Understanding great literature is better than trying to read and understand (yet) another business book, Leadership Lessons From The Great Books leverages insights from the GREAT BOOKS of the Western canon to explain, dissect, and analyze leadership best practices for the post-modern leader.
Alright. Leadership Jesan from the great books podcast,
Hello. My name
is Jesan Sorrells, and this is Leadership Lessons fourth the Great Books podcast,
episode number 103
with our book today, a short novel, a
relatively short novel anyway, that focuses on a topic
area relevant for understanding and
communication efforts and leadership efforts, quite frankly, in
our own current time.
First published in 18/62, this book tells the
story, about the clash of ideologies,
between generations. Remember I said it was relevant
to our time. The core of this story
focuses on the inability or at least the challenges
that parents and children have in communicating across
the narrow expanse of time when great social and
cultural unraveling is coalescing around them
at exactly the same time.
A lot of what we have talked about this year on the podcast has been
focused around this idea of America exiting the
fourth turning, exiting chaos. Well, before you can get
into chaos, you have to have an unraveling. And our unraveling happened
between the 19 eighties and actually, the 19 seventies in
America and the 19 nineties, except we all
didn't recognize it. Because after unraveling, there is
chaos. And when this book was written, this book was written during a
time of unraveling, which was followed closely by a time of
chaos. And we're gonna talk about all of that today.
Well, in our time, as we begin to exit the chaos that always
follows such an unraveling, as I just said, American
society and American leadership is beginning with fits, starts, and
stops to put back together the pieces of communication between
people, leveraging the long tail of technology and the
technology of the Internet and the narrowcasting of
podcasts and long form video, kind of like
the video you're watching today or the podcast episode you are listening
to today. This process of putting everything back
together is indeed a long process. It will not happen
instantly at the snap of our fingers, and this book
guides us through understanding just how
long and tenuous a process that will
be. Today, we will be covering
the relationship between fathers and sons fourth in the
original Russian fathers and children by Ivan
Perganev. And today, in order
to kind of walk through this, we will be rejoined by
our cohost. And pardon me if you
hear me doing all that. I'm I'm struggling a little bit with allergies. I'm gonna
try to mute as much of that out of this episode as I possibly can,
but we will be rejoined by our cohost today,
Libby Unger. How are you doing, Libby?
I'm great. Nice to be here again. Alright. Could be
a little bit more toned down from last time you were here, maybe.
Maybe. Maybe. I have a little more sleep under the belt. Yeah. You
didn't just you'd we're just jet lag coming back from coming back from India. Yeah.
So this this will Libby, I think this will be a good
conversation today. So, let me pick up
from fathers and sons. Gonna pick up from
chapter 1 of this book by Ivan
Turgenev.
Well, PR thrown it. Not in sight yet was the question asked on May
20th, 18 59 by a gentleman of a little over
40 in a dusty coat and checked trousers who came in without his
hat to the low steps of the posting station at s. He was
addressing his servant, a chubby young fellow, with whitish down on
his chin and little lackluster eyes.
The servant in whom everything, the turquoise ring in his ear, the streaky hair
plastered with grease, and the civility of his movements indicated a
man of the new improved generation, glanced with an air of
indulgence along the road and made an answer. No, sir. Not in
sight. Not in sight, repeated his master. No, sir, responded the
man a second time. The master's side and sat down
on a little bench. We will introduce him to the reader while he sits, his
feet tucked under him, gazing thoughtfully round.
His name was Nikolai Petrovich Kersonov. He had 12
miles from the posting station, a fine property of 200 souls, or as
he expressed it, since he had arranged a division of his land with the peasants
and started a, quote, unquote, farm of nearly 5,000 acres.
His father, a general in the army who served in 18 12, a fourth half
educated but not ill natured man, a typical Russian who had been in
harness all his life, first in command of a brigade, then of a division, and
Libby constantly in the provinces where by virtue of his rank, he played
a favorite, a fairly important part. Nikolai
Petrovich was born in the south of Russia like his elder brother, Pavel, of whom
wore the hereafter. He was educated at home till he was fourth,
surrounded by cheap tutors, free and easy but toadying
adjuncts, and all the usual regimental and staff set. His
mother, one of the Kolyazion family, as a girl called Agatha, but
as general's wife, Agalithia, who's Manisha
Kersonov, was one of those military ladies who take their full
share of the duties and dignities of office. She wore
gorgeous caps and wrestling silk dresses. In church, she was the 1st to advance
to the cross. She talked a great deal in a loud voice, let her children
kiss her hand in the morning, and gave them her blessing at night.
In fact, she got everything out of life she could.
