Posted on Dec 5, 2014
What guidance do you have on shaping the legacy we leave behind?
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This is pretty much an all-encompassing thread.
As current service-members and vets, what is one thing that you wish you had done, as a leader, to impact your soldiers?
Alternatively, as a future leader, what examples have you encountered that are influencing your potential style of leadership?
The military, as a whole, is undergoing changes, both internally and externally. Our future leaders are learning by example, and the course of future attitudes is determined by what they (and we) are doing now.
So, what guidance do you have on shaping the legacy we leave behind?
As current service-members and vets, what is one thing that you wish you had done, as a leader, to impact your soldiers?
Alternatively, as a future leader, what examples have you encountered that are influencing your potential style of leadership?
The military, as a whole, is undergoing changes, both internally and externally. Our future leaders are learning by example, and the course of future attitudes is determined by what they (and we) are doing now.
So, what guidance do you have on shaping the legacy we leave behind?
Posted 10 y ago
Responses: 13
I am going to quote myself...
"It is better to leave a legacy of people than a legacy of things. Things will get old, break and eventually be thrown away. People grow and pass those good things they have learned from you on. In this way, when you grow people, you are really ensuring that just a tiny part of you will live forever."
"It is better to leave a legacy of people than a legacy of things. Things will get old, break and eventually be thrown away. People grow and pass those good things they have learned from you on. In this way, when you grow people, you are really ensuring that just a tiny part of you will live forever."
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SGT (Join to see)
Terrific philosophy, TSgt Joshua Copeland. I believe we have lost sight of the concept of legacy...and underestimated the influence we have on other folks sharing our distinction in service, from Private to General. Great advice!
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1SG Steven Stankovich
What we have done for ourselves alone dies with us; what we have done for others and the world remains and is immortal...
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Great question SGT (Join to see). I just went over 24 years time in service a few months ago and I have experienced numerous examples of what right looks like and what is nowhere near right. I think the important thing to remember as Leaders is that we are always in the spotlight. Soldiers are always watching to see how we react to whatever situation we are placed in. I believe that the most important rule to live by is, while it may seem cliché (to borrow from CW5 (Join to see)), to always to the right thing no matter who is, or who is not, looking over your shoulder. If you do and say right all the time, then the legacy that you shape will speak for itself and it should resonate throughout formations to come.
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