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"Leadership Skills: Here's Dad's Memorial Top 10 List" @ CoolAvenues.com

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Leadership Skills: Here's Dad's Memorial Top 10 List

Part - I

Leadership Skill # 1 : Build It Strong

Dad would always build things more sturdy than they needed to be so that he would never have to worry when an extraordinary force was applied. He knew that whatever he built would stand up to the test. This applied to both character traits and real hammer and nail construction. In fact, without his insistence on this leadership trait, I would not be here today.

When I was 16 years old a drunk driver doing nearly 100 mph (161 kmph) ran his car off the road smashing it into the corner of our living room. I was the only one in the room when it exploded around me. Had this been a normally built house the car would have burst thru the wall and killed me.

Leadership Skill # 2 : Don't Take Short Cuts

Dad was an electrician by trade. When doing his wiring he would always route the flat wires he worked with in a nice symmetrical and evenly spaced pattern. He would never just cut across the shortest distance to save wire and make his costs a little cheaper. I remember as a child watching him and asking him why he did this when it would be a lot shorter to just run the wires directly between two points. He said, "When someone looks at this job years from now they will know that a professional did it and also, if they ever have trouble, they will be able to track down the problem easier because I did a nice neat job".

I can't remember dad ever being out of work one day in my whole life. When everyone else was laid-off, he was always in demand.

Leadership Skill # 3 : Don't Waste Things Or People

Think a rock isn't worth much? Read on. At the age of 73 dad was purchasing some used lumber that someone had advertised in the paper. When he went to pick it up he saw a large number of boulders in the front yard of the place where he bought the lumber. He asked what they were going to do with the boulders. The man said, "I just want to get them out of here." Dad spent two weeks hauling them back to our house and another two months cutting them up with a chisel and a hammer. He then built a beautiful stone fireplace and chimney for one of our rental properties.

Also, I can't tell you the number of nails I removed from used lumber that dad made me straighten and use over again. I still do it to this day. A bent nail with a little help can be very useful again. Sometimes people also need a little help to do the job they were meant to do.

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Source: The Net

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