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  • 1.  Absurd excerpts from Scott Ott

    Posted 01-08-1998 09:59
    Below are some quotes from Richard Farson's "Management of the Absurd: Paradoxes in Leadership". If you are interested in more excerpts (FREE), send e-mail to sott@nkcsd.k12.mo.us
    Put the word "absurd" (without quotation marks) in the subject line and/or message line. You will receive a return e-mail with excerpts attached as an MS-Word document. If you cannot open such a document, send me a note and we'll find a compatible format.
    Here are some sample excerpts from Farson's book...

    "Knowing how people grow, for example, does not mean we know how to grow them. Experts in child development are no better than anyone else at raising their own children." (p. 40)

    "Absurd as it seems, the way to judge your effectiveness is to assess the quality of the discontent you engender, the ability to produce movement from low-order discontent to high-order discontent." (p. 94)

    "Real creativity, the kind that is responsible for breakthrough changes in our society, always violates the rules. That is why it is so unmanageable and that is why, in most organizations, when we say we desire creativity we really mean manageable creativity. We don't mean raw, dramatic, radical creativity that requires us to change." (p. 103)

    "While they might like to think they are organized for creativity, companies that are sizable and think of themselves as permanent cannot encourage creative acts as well as a new and relatively temporary organization can." (p. 104)

    "It presents us with the paralyzing absurdity that the situations we try hardest to avoid in our organizations would actually be the most beneficial for them." (p. 126)

    "The best leaders make their organizations places where their passion becomes the organizing force. 'Amateur' stems from the Latin word amator, which means 'lover'. Amateurs do what they do out of love. That is a word that does not often arise in conversation about management development, yet love is fundamental to good leadership, because leadership is all about caring. Indeed, caring is the basis for community, and the first job of the leader is to build community, a deep feeling of unity, a fellowship*One of the great dilemmas is that the erosion of community almost always happens in the name of progress*Once the human organization gets to be large-scale, it is difficult to make it work as effectively as it did when it was smaller. That is the reason for the current move to more entrepreneurial organizations. There are those who feel that the future of organizations will be in a reversion to small units because, for one thing, only in smaller units are the bonds holding people together affectional rather than simply functional, and affection is the basis of community. For example, only prisons housing fewer than twenty inmates are likely to be rehabilitative*leadership is like being in love." (p. 159)

    "Whenever I have the arrogance or audacity to believe that I can reform people, I get nowhere. But when I fundamentally recognize that I cannot possibly accomplish those reforms, I can move ahead with a more humble posture and, paradoxically, perhaps then there is a chance that the situation can change. The absurd lesson is to recognize that it is a lost cause and work on it anyway." (p. 164)


    Grace & Peace,
    Scott Ott


  • 2.  Absurd excerpts from Scott Ott

    Posted 01-08-1998 14:38
    Scott Ott wrote:
    >
    > Below are some quotes from Richard Farson's "Management of the Absurd: Paradoxes in Leadership". If you are interested in more excerpts (FREE),
    send e-mail to
    > Put the word "absurd" (without quotation marks) in the subject line and/or message line. You will receive a return e-mail with excerpts
    attached as an MS-Word
    > Here are some sample excerpts from Farson's book...
    >
    > "Knowing how people grow, for example, does not mean we know how to grow them. Experts in child development are no better than anyone else at
    raising their own
    >
    > "Absurd as it seems, the way to judge your effectiveness is to assess the quality of the discontent you engender, the ability to produce
    movement from low-orde
    >
    > "Real creativity, the kind that is responsible for breakthrough changes in our society, always violates the rules. That is why it is so
    unmanageable and that i
    >
    > "While they might like to think they are organized for creativity, companies that are sizable and think of themselves as permanent cannot
    encourage creative ac
    >
    > "It presents us with the paralyzing absurdity that the situations we try hardest to avoid in our organizations would actually be the most
    beneficial for them."
    >
    > "The best leaders make their organizations places where their passion becomes the organizing force. 'Amateur' stems from the Latin word amator,
    which means 'lo
    >
    > "Whenever I have the arrogance or audacity to believe that I can reform people, I get nowhere. But when I fundamentally recognize that I cannot
    possibly accomp
    >
    > Grace & Peace,
    > Scott OttFYI: Apparently, you do not have automatic word-wrap. So your lines
    extend way past the screen. When reduced for reply purposes, your
    message becomes truncated, losing the tail end of each section. Thought
    you'd want to know, as might others who may have similar limitations in
    the communications software. Perhaps Charlie can help with this.


  • 3.  Absurd excerpts from Scott Ott

    Posted 01-08-1998 16:35
    I used to go batty when I would get messages where the lines did not
    wrap. It apparently isn't always something the sender does or doesn't
    do. I checked with one of my lists and I was the only one receiving the
    un-wrapped messages.

    I've learned that when I get an un-wrapped message I can just select
    "wrap long lines" from the View menu and it corrects the message. I use
    Netscape for Mac so don't know if this is applicable across systems. I
    don't think this works for the rely messages or the strange formatting
    that happens with pasted messages though. I'll try that next time.
    Susie
    --
    H. Susie Coddington, Ph.D., Coddington Learning Co.
    410.992.9563 hsusie@erols.com
    LEARNING NEVER ENDS . . .