Nikolai Petrovich has a general Jesan, though so far for being distinguished by
courage and he even deserved to be called a funk, was intended, like
his brother Pavel, to enter the army, but he broke his leg on the very
day when the news of his commission came. And after being 2 months in bed,
retained a slight limp to the end of his days. His
father gave him up as a bad job and let him go into the civil
service. He took him to Petersburg directly. He was 18 in a place turning
the university. His brother happened about the same time she made an officer in the
guards. The young men started living together in one set of rooms with the remote
supervision of a cousin on their mother's side, Ilya
Kolyazin, an official of high rank. Their father returned to his
division and his wife had only rarely sent his essays large sheets of gray
paper scrawled over in a book, clerkly hand.
At the bottom of these sheets stood in letters enclosed carefully in scroll
book, the words Piotr O Kursanov general major.
18/35, Nikolai Petrovich left the university a graduate. In the same year,
general Kursunov was put on the retired list after an unsuccessful review and
came to Petersburg with his wife to live. He was about to take a
house in the Tavarishki Gardens and adjoin the English
club, but he died suddenly of an apoplectic
fit. Agalithkea Kumnishka
soon followed him. She could not accustom herself to adult life
in the capital. She was consumed by the
ennui of existence away from the
regiment. Meanwhile, Nikolai Petrovich had already
in his parents' lifetime, Tom to their no slight chagrin, had time to fall over
the daughter of his landlord, a petty official, Popola Novinski.
She was pretty and as is called, advanced girl. She used to read
serious articles in the science column of the journals. He married her directly. The term
of mourning was over, and leaving the civil service at which his father had
by favor procured him a post, was perfectly blissful with his
Masha, first in a country villa near the Lianski Institute. Afterwards
in the town, a pretty little flat with clean staircase and a haughty drawing room.
And then in the country where he settled finally and where in a short Tom,
son, Arkady, was born to him. The young couple lived very happily and
peacefully and were scarcely ever apart. They read together, sang, and
played duets on the piano. She tended her flowers and looked after the
poultry yard. He sometimes went hunting and busied himself with the estate
while Arcadia grew and grew in the same happy and peaceful
way. 10 years passed like a
dream. In 18 fourth, Cursonov's wife died. He
almost succumb to this blow. In a few weeks, his hair was gray. He was
getting ready to go abroad if possible to distract his mind, but then came the
year fourth. He returned unwillingly to the country
and after a rather prolonged period of inactivity, began to take
interest in the improvements of the management of his land. In
18/55, he brought his son to the university. He spent 3 winters with him in
Petersburg, hardly going out anywhere and trying to make acquaintance with
Arcady's young companions. The last winter, he had
not been able to go. And here we have seen him in May of 18
59, already quite gray, stoutish, and rather bent,
waiting for his son who had just taken his degree as
once he had taken it himself.
Why did I give you all of that background?
Well, because, a, this is what Russian writers do. They give you the background of
everybody in the family before they tell you what anything that's gonna happen fourth they
move on to the main action. And Turgenev is, at the end of the
day, or was at the end of the day, a Russian writer. Speaking of
which, the literary life of Ivan Turgenev is probably
worthwhile for us to understand even after
well, even after that whole laying out of the history
of Nikolai and Arcadia.
Yvonne Sergeiovich Turgenev was born on
November 9th, 18 18 and died September 3,
18, 83. He was a Russian novelist, a
short story writer, a poet, a playwright, a translator, and a popularizer of
Russian literature Tom and in the west.
Ivan and his brothers, Nikolai and Sergei, were raised by their mother,
an educated and authoritarian woman. Their
father spent little time with the family. And although he was not hostile to
them, his absence hurt Ivan's feelings.
After the standard schooling, for the son of a
gentleman, Turgenev studied for 1 year at the University of Moscow
and then moved on to the University of Saint Petersburg. From 1838
to fourth, he studied philosophy, particularly
Hegel. This is, by the way, very important to understand for what's about to
happen in fathers and Jesan, and he studied history
at the University of Berlin.
Now what we don't realize now, because a
lot of things have happened, is that back in the day,
Germany was considered to be the high cultural and
intellectual
glittering jewel of Europe. And everyone from Russia
who wanted to learn anything about anything intellectual
or cultural, went to Germany. And I
know that's kind of weird, but particularly with the rise of
particularly with the rise of Hegel, and Hegelianism, and then
later on with the rise of Nietzsche, and Nietzschean
ideas of nihilism, Germany became a hotbed
of intellectual and cultural
leaders for the Russians.
By the way, historically, that's probably not gonna work out
fourth later. Turgenev first made his
name, with writing a sportsman's sketches, a collection of short
stories credited with having influenced Russian public opinion in favor of
the abolition of serfdom in 18/60 1. And this is another
element that we forget about in Russia.
Russia had a system of serfdom. When we think about
serfdom, we should probably think about it in context of American
slavery, which was also,
well, not beginning to be abolished. It had yet to be abolished, but was on
the road to being abolished in 18/61. We were having a
civil war over it. Russians, however,
were just having it thrust upon them.
