Leadership Lessons Learned from Mom
Written by Mark Villareal
An interesting book that discusses qualities of leadership by correlating them with lessons that the author learned from his mother. The author begins the book in early childhood when his mother guided him to listen to the little voice in his head whenever he needed to decide whether something was right or wrong. She taught him not to be a loner, and to push himself to become involved. Villareal explains how his mother encouraged him to dream big and reach for the top while teaching him to understand not everyone will get the trophy. As he grew older, she taught him not to exclude others, be a good example, and avoid taking shortcuts to success. The author learned to stand up for himself when he believed that he was right, but to learn the difference between having pride and being too full of pride. Life will not always be convenient and be accommodating, we must learn to accept defeat graciously at times, then pick ourselves up to try harder next time.
These are all valuable lessons in developing leadership. Rather than learning these skills by reading a leadership training manual, Villareal tells a charming story that entertains and inspires. Unfortunately, not all children grow up in an environment with parents who make the effort to teach and model these values. Recommended for young adult and adult audiences.
If you enjoyed reading this post, please subscribe by clicking on the word Follow or by hitting the orange RSS FEED button in the upper right-hand corner of this page.
4 responses to “LOVE AND LEADERSHIP”
mommynificent
June 14th, 2017 at 04:50
This seems a unique book. I don’t think I’ve heard of anything quite like it before. Thanks for sharing this at Booknificent Thursday on Mommynificent.com this week!
Tina
bamauthor
June 14th, 2017 at 18:47
I have never come across a leadership book written from this perspective.
randommusings29
June 18th, 2017 at 15:42
Love the twist on the standard leadership book trope!
Thanks for linking up to #AnythingGoes 🙂
Debbie
bamauthor
June 18th, 2017 at 16:57
Yes, the personal perspective makes it quite effective.