Monday, March 13, 2023

The New Humility

The near arrival of another banking crisis warns us about the dangers of arrogance and leaving humility. Never underestimate an opponent. 

Rule 1. Put the team first. Rule 2. Never forget Rule 1. 


Build your playing value system using some of Don Meyer's. 

Passion. Love to do what you do.
Unity. Be better together. 
Servant leadership. Lead by caring for others. 
Humility. Be gracious in victory and humble in defeat. 
Thankfulness. Express gratitude without reservation. 

Uncontrolled ego has uncontrolled risk. 
  • Jonas Salk helped create the polio vaccine. But his refusal to share credit cost him. H never won the Nobel Prize and never was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. 
  • Frank Lloyd Wright was a brilliant architect who refused to credit subordinates who helped his designs. His selfishness cost him professionally as his business suffered. 
  • George C. Marshall was a master of logistics. He stayed in the shadows as General Dwight Eisenhower went on to command Allied Forces in World War II. The "Marshall Plan" rebuilt Europe. 
  • General William Tecumseh Sherman avoided major battles during the Civil War, yet corrupted infrastructure giving the North a strategic material advantage during his March to the Sea. 

Frank Lloyd Wright design. 

"Pride goeth before the fall." Give your best to build a great team. 

The AI Take: 

"Pride goeth before the fall" is a proverb that means arrogance or excessive self-confidence can lead to a person's downfall or failure.

The phrase comes from a passage in the Bible, specifically from the book of Proverbs 16:18, which says: "Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before a fall."

The proverb suggests that when people become too self-assured or overconfident, they tend to make mistakes and take unnecessary risks, which can lead to their downfall. It is a cautionary tale that warns against the dangers of hubris and encourages humility and modesty.

In essence, the proverb reminds us to be humble and to avoid becoming too full of ourselves, as it can lead to our eventual downfall.

Lagniappe. Read the hitter/set combination.

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