Every one of us has “moments of truth.” Think about how sad it is that most humans vividly remember theirs because they have so few.
Moments of truth build or break you. They cannot be neutral. Virtue is built when we STAND in such moments. Bad habits are built the same way. It’s really that simple.
Last week a young leader broke a bad habit. He confronted the head of his system with the truth in LOVE. His habit has been to say nothing. He’s been beaten down by words and body language. Last week, he stood. He gave his leader the gift of a lifetime, the unvarnished truth in LOVE. He created a moment of truth for both of them.
Here’s the really cool part. It does NOT matter how the head of the system responds. Virtue is built by your action, not by others reaction. Isn’t that so cool and so freeing.
The young leader stood, broke a bad habit, began to build a new one, built virtue within, esteemed himself, gained clarity, conviction, and confidence, all while searing the moment permanately in his mind. This was REAL, HARD, WORK.
The next time it will be a little bit easier. The tenth time it will begin to feel less laborious and clunky. By the hundredth time, he won’t have to think and it will feel almost natural. After a thousand repetitions, it will become a habit of the heart. This is how virtuous leaders are built.
Moments of truth build or break you. Other people, tough situations, bad breaks, and even your worst enemies, not so much.
God, help me notice more of my moments of truth. And, help me understand that my actions are virtue or vice in the making, not how others react.
God, help me…

After time 1 or 10 or 100 or 1000 will simply come the affirmation that it never necessarily FEELS easy but that the more you follow your deepest held beliefs — your convictions — you will learn that trusting your CORE will leave you with no regrets. . .
AND that the FEELINGS you want always FOLLOW (not PRECEDE) ACTing on what your CORE inspires you to do.
The GOOD feelings are lagging indicators, so LEAD with your CORE not your feelings.
Thank you, Toto. . .