Fathers and sons, Turgutov's most famous and enduring novel appeared in
18 62. Its leading character, who we do have not
met yet, Eugene Bazarov, was
considered the first Bolshevik in Russian literature and
was in turn herald and reviled as either a glorification or parody
of the, quote, unquote, new men of the 18 sixties.
Unlike Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, who Turgenev did know, by the
way, as a matter of fact, it was Tolstoy who spoke at
his funeral, and Turgenev had a little counter Trump with Dostoevsky
that went on 10 years, if you can believe that. Literary
fights are some of the worst literary fights.
But Turgenev lacked religious motives in his writings. That's something that you see in
fathers and sons. He's not consumed with religion in the same way that Tolstoy
and Dostoevsky are. And he was more
consumed with the social aspects of the reform
movements that were beginning to sweep and unravel Russia
in the 18 sixties and subsequently 18
seventies and 18 eighties, and all that unraveling that would lead to the
horror of World War 1 and then the Leninist
revolution, the Bolshevik revolution on the other
side of that. Targanev was considered to
be anagnostic, and he did not let religion
influence his writers. Unlike Dostoevsky who considered himself a
Christian socialist and Tolstoy who considered himself
a man of god, period.
So that's where we are starting with Turgenev, with fathers and
sons, with Russian history. There's a lot here that parallels
ways in which America has engaged with itself
internally between the 19 nineties and all the way up to
now, right, the last 30 years. Of course, there are ways
in which those parallels don't line up. There's ways in which we we
have parted because we have our own separate history with our
own separate set of ideas. But there are broad
lessons that can be drawn fourth leaders from Turgenev's fathers and sons
and from the literary life of Ivan Turgenev. And so,
I wanna kick this over to Libby now. I sent you
a link to a video about, Turgenev, watched a little bit of that. I don't
know if you watched that. But to tell me what you love about Turgenev,
tell me about the literary life of Ivan Turgenev. And, what do you think of
fathers and sons? Let's start there.
Yeah. You did an excellent job of recapping kind of
the the literary journey journey and the comparison with,
you know, other famous Russian authors. I read
this in high school, and I remember
loving it, but I loved all of the Russian literature.
And I think it has to do with the the deep
exploration of the human condition yeah. The human
condition and understanding, how we all
have dark and light in us.
We all have good and evil. It's about understanding it
and not letting 1 you know, letting
the dark outweigh the outweigh the light.
But if you understand the human condition, in
yourself, first, you can solve for it. And then in you
know, if you see it in others too, you can help maybe help them
see it and act or input systems in place so they act
in their delighted and heart based best
interest. But I just always love the the
descriptions and the lang the Russian language.
What was interesting is I I would never have
guessed that Dostoevsky had a religious foundation.
Like, I don't when having read Crime and Punishment, that
was not a through yeah. Mhmm. A through
affair in that book fourth, yeah, at least for me,
it was understanding the human condition, though. Yeah. Yeah. In the same
way, I think that the Bible is from, you know, all the allegories
within the Bible. You know, they're just ways for you
to understand, you know, good and evil
within yourself and within others and how, the
consequences of letting one
lead more than the other. That being said, what
I was not I always said Turgenev,
not Turgenev, but, I know I was hearing a lot Turgenev,
so I'll go with that. If I flip up,
it's because I always said Turgenev. We can go with we can go with Turgenev
as well. I know Turgenev. Yeah. Tomato, tomato. Yeah. Yeah.
I'm terrible with Russian names here. But, what I really liked
was, what I kinda took away
is the the over over
overreaching theme around balancing progressivism with tradition.
And so what Turgenev, he grew up,
he grew up, yeah, with lots of land and with, you know,
money, but he wasn't, he was a hunter,
and he also, worked with the peasants and
fourth side by side than as a, yeah, than as a owner.
And, you know, he while he was educated in
Saint Petersburg and in Germany,
which balances, in my mind, kind of the intellectual.
He had the intellectual education, but he also had the
human education. And I always think of the
balancing, like, you know, I always essays, I'm city and country. There
no suburban in my in my life. I love the city
and the cosmopolitan
benefits, the art, the food, the intellectual
conversations, cities tended
to always be the art of the possible. Now when cities are
dying, it shows you how,
the art of the possible taken too far without, you know, without
good boundaries Mhmm. Can erode. But for the most part, like, the
cosmopolitan sensibilities, cities are about, you know,
the potential, and urban
and the rural areas and country Tom me is more about the
constraints of us as humans within a broader ecosystem
and understanding how we relate to a
broader ecosystem of you know, with animals and
food. And, to me, that's where
being human Mhmm. Is truly
felt. Like, that's where it's quiet so you can hear your thoughts. It's
where it's quiet, so you can feel the energy of the animals.
You can feel the energy of the land,
and you learn to work in balance with all of that when
you're in the role. And
so what I see the battle,
the unraveling today that was similar to the unraveling that
Turgenev was dealing with in fathers and sons is
the overreaching of the progressive and intellectual.
You know, the nihilism, we don't believe in any tradition.
