumed by hatred and destroyed a nation. South Africa’s neighbour Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe is currently destroying his country because he was never delivered from within …

Lesson # no. 3: A friend, life coach, father, teacher, speaker, counsellor helps others to be liberated from things on the inside that harm them.

The farm murder? In my daily work I do also trauma counselling. Assisting a family after their father was brutally murdered on a farm in South Africa, we sat around a table discussing: The culprits will hopefully be soon behind bars as a result of their horrendous acts. But we shared: The family will not be safe and secure if they only introduce new security measures. They will only be victorious if they don’t  allow this happening to replay in their minds every day. They won’t allow the terror agents any mind space. They will win - not in finding meaning in a senseless killing – that is impossible. But they will use the human ability to create new meaning and find new motivation. In doing so, they will be even better off after the tragic loss of a beloved father. They will be prepared but not be paranoid. They will be diligent but not vindictive. They will create meaning instead of being consumed by hatred. They will be free and the culprits will be in jail. Actually in two jails: The one behind bars, and the prison of hatred and greed, that a murderer carries within.

Not the recent Mandela Day celebrations, or the birth of a Royal baby, inspired me as much as the bravery of a South African farmer family, who knows their victory lies in not in being safe from the outside but being free from the inside.  Their father was not saved from the attack, but they are delivered from the inner hatred that could have poisoned the whole family.
They will go from strength to strength, and continue to be leaders in their farming community because they understood the concept of being “delivered of …”.


Thank you George of Cambridge.



Dr Gustav Gous  is an International Motivational Speaker and 
Executive Life Coach with experience on 5 continents. In the past he 
was the in-house counselor for the petro-chemical company Sasol 
for 9 years. He facilitated in numerous Trauma counselling sessions
after industrial accidents. He is known for his Transformational leadership 
programmes on Robben Island, titled the “Short Walk to Freedom”. 
He is a Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) and past President 
of the Professional Speakers Association of Southern Africa and a 
member of the APSS (Asia Professional Speakers Singapore).  
Currently he is heading up the Diversity Intelligence Institute, 
specializing in rolling out Diversity Intelligence interventions for 
international companies.   www.gustavgous.co.za , www.diviin.com ,
www.diversityconference.co.za    gustav@gustavgous.co.za    drgous@iafrica.com
Follow him on Twitter: @GustavGous  or on Facebook and LinkedIn .





Sunday, June 30, 2013

Open letter to President Obama: We need a Statue of Responsibility on Robben Island please.

Open letter to President Obama:
We need a Statue of Responsibility on Robben Island  please.

Dear president Obama,

Let me cut to the chase: You are visiting Robben Island today – a place of enormous symbolism. I want to make a bold request. Please consider a symbolic gift to us in the form of a statue:   Yes, a big statue to be erected on Robben Island, to be called the Statue of Responsibility .  We all know that the statue of Liberty was a gift of the French nation to the American people. We all know that the powerful presence of  lady Liberty in New York (on Liberty Island), is an inspiration to many. Wouldn’t it be great if you can return the compliment and give a symbolic Statue of Responsibility  to  the people of South Africa, Africa and the World, as a gift from the American people, to be erected on Robben Island where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned.  

Why a statue of Responsibility? We all know that freedom & responsibility (should) go hand in hand like a fish & water. Where things go wrong is where people fight for freedom but forget to act responsibly once they attained freedom.
As USA President, carrying great responsibility, you will know  that freedom is a double sided coin.  It is best illustrated by the fact that in Hebrew there are two words for freedom: ‘hofshi’ and ‘hor’: One denotes negative freedom: “Free FROM …”  oppression, imprisonment, slavery, colonialism, etc. But that is just the starting point. The other word denotes positive freedom: “Free TO ….”  … to serve, to make a positive difference and helping others. Nelson Mandela, whose prison cell you are visiting today, was the perfect example of a leader who embraced both of these meanings of the word ‘freedom’.



All the problems in the world derive from businesses not taking up their responsibilities contributing to climate change and polluting the environment, irresponsible politicians (unlike Mandela) using their position for personal gain, fathers making babies but not taking up their role as fathers neglecting their children. Teenagers, screaming for freedom, can mess up their lives if they don’t have a sense of responsibility.  The list is endless. 

