The Counselor's Bookshelf:
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The Counselor's Bookshelf:
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I have read a few books lately that I have loved because they are great books, and also because they are under 100 pages. In this era of information abundance I often find myself slipping into information overload. Sometimes I wonder if curiosity, untethered, can be a curse. So much to learn! So little time! Short books, done well, can share a lot of information in doses that are understandable, integrate-able and actionable. Abby Wambach's Wolfpack is a great example of this. She has a simple but powerful message and she shares it clearly and concisely so that we can take it and run. Abby Wambach is an educator, leader, activist and one of the best professional soccer players of all time. Wolfpack is based on her 2018 commencement speech for the graduating class of Barnard College. The speech is addressed to women, but the message is for all of us. In the Note To Reader she writes: Since I identify as a woman, this book is written from a woman's point of view. The leadership ideas, however, are universal. Recently, on a call with a company hiring me to teach about leadership, a man said, "Excuse me, Abby, I just need to ensure that what you present is applicable to men too." I said, "Good question! But only if you've asked every male speaker you've hired if his message is applicable to women, too." She asserts, and I agree, that women have the potential to bring qualities we all need to the table: dedication to working collaboratively and inclusively, commitment to identifying problems and fixing them so that the greatest number benefit, willingness to work incredibly hard to transform failure into achievement and, perhaps most importantly, an alternative to the masculine world view that has so long dominated our leadership. This isn't only about women being in leadership roles, it's about all of us, however we define gender, embracing the feminine perspective so long underrepresented by leadership in our society. Her analogy of the reintroduction of wolves at Yellowstone National Park is a descriptive example of the importance of balance in an ecosystem, whether ecological or social. From the introduction: As I focused on what I wanted to share with the women of Barnard- a directive to unleash their individuality, unite the collective, and change the landscape- my thoughts turned to a TED Talk I'd watched recently about the wolves of Yellowstone National Park. In 1995, wolves were reintroduced into Yellowstone after being absent for seventy years. It was a controversial decision, but rangers decided it was a risk worth taking, because the land was in trouble...
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The Counselor's Bookshelf:Sharing the books, articles, podcasts, and other resources I'm drawing from personally, and in my work as a counselor. Archives
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