Thursday 28 August 2014

Of pounding hearts and serene minds

Childhood memories

When sitting cross legged as a child, I was taught that humans have two life giving organs; a brain, and a heart. Our brain is a palace to logic, the heart beats for passion. The two influence us in a very different manner; one has to appeal to both when trying to create adaptive change.


Robin Williams rousing his class in 'Dead Poets Society'
http://www.peterweircave.com/dps/pics/desk3.jpg

                                                                                   
Casting my mind back to my high-schooling, there were two principals during my six years of education. The first was the personification of the inspiring leader. Striding across the boards of the assembly stage he would gesticulate, he would weave imagery, he would inspire. Yet when explaining the financial reasoning behind the construction of a new auditorium he was lost, pontificating with no real substance behind his words. 

A 'typical' accountant
http://542partners.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/choosing-an-accountant.jp
His successor was the polar opposite: he knew the precise statistics of the schools financials and VCE performance; down to the decimal place. Yet when he stood before the school, he blandly regurgitated facts and figures. One principle inspired and confused me; the other informed and bored me; to be an effective leader you need to ‘engage with your heart, mind, spirit guts’ (Heifetz, Grashow & Linsky 2009).



Psychological explanation

Antonio Damasio
http://www.illywords.com/wp-content
So why is it so important to have both emotion and logic within ones leadership? From a psychological perspective, it can be explained using the ‘somatic marker hypothesis’, proposed by notable neurobiologist Antonio Damasio. It suggests that when making complex decisions, the cognitive areas (i.e. logical) of the brain can become ‘overloaded by infinite variables and possibilities’(Damasio, Damasio, Christen 1995). As a result, the emotion based areas of the brain – using emotional flags (somatic markers) –help this by pointing towards generally advantageous outcomes, simplifying the decision making process.







Case study
One of Damasio’s most famous cases was the patient he referred to as ‘Colin’. Colin underwent surgery to remove cancer from his frontal lobe and as a result suffered a major personality change. His intelligence, language skills and mobility were not affected in any way but in the wake of the operation he lost his job, became bankrupt and divorced two women. It was discovered that Colin had lost the ability to feel emotion and therefore could not properly make decisions. In a specific exchange, Damasio asked when they should next meet, on a Tuesday or Wednesday. For the next 40 minutes, Colin tried to make a decision; weighing traffic conditions, the weather, the amount of petrol in his car etc. Yet he could not reach a solution, as without his emotional flags, he could not make an effective decision.



                                            Antonio Damasio explaining his patients symptoms
                                                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wup_K2WN0I   

Applications

So we understand why emotions are so important in our decision making, but how can we utilise this for adaptive change? When trying to enact change within a group of people (whether that be a company or a project group at school), they will often be unmoved by facts and figures, needing emotion to be convinced. If we apply another adaptive leadership tool – connect to a purpose– we can activate their emotion based areas, easing their acceptance of change. The idea behind ‘connect to a purpose is to galvanise you and your team behind a single, emotive resolve. This has multiple benefits: it offsets cold logic, unifies the group and ‘provides guidance, sustenance, and inspiration’(Heifetz, Grashow & Linsky 2009).

'Unity'
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Xp2MpDnGKGk/URfmJW27WuI.jpg

Scenario


The betrayal and upheaval of the Labor party during their time in power between 2007 and2013 was the very public dismantling of a political collective. Infighting was rife and squabbles between the politicians spilt out into the public space. The party needed a strong leader if they had any hope to pull the party back from oblivion and emerge victorious from the election. We now know that they ultimately failed, conceding to the Liberal party; but if we use our imagination, how could adaptive leadership have been applied to improve the situation. 

Kevin Rudd on the campaign trail
http://www1.pictures.zimbio.com/gi/Kevin+Rudd+Australian+Labor.jpg


It has been reported that the party leader at the time – Kevin Rudd – was holding his policy meetings whilst campaigning around the country, informing his ministers of policy decisions exclusively through memos and emails. This policy information effectively formed the ‘logical’ aspect of Rudd’s leadership, yet he neglected to also connect with his colleague’s values or beliefs. If Rudd personally met with the other party members, if he presented a single vision within which he was fully invested – the Labor party’s quest for equality in Australia – he would have been able to truly connect with the ministers, uniting them behind his leadership. If this had occurred, the face of history would be re-written, but only because he connected with their hearts and their minds, the mark of a true leader.


The head and the heart
http://static.tumblr.com/mk1l7lr/pLhlzosnh/eye2heart2head.jpg

References


Heifetz R,  Linsky M, Grashow A 2009. The Practice of Adaptive Leadership: Tools and Tactics for Changing Your Organization and the World  Harvard Business Review Press. Boston

Damasio A, Damasio H, Christen Y 1995 Neurobiology of Decision-Making Springer Publishing, New York

Damasio A, 2008 Descartes' Error: Emotion, Reason and the Human Brain Random House, London