I have a confession: As students of a men’s residence we incurred the wrath of your American Embassy in Pretoria on this topic. It was rag time (charity fund-raising festival) and we toyed with the idea (and even published it) to depict the statue of liberty as a pregnant lady on one of the carnival floats. Your Embassy took offence, and despite our assurances that it was none of us who impregnated her (!?) – they wrote a letter of protest to our University principal, who  came down real hard on us prohibiting us to build a carnival float with a pregnant Statue of Liberty. We wanted to make a point similar to the following:   

Lady Liberty thought, since she symbolizes freedom, that she also must have the freedom to explore a bit and even change her dress and have a bit of fun. So she did:



But one dark and stormy night she neglected her duty to carry the flame of liberty and left her post to play with the sailors in the harbour. She threw all responsibility overboard, and thought nobody would find out – but after a while her slip was showing ….



You look like a man who can appreciate a bit of humor President Obama, but our current reality in SA is no joke. We have leaders who have to be seriously reminded that they must not abuse the freedom they got, after fighting for it so long. Some of them are blatantly using their positions of power for personal gain.
A statue of responsibility will be a soft but strong way to remind all  leaders and citizens of the world to fight for freedom, but use it responsibly. 

Your call earlier on your tour to African leaders, and the African youth was to take responsibility and hold our leaders accountable. Please consider to cement this call now with this symbolic gift. 

You are probably aware that the idea of a Statue of Responsibility was first proposed by the Austrian psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, author of  the best-selling book, "Man's Search for Meaning",  In his book  he describes how he created meaning from his prison experience  as a  surviving Nazi prisoner at both Auschwitz and Dachau. "Freedom is not the last word," Frankl wrote. "Freedom is only part of the story and half of the truth. The positive aspect of freedom is responsibleness. That is why I recommend that the Statue of Liberty on the East Coast be supplemented by a Statue of Responsibility on the West Coast."
In the late 1980s dr Frankl spoke  at the University of Pretoria, and  he then  suggested that the Statue must be erected on the other side of the Atlantic ocean in South Africa.

I also know that before his death in 1997 dr Frankl with some American friends including the late  Stephen R. Covey, started the  Statue of Responsibility Foundation and that they already commissioned the Springville sculptor Gary Price to design a monument that captured Frankl's vision. Their idea is to erect it in Utah on the west coast, but the project probably needs government input to be more than a private initiative. There is even a group in South Africa saying it must be in Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape in Nelson Mandela Bay.   

My request to you Mr president is: Can’t you take control of this project and get the inspired people to talk to each other and even give consideration to the fact that the best symbolic venue for such a statue would be Robben Island. I am sure it can be a beautiful part of your legacy

Why Robben Island?  Because Robben Island is our Liberty Island – a symbol of hope to the World. It does not only symbolise Freedom ( Nkululeko) - it also symbolises the fact the two leaders, Nelson Mandela and FW de Klerk took responsibility: They used their freedom responsibly to create a future for us all. You will visit Madiba’s cell of 18 years today, but I hope they also share with you the fact that  the decision by the Apartheid government to break free from the old parading and release Mandela, was also taken on the island – in the historic Guest House on the Island where they will probably offer you tea on your visit.

In the late 90’s and we started a “Short Walk to Freedom” project where we took leaders on a 4-step paradigm shift workshop on Robben Island: Captivity, Liberation, Responsibility and Leadership. Part of these workshops was to design models for a Statue of Responsibility to be erected on Robben Island. Robben Island can be the best place for the Statue of Responsibility, because on this island Madiba  had the longest part of his  long walk to freedom. Unfortunately he had a short time for leadership.  Since all of us are to some extent  prisoners without knowing (of the past, personal pain, paradigms , prejudice, etc) we must do our own short walk to freedom.  If we shorten our walk to freedom, we will have a longer time for responsible leadership. 

A Statue of Responsibility can be an international symbol to rally energy for responsible leadership.
I hope this can be part of your legacy, mr. President!

Kind regards

Gustav

Dr Gustav Gous,  MD: Short Walk Seminars (Pty) Ltd  www.gustavgous.co.za  

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Call to action: Nelson Mandela’s life and death. Walk free ...

Call to action: Nelson Mandela’s life and death. 
Call your prison and Walk free ...

Everybody knows it is inevitable. We will hear one day, perhaps sooner than we want: “World icon Nelson Mandela dies”. Rafael Nadal tweeted about Mandela’s death prematurely and apologised to his 4 million plus followers – but at least he is one of the people who respects and recognises his legacy.  We know and accept: Nelson Mandela is old and frail and cannot live forever. When it happens, we will be sad and deeply touched.  We will mourn as a South African nation. Actually, the whole world will mourn the death of perhaps the most inspiring leader of the previous century. He was even the 'go-to' leader for celebrities and other world leaders such as American president Bill Clinton who came to seek Mandela’s advice during his time of serious problems.

But what are we to do in this uneasy waiting period? Send well wishes? Must we just pray for his recovery? Obviously two great gestures. But is this the best way to honour him? Or must we just sit and wait, like the protocol group of the South African state who, in anticipation of the bad news, activates the funeral and other contingency plans, every time Madiba (his tribal name) is admitted to hospital? 