Mhmm. Everything must be destroyed, because
nothing is unless it has value to me.
So the overreaching of, like, the progressivism
with the overreaching of religion as a
traditional moral
framework. Mhmm. Where Turgenev landed was, yes,
the art of the possible. Science matters. Art matters.
But you balance that with the need to have balance
with the with with land and people
and, and animals.
So he gets to the same place that,
in you know, intellectual understanding
and understanding of nature takes you and but he
ignores the extremes through his language. And where we
are right now, society wise, we have the writers
who are break all systems, and then we have, you
know, the extreme right, religious
that aren't willing to neither group is willing to compromise or
understand positions of the other. At his
time, as you said, like, Bakarov is the first
Bolshevik. He's the nihilist, yeah,
woke, progressive, Bolshevik. You
know, 60 50 years later, you know, the Bolsheviks,
you know, killed the czar and the Romanovs and allowed Lenin to
rise. And how many people did Lenin kill? You know,
20, 30, 40, 50, 60,000,000? Somewhere in there. Yeah.
All debatable. Yeah. But, you know, the both
Sorrells, the czar was extremely totalitarian.
The, yeah, the rise of the Bolsheviks, and ultimately
communism was also tyrannical and, you know, an
authoritarian in its own its own way. So
what I love with Turgenev was it was real my takeaway
Mhmm. And perhaps its projection of my beliefs is a
balance of I do believe in, you know, intellectual
understanding of our history,
the world, but balancing that with true
understanding of the human human nature and
the world we live in and coming to balance
with nature and ourselves.
So it's interesting. The I'm reading this book
at an interesting time in my life, without going
into too many personal details publicly. I'm
in the process of moving from a place that
by an urban conception would be rural anyway,
to a more rural conception,
right? A more rural place, right? A place that's even a place that the people
who would be considered rural by the urban,
entity that exists next door to us. Yeah. The people
who live in this entity consider where I'm going to be rural, which is just
weird to me. Right. And I'm moving my family and I'm buying some land. I'm
becoming well, in, in, in one sense, I am becoming like,
we're, you know, we're gonna start homesetting.
I'm gonna be around like goats and steers and chickens and
ducks. Now the framing for this,
the context for this is I'm reading it is that
I was a kid who like
allergies, pollen, activated my asthma when I was a kid. I
was allergic to, like, animals of all kinds. It was just a mess.
And so for a lot of the years of my life, I Libby in urban
areas, or suburban areas at best.
I don't hike. I I would I would I
would I would concrete over a tree because it's trying
to kill me. Like, I look at a tree who's trying to kill me. I
don't look at it as trying to help me because it's spitting off this crap,
and then I can't breathe. Right? Okay. Yeah. And so the irony,
because God is not without a sense of irony, is that I'm probably
going to end up my life and the situation closer to target have
then Dostoevsky.
Writers. And so I'm reading target at this
stage of my life and I'm reading what he's talking about. I'm reading about his
background being a. And being a part of nature and
being, like you said, this more centrist sort of character in Russian,
literature and Russian history. And I'm also trying to place
that. Pardon me with a cough here.
I'm also trying to place that. I have a cough button folks so that you
don't hear it. I'm also placing that in the
context of the history that Turgenev
or Genya lived through during a time
of everything being questioned. Right. And everything's
sort of coming apart, Not yet the chaos, which was
gonna come afterward because when everything, when nihilists
like, like Bazarov start talking,
you know, there's going to be chaos on the other side of it. And, and
the sense you get both from Nikolai and from,
his, his brother. Is that
they know because they know traditionally they know that chaos is on the other side
of it, but they can't articulate it. And then our Katie,
I think Jesan of Nikolai stands in much more for
target where he's fourth, or to get you up where he's sort
of the character who there's always this person during the
unraveling. Who's kind of going, oh, well, you know, it won't be
that bad. It won't be that bad. If it unravels, it'll be fine. Like we'll
be able to handle it. And there were a
lot of people when I was in high school in the nineties who said that.
A lot of people. They're like, oh, the Internet. It's I don't know. I just
took on the Internet for a moment. Oh, the Internet it's unraveling. It'll be fine.
Like, it'll be fine. Or, you know, by after September 11th.
Oh, it'll be fine. We'll just go take care of it over there in the
Middle East, and it'll be you know, speaking of current events, we'll go take care
of it in the Middle East. It'll be fine. Like, what could possibly what could
possibly go wrong?
And that level of this is gonna sound
hard, but that level of naivete is I
think why is read in high school
and not read so much later on in your life. Because you do get
as you get older and you have more experiences, I would say you become more
cynical, but you become more cautious. Right?
For me, it's more it it's
more about balancing it's it's more about
balancing vision with systems. Right. Writers.
Yeah. And, specifically, what I mean by this is,
you know, you have a lot of folks are, like you know, don't worry
about abolishing slavery and the, chaos on the other side.
