Relationship, Leadership, Success, Life… it is ALL Service

Leaders are inspiring when they’re thoughtful, and anticipating ways of giving to those in their care.

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For the past year, for the first time in my life, I’m constantly in conversations about relationships, leadership, success, and life that reveal a solitary theme: service for the win.

Service as in serving… as in giving… as in sacrificing… as in reflecting on one’s thoughts, attitudes, behaviors, and deeds.

Those who have great relationships, who are great leaders, who enjoy great success, are all deeply committed to service.

What do I mean by “service?”

Those who are deeply committed to service would prefer to do the work than have others do the work for them.

Those who serve would prefer to be accountable than hold others accountable. Those who serve expect little from others, but they expect a lot from themselves—but importantly, they don’t punish themselves for failures, they strive to do better.

Service is the opposite of entitlement.

Service is the opposite of privilege.

Those who serve motivate others to kindness through their acts of service. They serve with joy for the blessing they can be in doing simple things to make others’ lives better.

Marriages go better when husbands serve their wives. Why not the other way around? The default is wives already serve their husbands.

There is no better way to woo a wife than to do loving things, give time generously, give thoughtful gifts, give loving compliments, and give warmth and affection. Husbands who expect to be served will have unhappier wives.

Leaders are inspiring when they’re thoughtful, and anticipating ways of giving to those in their care.

Leadership is not about the ‘privilege’ of being the ‘boss’. There’s no service in lording it over people. But when leaders serve, they provide a cogent example of teamwork, and their humility shines forth as inspiration.

Serving provides success through the willingness to get one’s hands dirty in a way that the person serving expects little if no reward.

Relationships, leadership, and success are not in viewing ourselves as right and others as wrong, imagining we have all the answers and others don’t.

It’s the complete opposite; it’s when we affirm others when they’re performing well, and just as much it’s when we admit we’ve missed the mark.

None of us have the market cornered in wisdom; when we think we do, we’re conceited.

The more we can demonstrate the emotional intelligence of being flexible and connected, the more inspirational we become.

Relationships, leadership, success, and life no less, are all procured through service.

 

This is an updated edition of a post originally published on Tribework

Featured Image by Alexa from Pixabay

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About the Author

Steve Wickham is a Kingdom Winds Contributor. He holds several roles, including husband, father, peacemaker championing peacemaking for children and adults, conflict coach and mediator, church pastor, counselor, funeral celebrant, chaplain, mentor, and Board Secretary. He holds degrees in Science, Divinity (2), and Counselling. Steve is also a Christian minister serving CyberSpace i.e. here.

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