No, we must not sit and wait – we must act. The best way to honour Madiba’s legacy is not just to empathize or watch with interest and emotion the media drama that will unfold. Many dignitaries will arrive with over 2000 planes expected to land, creating a media circus. Sharing in the emotion of the moment will be good (like so many did with Lady Diana’s funeral), but it is still not the best way to honour his life.  If we only focus on his great extraordinary deeds  - his  27 years in prison, coming out with forgiveness and not with guns blazing -  then it will be just reminiscing the past.  His life and death will only get real meaning if we do not only remember the past but start doing something in the present.

This blog is not a call to observation, but a call to action:  It is a call, that you actually should have started to act long ago.  The call to action is to live Mandela’s example and not to only admire his great deeds.

What is the Mandela secret?
The secret of Mandela’s legacy lies in the fact that he really was a free man. He did not only have a Long Walk to Freedom (title of his autobiography) -  being released after 27 years in prison, 18 of those on Robben Island. He was also free from hatred, the bondages of the past, the negative residual of personal pain that was inflicted on him, and free from vengeance.  All of this was possible because he embraced the concept of forgiveness. Because of this, South Africa got off the top of the world's hot spot list and became a country with a future. 

Other hot spots in the world stay hot because fighting factions perpetuate hatred. They feed it. They keep it alive. 'Live, and let live' is for example not big in the Middle East. They hate each other so much that some don't even recognize the existence of others.  Great military leaders in history loved their own people, hated their enemies, and conquered and killed them, and got written into history.  But greater leaders love not only their friends but also their enemies.  They are the ’next level leaders’, in a class of their own. They are a rare breed: few and far between. In South Africa we call these kinds of leaders ‘rainmakers’ – they bring good things to all people under the sun/ on earth. 

In this respect, Nelson Mandela, a Methodist Christian, imitated an even greater leader, Jesus Christ, who preached and lived that you must love not only your neighbour, but also your enemies. Jesus was willing to sacrifice: He died and lived for his message of love for all humankind.  Mandela said during the Rivonia trial that led to his imprisonment 49 years ago: “During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to this struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”
Nelson in his own admittance is not a saint and he resisted being iconised, but he surely did practice the principle of forgiveness – and that unique ability made him the ‘next level leader’ we admire. He went from positional power to ‘personhood’ where people will follow him for what he is and stands for.

Two movies especially depict Mandela’s attitude of forgiveness, inclusion and love for all: 

(1) Invictus, (produced and directed in 2009 by Clint Eastwood with Morgan Freeman as Mandela and Matt Damon as Springbok Rugby captain Francois Pienaar), where Mandela embraces the then predominantly white sport Rugby, to bring about reconciliation and victory for all South Africans.  He rejects revenge, forgives his oppressors and creates national unity in an unlikely place: The Rugby field. 
(2) Goodbye Bafana (a Bille August film, 2007) depicts the special friendship that developed between prisoner Mandela and his then  racist jailer/warder James Gregory. Perhaps they discovered their common humanity in the fact that both men lost their son’s in motor car accidents, with Mandela not even being allowed to attend the funeral of his own son.  

It is beyond the reach of petty dictators to ever, get over the hurt of the past and become a next level leader like Nelson Mandela. Caught up in their own hatred, personal pain, they live a reactive life of getting back at people. A classical example is Robert Mugabe who recently criticized Nelson Mandela, saying:  "Mandela has gone a bit too far in doing good to the non-black communities [whites, mixed race and Indian people – GG] , really in some cases at the expense of blacks...," in an interview with talk show host Dali Tambo. "That is being too saintly, too good, too much of a saint," he said. Mugabe also fought for freedom, but will die in his own prisons of hatred, reversed racism and homophobia.  It will be interesting to see how Zimbabweans and the world view Mugabe’s funeral one day – who stayed in power with fear tactics and rigged elections.

Call to action
But what is the call to action then? It is plain and simple: Inspired by Nelson Mandela’s life well lived …
·         1. Call your own prison.
·         2. Then walk free from it.
·         3. Then Change your world for the better as a free leader.
First be transformed – then lead to transform. Name your own prisons. Then break free. Then use your position to make the world a better place.  In doing so Mandela’s inevitable death will not only stir up emotion, but also result in action. Just like Mandela had a long walk to freedom, you must do your personal walk to freedom.  This is to my mind the best way to honour his legacy. Because only free leaders can lead people to a better place.

My call to action to all of us is to do a ‘Short Walk to Freedom’. Mandela had a long walk to freedom and a short time for leadership. If we can shorten our respective walks to freedom, then we can have a longer time for leadership.