It will all work itself out. Well, I
what they didn't work through is what you do with the released
slaves so that they can thrive faster instead of having them
have to figure it out and just be thrown
out of their the place where they were getting fed and had roof over their
head, and they have no jobs and no homes. Which is exactly, by the way,
the same that was the same thing that was said in America about the emancipation
of the slaves. But where we solved that
problem in America was just killed 750,000
people. Like, we just did that. We're just like, okay. Well, we'll just kill we
almost I mean, we almost out wiped out an entire generation during that unraveling
because the spirit of vengeance
that would have been, right, that would have been in the younger generation. The,
the Basarovs was instead in the older generation. It was
in the Nikolai's and the Sorrells. There there also
isn't a trust that you'll do what you're you'll say. Right?
Like, so and to help with the transition. Yeah. So I noticed
this in corporate, yeah, where you you can
plan, you know, a good go to market. You can you can,
plan a good announcement of an m and a event or a
restructuring where everyone isn't left in chaos
wondering what's next. Like, you can have messaging. You can
have, discussions. You can have, you know,
benefits plans. You can have a lot set up to
reduce the stress and uncertainty
of you know, to make that transition easier.
But too many individuals have low expectations
around what that transition should look like, and
it's like, oh, we'll just figure it out. They actually kind of
yeah. We'll just figure it out. So We'll wing it. Figure it out in
government. You figure it out in corporate.
And this isn't about yeah. And so for me, it's the balance.
Bill Maher on Friday was talking about the balance of, you know,
literature are your pedal on the metal, and conservatives are
on the brake. And I'm like, no. You do like, you it's not one or
the other. It's both, but it's being thoughtful about it.
And, unfortunately, most people don't wanna do the work of
being thoughtful. You know, the go go slow go slow to go
fast. They either see it being a brake or an
accelerator, and, ultimately, you do have
unnecessary chaos. So I think
yes. Absolutely. And now in
and this is why I said in my open, it with fits and starts
Yep. The centrists are coming back into the
conversation. Maybe not necessarily
politically because politics is always downstream from all of this
nonsense. It always is at the end of the day.
Yep. And I think it started it's interesting that you mentioned Bill
Maher. I think it started with bill Maher, you know,
where I was listening to him a few months ago.
And normally I'm like, okay, Bill. That's
your position. Okay. That's fine. But
I think he's reached a point where he's more like Nikolai
than Bazarov now. Mhmm. And
he recognizes and I don't think he knows how to articulate this as I think
a lot of folks who fourth used to be
revolutionaries and then the revolution moved on ahead of them to other places they didn't
think the revolution was gonna go to. Yeah. They don't know how
to say, oh, no. Wait a minute. There were some
things worth preserving. Right. And I think he's starting
to roll around to that, which looks like a
centrist position when the revolution is
pushing the fringes. Right? It's pushing to the fringes. Right? Right.
Right. And in the United States,
I think that we did have our revolutionary
moment in 2020. I do. I think we had our revolutionary moment
from, like, the summer of 2020 all the way through to, like, January, February
of 2021. That was our revolutionary moment. And
and I've said this before on this podcast, now we're done. And so when you're
done with the revolutionary moment, the centrists come back into
the folder that at least they're invited in. Now are they gonna look
the same as the centrists that were previously outside
fourth who were saying it's not that bad during the last unraveling?
No. I mean, the
no one's gonna confuse
how can I frame this? No one's gonna confuse Marjorie Taylor Greene with Newt Gingrich.
Like, nobody's gonna do that. You know? Nobody's gonna confuse,
Joe Lieberman with, like,
I don't know. And I know Julie just passed away.
Yeah. Yeah. Like, it's not it's not gonna happen. So the characters are gonna be
different, but the that centrist pullback,
I think, is starting to happen.
I I agree. They let's just
like, let's go to Turgenev with, fathers and
sons and Arkady in in particular.
He grew up on the grew up in the, on the land, then went to
the city and got educated and came back in what he wants to
do. His father is not great at managing the
farm, and it's not doing well. And
Arcady wants to introduce some new practices.
Mhmm. Yeah. With the land, you know, that he
learned when he was away at school. So he's bringing a little bit of science.
He's bringing a little bit of modernity, but he's
not saying they yeah. Go be dead those farms.
It's only the intellect that matters. Right? So he's not saying
all institutions that exist
existed before need to die because they're
not sustainable in their current fashion. Let's bring a bit of modernity,
but smart modernity. And he can say that because
he actually has worked the land. He's worked with the people, and
he's balanced his practical experience with an
intellectual experience, you know, that where I learned about science and medicine
and things at school. Mhmm. Yeah. Same way
today, one,
revolutions take years,
sometimes decades, to occur. I think what
happened in 2020 was an away like, a a broad awakening
True. True. Of the fact that our country was being taken over.
