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Peter's Articles

A Conference for the __People, by the People, __and At the People?
A Sign of Hope
As Goes the Follower; So __Goes the Leader
A Time To Heal

A Word in Support of __Suppliers
Back to the End of the Line
Be Careful What You Ask for
Caring About Place
Conference Calling
Conversations for a Change
Creating New Futures Through Community Conversations
Food for Thought
Freedom’s Just Another __Word
Hard Measures for Human __Values
Homeward Bound
Hope is Where You Find it
How’s it Going
In Praise of C-SPAN
It’s About Time
Large Ideas Expressed in __Small Movements

Let’s Give Them Something __to Talk About
Let’s Go to the Oasis
Movable Chairs
My Way is the Highway Once Around the Block
On The Streets Where We __Live
Quality, Wherefore Art __Thou?

Reframing The Debate
Remembering What Matters
Reality What a Concept
Safe Return Doubtful
Servant-Leadership
__ Conference
Strategy for Civic __Engagement
The Board Score
The Hunt for Next __November
The Oversight Fallacy
Total Quantity __Management
Trust in Whom
Turnabout is Fair Play
What a Difference a Space __Makes
When Change is No Change __at All
Y2K Calling
Y2K, Oh

WWW
 

Consulting Skills in Action

Engineering Impact

Gaining Client Commitment

The New Role for Human Resource Staff

Making Quality Happen

Making Quality Happen - II

Trainers Become Full Partners

 

Other Articles

Embracing Stewardship

Interview with Peter Block

Leading Change From Within

Peter Koestenbaum on Peter Block

Tips for Successful Consulting

Transformation Needed In Ethics
 

More From Peter

Peter's Morning Talk.mp3
 

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Peter Koestenbaum on Peter Block
By Bill Brewer

B: Over twenty-five years since its publication, Peter Block’s Flawless Consulting still has a life of its own. Has nothing changed in 30 years in companies or in people?

 

P: I’m not sure what to do with that question. But having had a chance to speak with Peter just a few minutes ago, I was reminded of something that’s been apparent since I met Peter. That A - he is a born therapist. And B - probably one of the best therapists ever born as a therapist.

 

It reminds me of what Freud said of Nietzsche, He said that Nietzsche understood himself better than maybe any man who ever lived or who was ever likely to live, which is quite a compliment coming from Freud.

 

People often wonder what did he mean by that. Basically, he meant that a philosophical mind which Freud had, is sort of a prerequisite for understanding more deeply the structure of human experience. No person is more sensitive to what happens intra-psychically and inter-psychically than Peter Block. He is extremely capable of being intra-psychic which means to go vertically down into the lower levels of the psyche and to really know what’s going on there as well as inter-psychically which means to communicate horizontally with people and to have the most engaging therapeutic skills of making people feel that they want to talk more, they’re gaining insight and they’re gaining helpful questions. Finally, he is creative, which I sort of add to the mix as coming up with new ways of thinking every time he opens his mouth.

 

I’m sure that the entire 30 years of Flawless Consulting has been an expression of that. 

 

You said has nothing changed in business.  People need this always - like breathing. These are the things we need for sustenance. We need an environment in where we’ve been heard, where we have felt valued, and where we have felt included because these experiences give us a voice and make it possible for us to say ‘I am’.

 

B: Do you think we have a role in creating a world where we can be heard, included, and valued, or am I dependent on others for that world?

 

P: Of course we have a role. I think that that is how Peter makes a living, by giving people the tools to be like him. If you want to talk about the world, love is not enough. It is a hard world of war, killing, hunger, competition ,envy, betrayal and humiliation so that love alone is not enough.

 

Martin Buber fits right into our conversation, to which the most important thing in life is to know how to stand your ground with another human being. Essentially that is not love.  That is the capacity to confront, challenge, and say ‘I am’, when someone else is saying “I’m so sorry, but you’re not”. I think Peter’s demeanor is of that sort. In a very gentle way, he is never afraid to make a strong courageous point.

 

B: I was struck by what you said before that love is not enough.

 

P: In Iraq today, love is not enough.

 

B: In a world of betrayal, and war, and bad things, it can be overwhelming--- so how do we find goodness or God?

 

P: Well, God is also a powerful being who destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah – who turns Sarah into a column of salt. The Old Testament is sort of shamelessly distinguished from the new testament by being all about the power of God whereas the new testament is about the love of God. So there is a god of power, and frightening terror referred to by theologians as the “mysterium tremendum” as opposed to the God of infinite love that is so strong in the New Testament. That is why my leadership diamond is not just about ethics. It is about reality, vision, and courage.  Ethics is not enough. There is the S.O.B. factor in human beings as well that you have to deal with.