Since the nineties, I’ve been hosting “Short Walk to Freedom”-interventions on Robben Island on a regular basis.  There I lead senior executives and upcoming young leaders on a three step journey: From Captivity, to Liberation, to Leadership. The first step is to identify all the ‘prisons’ that hold you back and prevent you from reaching your destiny. The same prisons can hinder your company/NGO/family/community/country/political party/trade union/school or university.

Over the years we have identified more than 45 potential prisons that hold us back, including the prisons of
  • ·         the past
  • ·         prejudice
  • ·         paradigms  (political, business, ideological, etc)
  • ·         personal pain
  • ·         habits  (even addictions)
  • ·         fundamentalism
  • ·         greed   …
and many more.  It turned into a project that will soon become a publication that will urge people to break free from everything that is holding them back.
We contemplated the following over the years:
  • ·         If people get out of the prison of unresolved issues and personal pain, they will be free to have pro-active lives and not re-active lives, in relationships and business teams
  • ·         If some bankers can escape from the prison of greed – then we can avoid a further global credit crunch.
  • ·         If people can walk away from the prison of selfishness/immorality, then we can prevent the next Enron scandal.
  • ·         If people can break free from fundamentalism, there will be less wars on earth.
  • ·         If people can break free from outdated business and environmental paradigms, then businesses and the world will flourish more.
  • ·         If politicians can break free from their self-serving prison and start serving the people like Nelson Mandela did, we will all have a better life for all - in South Africa and elsewhere. Nelson Mandela was a freedom fighter that fought for principles.  Many of his struggle mates are not actually freedom fighters, but proved themselves to be mere “power fighters” who aim for and cling to positions of power, for the sake of self-enrichment and family enrichment through nepotism.  Some even cling to positions of power because of the prison of fear: The moment they lose the immunity that goes with their position, they know they will be criminally charged or brought to book for war crimes.  
  • ·         Bad habits are cobwebs that turn into cables – if you stay in the grip of bad habits people will never reach their rightful destiny.

My call to action is: Call your prison and walk free. Follow in Mandela’s footsteps and do your personal walk to freedom, albeit shorter.
Feel even free to contact me if you want to do your walk to freedom with me on Robben Island in the footsteps of Mandela.  admin@gustavgous.co.za


My last call to action is a smaller one:  If you can think of, or identify any type of ‘prison’ that can hold us back as individuals, communities, nations, humanity – then post it at the end of the blog or on my Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter links. It can help us in our research project to identify as many as possible ‘prisons’ that we can break free from, and include it in our future publications.

In summary
If you want to honour Nelson Mandela’s legacy- then do something:  Just watching the media circus surrounding his possible death is not enough – honour his life through action.
Realize that we are often ‘prisoners without knowing’ – prisoners of the past, prejudice, personal pain, paradigms, emotions (hatred, fear), unresolved issues, addictions, and many more.  Identify your prisons, and walk free – in doing so you will liberate yourself to be the best leader you can be -  a next level leader like Nelson Mandela.





Dr Gustav Gous  is an International Motivational Speaker and 
Executive Life Coach with experience on 5 continents. In the past he 
was the in-house councillor for the petro-chemical company Sasol 
for 9 years.  He is known for his Transformational leadership 
programmes on Robben Island, titled the “Short Walk to Freedom”. 
He is a Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) and past President 
of the Professional Speakers Association of Southern Africa and a 
member of the APSS (Asia Professional Speakers Singapore).  
Currently he is heading up the Diversity Intelligence Institute, 
specializing in rolling out Diversity Intelligence interventions for 
international companies.   www.gustavgous.co.za , www.diviin.com ,
www.diversityconference.co.za    gustav@gustavgous.co.za    drgous@iafrica.com
Follow him on Twitter: @GustavGous  or on Facebook and LinkedIn .

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Conversation on Diversity Intelligence: Lenora Billings-Harris interviews Gustav Gous

Conversation on Diversity Intelligence: Lenora Billings-Harris interviews Gustav Gous

Click link to hear audio recording:
https://soundcloud.com/gustavgous/conversation-on-diversity

Conversation Topics:
  •  How the field of diversity is viewed differently in different parts of the world
  • Different terms for diversity in different parts of the world (inclusion, etc)
  • How training differs in different contexts.
  • The six ways to relate to people  and many more . Click audio link above.


www.LenoraSpeaks.com                                                   www.gustavgous.co.za  
www.aboutTrailblazers.com                                                www.diversityconference.co.za 
                                                                                          Twitter: GustavGous
                                                                                           Facebook & LinkedIn: Gustav Gous