Right. And because it was done
in a soft way, and and we observed it through
digital means, you know, and not loss
of our children. Mhmm. We could say that we're losing our children and we're
losing our, you know, men and women, to the digital space, but we
didn't you know, suicide and a lot of other
things. But we didn't lose them in a a physical war
like World War 1 fourth World War 2. Right. Right?
But, you know, many people could've could see a soft coup
happening. Mhmm. You know, that was the yeah. We were being
redirected away from with an insurrection that
had no guns and no army idea. Right? And no army. Like,
so people yeah.
Like, most people, they probably were believing it until,
you know, like, a few weeks out where the facts started to spew. And
then folks were like, wait. What is not making sense
here? I had my wake up call in, like, 2017 with
the hysterics day in and day out on the front page of The New York
Tom, where it's like, this just doesn't sound like rational
analysis of what's occurring. Like, this actually sounds like hysteria.
And so then I started just doing deeper dives
into news. Like, I would actually watch full videos instead of snapshots.
But, you know, whatever I think 2020 was a
pinnacle where it became like, the emperor we could see the emperor
had no clothes. Right. But, you know, I've used this term
quite a bit. The Leviathan is not gonna give up easily.
Right. And we're gonna see a lot of a lot more
chaos, and discomfort through 2024.
So it's unraveling. I think the chaos is still here.
So what I was challenging was that the revolution
happened. I guess my perception is that chaos is still
around. Well, I wanna be very clear. I wanna be very clear. I said revolutionary
moment. That's not to say that there can be another moment. Writers? Yeah.
Another moment. I I don't disagree with that. I think I think
things are when I was a kid, I
used to in my more my more felonious
moments Yeah. Used to try to, knock
over Coke machines. Right? Yeah. Yeah. And one thing I learned about a Coke machine
is you gotta rock it a few times. You can really do. You gotta rock
it a few times, and then it'll go over. Book things are beasts. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Right? Yeah. You can't just push it once or kick it
once or whatever. Right? I do
think that
there are touchstones along the
way. Yeah. But the
high watermark, I don't I genuinely
and I could be wrong. I am I'm open to being wrong on this. Yeah.
Libby, I absolutely am. I'm open to being corrected on this.
Sure. But in my heart of hearts, I want to
not be wrong. Right. I think the high watermark
was 2020. That was, like, the height of of BS.
That's your high watermark. Everything else after that's gonna be step
down, step down, step down, step down, step down, step
down until we step down into, you know, the new
awakening and we step down into the new way of moving forward, which
Tom get back to fathers and Jesan, may be
that combination of in our time, the
readers coming onto the new
property and saying, these are the things we could preserve that were
old. These are the things we have to inject that are new, and it's
fine. Let's move forward with this. It's a vision of
the Yeah. And to bring that to the modern day, I would
say the expansion of the Overton window back to
normal Yeah. Like, a normal size Yeah. Is
why the censors centrist voices are being
heard. Right. You and and, you know, people aren't
afraid of the retaliation anymore. You know? People are saying what, you
know, what they believe. Like, there was a time when the Overton went I I
didn't know there was an Overton window. You have to be that I was naive
myself, but, you know, that Overton window is
very broad. You're also seeing, a lot of
the political talking points that the current administration
thinks are gonna stick, they're moving through them really fast
because they're not working anymore Right. Which
means, know, kinda the the jig is up. And then finals
finally, regulatory lag is also
another is an example of politics
following culture. You're starting to see a shift on the climate
a a lot of the climate policies, because the
cost of it was was gonna be too high,
the literal cost of it. And the cost to poor who
weren't getting their energy or their energy costs were going up too high, like,
that pushback, like, started to change. You know, plus people saw
that it was the rich getting wealthier and not necessarily
we weren't considering things that were actually going to solve the problem, like nuclear,
etcetera. So Overton window expansion
is the centrist voice is now being able to be heard, and it just starts
with a few brave people. Mhmm. Yep. And people saying they are not killed
or, yeah, or die, fourth commit suicide.
And then regulatory lag, you're starting to see a pullback in
some of the things that you we wouldn't have imagined
being able to be pulled back to within reasonable frames,
you know, of of pursuing. So Yeah. Yeah. I like it how you
mentioned, and we'll get back to the book here in just a moment. But I
like it how you mentioned the Overton window because I think that
and I mentioned this when the Russians invaded the Ukraine. The
Overton window got moved around,
us having open conversations
around the use of nuclear weapons in warfare,
which I can't remember that conversation
ever being in the public space after like
1994 fourth people were going on and on about,
not going on and on, but when there was a lot of,
analysis about whether or not nuclear weapons would be used
in Bosnia. Mhmm. And I do
remember that. And and I haven't heard I had literally not heard
hide or hair about nukes until the Russians
invaded the Ukraine. And now, at an international level,
we have the Iranians escalating with the Israelis,
which while that is
while that has moved the Overton window
towards a conversation of what Israel does next,
it has not moved it towards a conversation of
how soon are the nukes coming to Tel Aviv or Tehran.