 

B: You stated recently on your website (www.pib.net) that all we need to understand and take advantage of anxiety as an opportunity. I suppose that might include my anxiety about being authentic and saying “I am”.

 

P: That is central to Kierkegaard. You’ve got to take a leap of faith because you don’t know the truth. My contribution to this work, as infinitesimal as it may be, or as wrong as it may be, is to have lived with philosophy all my life. I’m no longer a spring chicken.  If I’ve made a contribution, it is to use the history and insight of philosophy which in my view are the very best thinking of mankind because cultures have elevated their philosophers to the pinnacle of representing what they are all about.

 

If you want to know what a culture is all about, you have to ask the culture ‘who are your great philosophers’. If you wanted to know what the West thinks, you’ve got Plato and Immanuel Kant. If you want to know what this culture thinks about itself, look and read Immanuel Kant. By studying the history of philosophy, you study the most important thoughts that mankind has come up with in order to struggle with the problem of existing in this world.

 

So my style is not to deal with individual disconnected themes, nor to say that one theme explains all themes, but to have eight themes and deliver it to someone who wants to use the yield of philosophy either as a coach, consultant, psychotherapist, lawyer, physician, executive, or as a leader. I try to find a place for anxiety in that picture.

 

I would say the fulcrum of it all is free will. The structure of free will is a great mystery, a great miracle. We all have it. It’s what makes us in the image of God, and ultimately experiencing and claiming my free will makes me anxious.  Anxiety is the experience that leads me to understand the power of my freedom.  And by eliminating anxiety with tranquilizers, we also eliminate philosophy.  Your anxiety does not have to be corrected which distorts the way you look at life, quite the opposite it rectifies the way you look at life.

 

B: These values of being authentic and stating “I am” resonate with me, but what if I lack the courage to do that because my fear is others will come back even more strongly saying “No you are not, and, in fact, you don’t have a job here any more.”

 

P: That’s why you need to know more than one theme. If all you know is integrity - that is not sufficient to be a leader.  You have to also pay attention to what you just said - that there are risks and dangers in life, and it is just poor judgment and foolish to ignore them.  Yes, if you speak out in the wrong place there will be consequences.  There always are consequences.  But the consequences in the wrong place can be very nefarious and very troublesome and you need to know that.

 

And you can make another decision – how am I going to manage my integrity in an evil world? Evil is part of the way I have to understand the world. You cannot simply say I will ignore evil, which is plainly pulling the wool over your eyes. But I will pay attention to evil and make some decisions about how to use my integrity in this world and survive.

 

That is what the world economic forum’s primary economic instrument is all about, and it is the best and most important document of its kind that we have today. The basic theme is the following: If a nation wishes to support its value system, which is an ethical issue, it must first be globally competitive, otherwise it cannot pay for it. That is the reality factor. If all you say is ‘we need to have a value system’ without factoring the reality dimension as well, then you don’t have an ethics factor at all.  And so that’s how my leadership diamond is constructed. You have several things to consider that are all equally important and ethics is one, but they’re all interconnected.

 

B: I’m struck by the global competitiveness, you know, in organizations there is always the capitalistic demand and we need to be able to predict a future three months out or six months out….

 

P: But see, you never can. Here we talk about vision, which is the third characteristic of the diamond. It’s not a question of predicting the future. It’s a question of making the motions of making it look good in the process of trying to do it.  Perhaps cynical, but I think it’s realistic. I think people who are just bottom line oriented are short lived, because they aren’t keeping up with the proper business.

 

That’s how they talk. They think this ‘kick ass’ kind of talk, is the way to be a cowboy leader and in some instances it works. But also some of the best people will just walk out of the room. In other words, if a leader is that simplistic and thinks that by being a cowboy he’s going to run the world, then I’m not interested in having this person around and I don’t care if I lose my job. I’ve got better things to do and better things to say, then to be run by John Wayne.

 

I talk about the four-fold bottom line. In Europe they talk about the triple bottom line, in the US they talk about only one bottom line.  Bottom line in Europe means ecological sustainability, it means social responsibility, and it means profit.  I add a fourth, which is peace. Because when you see the mess the world is in today where every news is bad news. When Baker and others come out and say that Iraq is beyond fixing -  that is not very hopeful, to put it mildly.  When Iran is stepping in and saying I want to try to get all the Arab countries to form an alliance against the United States and we have some atomic weapons –that is not very hopeful. 

 

So that if you’re going to say that ‘all I care about is the profit’, I will say then when the world is gone, you might be up in smoke…what will profits do for you?  There are other things you have to consider in doing business whether you like it or not. One has to be in an atmosphere of enough stability and peace for there to be such a thing as a market. If you single out profits, it’s a very, very, very limited success that you can have.


 

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