Expanding our family through an international adoption has
shaped the last three years. The journey began in December 2009 and
in March of 2012 we brought two sisters, Meskerem and Tarikua, to Austin from
Ethiopia and into our home. The adventure continues and the
expedition has provided emotional lessons; some of them even apply to
leadership.
Leaders Don’t Dwell on the Differences: There is a great Ethiopian restaurant in
Austin called Aster's Ethiopian
Restaurant and I found myself in their parking lot 72 hours after we
brought the girls to Austin. Meskerem
and Tarikua opened the car door and became giddy with excitement and not
because they could magically divine the sign.
They were hypnotized by the smell.
The scent of authentic Ethiopian food is unique; much like a curry tells
you the food is Indian or strong garlic announces Italian food. Berbere
is the spice mix in Ethiopian food that makes it smell and taste, well –
Ethiopian (if you make the spice, don’t leave out the Fenugreek). Smell is the oldest sense and some maintain it
has the ability to bring
back memories. Aster’s took the
girls back to home to Ethiopia and the news spread rapidly in our neighborhood that
berbere was comforting to the two new Americans.
We are fortunate to live in Austin with its’ Keep Austin Weird
state of mind. Austin has a friendly accepting
culture of artistic and individual expression.
But how would our neighbors react to the adoption? We really did not worry about bigotry, but
Ethiopian children in Westlake Hills? The
racial makeup of our area of the city is 95.60% white, so
even if folks were accepting, it was still new.
Tarikua tested them (and me) quickly.
Early one morning I was washing my car and she decided the bucket was
her bathtub. She stripped down, sat in
the bucket and then took off down the street like a character in a Sandra
Boyton book. I found myself running
down the street chasing a naked Ethiopian girl yelling, “Come back to daddy!” This was not my original plan on introducing
my daughter to the neighbors but no police were called to the scene; I was
grateful our neighbors were accepting and supportive.
The support came to full bloom in the meal parade that hit
our house. For at least six weeks the
smell of berbere spice was ever present.
Every night a different neighbor came by with food for the family; they
had all learned about the magic of injera, doro wat, sega wat, allicha, and fir-fir. My wife and I enjoy a good glass of red wine
from time to time and soon our back patio became a combination wine bar and play scape.
One of my favorite moments of the journey came during one of
those early evenings. Our next door
neighbors came over; they have two children and their youngest daughter is the
same age as Tarikua (they have since
become best friends, the picture is from the first night they met). As we enjoyed a
great glass of cabernet, a baker’s dozen
kids scrambled onto the trampoline. Loud
laughter filled the spring evening. We
looked up and my older daughter was directing some new game. My neighbor shook his head in amazement, “All those kids are from two different
worlds, they cannot even talk to each other and somehow they have immediately found
a way to play together – they don’t even know they are different”
The cheapest way to lead is by building a wall around your
team saying, “It is us against them” We
are good, they are bad. We work hard,
they do not. We know the answer, they are
stupid. You see these types of
self-important teams everywhere. Since
the beginning of time leaders have used the tribal nature of humans to build
walls and lead from position of ‘different’
but real leaders don’t do that.
Diversity is great and should be celebrated. But celebrating diversity of humanity is
different than leading by highlighting differences. Our organizations are made up of functions,
roles, levels and geographies. It is all
too easy to say, “We are doing great in
marketing, but sales is not doing their job” or “The Americans just don’t understand how things are done here in Europe”…I
have even heard, “The third floor gets
more work done than the fourth floor”
What do trampolines have to do with leadership? The application is Leaders Don’t Dwell on the Differences. Leadership brings different people together
and points them towards something worthy.
Leaders are for something, not against others. Leaders
find and celebrate unity.
“Where there is unity
there is always victory” - Publilius Syrus
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