And it's interesting to me. Essays in these kinds of
discussions, Overton window is interesting for me too for where it
moves and then where it does not go.
And so I think and I was one of the folks last
year who was saying, we gotta stop talking about nuclear war. We just
do. We gotta stop talking about it. Not to say that by stopping and talking
about it, we're not it's not gonna happen. I'm saying instead,
let's not give that conversation energy, and instead, let's give
conversation energy to something else that's fourth,
productive. Because if you start giving energy to that conversation, it's
gonna grow. And then you will wind up the spots that you
They're priming you for it. They are priming you to expect it,
and the fact that it had been out of the conversation for so long and
then bringing it book, yeah, I I'll go cynic I'll go
skeptical on this. It's because all their other fear tactics aren't working anymore,
and now we're back to, you you know, mutual assured destruction.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yep. No. Yeah. So there's a
lot of different things that a lot of different threads that run underneath this book
that parallel our time. I know. Yeah. It was
brilliant call to read this book, actually. Yeah.
So, back to the ball. Although all of the classics
seem to parallel this time in some way. Book
interesting how that works, isn't it? As, as Tom
Libby, my other guest co co host says,
the more things change, you know, we all know how the how
that ends. And he's
exactly right. Alright. So back to the book, back to
fathers and sons or fathers and children as it was written in the original
the original Russian by Ivan Turgenev.
Alright. So we're gonna pick up here in, chapter 6, and,
I wanna turn this conversation towards something around,
communication, towards the ideas of communication, particularly
communication at the end of the where we are at at the end of the
enlightenment experience.
So Pavel Petrovich is, Nikolai's
brother, and without going into a
whole lot of background about Pavel, let's just say he's a little more aristocratic
than even his brother, if that's at all possible. And,
and he's questioning Basarov's
life choices here. Is your special study physics?
Pavel Petrovich, in his turn, inquired. Physics, yes,
and natural sciences in general. They say the Teutons of
late have had great success in that line. By the way, pause. Teutons means
German. Back to the book. Yes. The Germans are our teachers
in it, Bazarov answered carelessly. The word
Teutons is in the Jesan, Pavel Petrovich had used with ironical
intention. None noticed it, however.
Have you such a high opinion of the Jesan, said Pavel Petrovich with exaggerated courtesy?
He was beginning to feel a secret irritation. His
aristocratic nature was revolted by Basarov's absolute
the surgeon's son was not only not overawed. He
even gave abrupt and indifferent answers. And in the tone of his voice, there was
something churlish, almost insulate. The scientific men there are
a clever lot. To be sure, a Russian
scientific man, you have not such a flattering opinion, I dare say.
That is very likely. That's very praiseworthy self abnegation, Pavel
Petrovich declared, drawing himself up and throwing his head back. But how is
this? Arkady Nikolaich was telling me just now that you accept
no authorities. Don't you believe in them? And how am
I accepting them? And what am I to believe in? They tell me the truth.
I agree. That's all. And do all Germans tell the truth, said
Pavel Petrovich. His face assumed an expression as unsympathetic
as remote as if he had withdrawn to some cloudy height.
Not all replied Bazarov with a short yawn. He obviously did not care to
continue the discussion. Pavel Petrovich glanced at
our Libby. And as though he would say to him, your friend's polite, I must
say. For my own part, he began again, not without some
effort. I am so unregenerate as to as
not to like Germans. Russian Germans, I am not speaking of now. We all know
what sort of creatures they are, but even German Germans are not to my liking.
In former days, there were some here and there. They had, well, Schiller, to be
sure, Gertha, my brother, he takes a particularly favorable
view of them. But now they have all turned chemists and materialists.
A good chemist is 20 times as useful as any poet, books in
Bazarov. Oh, indeed, commented Pavel Petrovich as
though falling asleep. He faintly raised his eyebrows. You don't acknowledge art
then, I suppose. The art of making money or of advertising
pills? Cried Bazarov with a contemptuous laugh.
You are pleased to Jesan. I see. You reject all that, no doubt.
Granted. Then you believe in science only. I've already
explained to you that I don't believe in anything. And what is science? Science in
the abstract? There are
sciences as there are trades and crafts, but abstract science
doesn't exist at all. Very good. Well and in regards to the other
traditions accepted in human conduct, you maintain the same negative attitude.
What's this, an examination? Asked Bazarov.
Pavel Petrovich turned slightly pale. Nikolai Petrovich thought
it his duty to interpose in the conversation. We will converse on
this subject with you more in detail someday, dear Yevegny Vasovich. We will
hear your views and express our own. For my part, I am heartily glad you
are studying the natural sciences. I have heard that Libby has made some wonderful discoveries
in the amelioration of soils. You could be of assistance to me in my agricultural
labors. You could give me some useful advice.
I'm at your service, Nikolai Petrovich, but Liebig smiles over our
heads. 1 has to first learn the ABC and then begin to read, and we
haven't set our eyes on the alphabet yet. You are certainly a
nihilist. I see that, thought Petro thought Nikolai Petrovich.
Still, you will allow me to apply to you on occasion, he added aloud. And
now I fancy brother. It's time for us to be going to have a talk
with the bailiff. Pavel Petrovich got up from his
seat. Yes, he said without looking at
anyone. It's a misfortune to live 5 years in a country like
this, far from mighty intellects. Fourth turn you
turn into a fool directly. You may try not to forget what you've
been taught, but in a snap, they'll prove all that's rubbish and tell you that
sensible men have nothing more to do with such foolishness and that you, if you
please, are an antiquated old fogey. What's to be done?
Young people, of course, are cleverer than we are.
Pavel Petrovich turned slowly on his heels and slowly walked
away. Nikolai Petrovich went after him.
Is he always like that? Azarov coolly inquired of Arkady
directly that the door had closed behind the 2 brothers. I must say you gave
me. You weren't very nice to him, remarked Arkady. You have hurt his feelings.
Well, I am I going to consider them these provincial aristocrats?
Why it's all vanity, dandy habits, fatuity? He should have
continued his career at Petersburg if that's his bent. But there, enough of
him. I found a rather rare species of water beetle, Disticus
margariatus. Do you know? I will show it to you. I promise
to tell you his story, Jesan Arcady. The story of the beetle?
Come, don't you, Gebni? The story of my uncle. You will see he's not the
sort of man you fancy. He deserves pity rather than ridicule.
Oh, I don't dispute it, but why are you worrying over him? What ought to
be just? How does that follow?
No. Listen. And Arkady told him his uncle's story.
The reader will find it in the following chapter.
That exchange right there between Pavel
Petrovich and Eugene Bazarov
with Arkady and Nikolai watching from
the sidelines is the beginning
of
wrestling with new ideas versus old traditions.
But it's also the beginning of Turgenev
setting the table around
a critical core idea in his book in
fathers and Jesan, and it is this core idea of communication
between generations. So let's start with
this idea of nihilism because how we think of nihilism almost a 100
and what is it, almost a
170 years after the events in
fathers and Jesan, has transformed
from what Hyrgen Yev, might have initially
been proposing. So nihilism at the time,
in the 18 fifties and the 18 sixties was a new theory of the world
that had sprung up from the mind of German intellectuals like Hegel,
he of the Hegelian dialectic, and Nietzsche, he
of the man and Superman.
Russian nihilism was defined at the time as, quote,
the symbol of struggle against all forms of tyranny, hypocrisy,
and artificiality, and for individual freedom.
So nihilism was perceived as a way to tear
down the systems of tyranny, the czarist systems
of tyranny, quite frankly, that were impacting
every single piece of Russian culture all the way from,
the inter the interactions between
people of different classes, the upper class, the middle class, and the
worker, not even the worker, the peasant and the serf class,
all the way to how all of those classes engaged
with the czar and the tsarists' apparatchiks and the
bureaucracy surrounding the tsar.
Now Russian nihilists of the late 19th century, just
like Bazarov, rejected political violence. He actually says
that in the book. He he he rejects, taking
on murder or riotous nature or thievery.
And they rejected political violence or violence with a political
focus as a, quote, unquote, outdated stage of humanity.
They kind of remind me in that way of the new atheists of the
early 20th century or sorry, the early 21st century in the United
States. Christopher Hitchens and Richard
Dawkins and and my friend over there,
Sam, and I'll remember his name in a second
here, Harris. That's right. My buddy, Sam Harris, who, by the
way, all 3 of those guys, not Hitchens, but
Dawkins and Harris, have over the course of
time come around to the idea
that atheist nihilism might not
get you where you need to go in the
west. The Russian
nihilists would eventually
have their ideals hijacked by the Trotskyites, during the
Bolshevik Bolshevik Revolution. The Trotskyites were
in that revolution, centrists,
centrist Bolsheviks, while while Lenin was an
extreme Bolshevik. And so that was sort of the the
makeup of that, coalition that was engaged in
political violence. And Trotsky was more than happy to send his enemies to a
gulag or send them to be shot in a mass
execution. And so and he would do he was more
than willing to do this all the while claiming, that he
believed that he was in a struggle against all forms
of tyranny, hypocrisy, artificiality, and in a
struggle for political and individual freedom.
But Basarov doesn't see any of this yet. Basarov's 20.
By the time the Russian revolution shows up and is completed, if
Bazarov makes it, which he won't, but guys like him never
do. But Bazarov will be at his sixties or seventies.
He'll be a traditionalist by the time the Bolshevik revolution
shows up. But
there's a deeper idea here in this chapter, and it is this idea
of how do generations communicate
and how do generations communicate when the younger
generation is disillusioned with the older generation, disillusioned
with false promises, disillusioned with
unfulfilled potential, judging the
past based on the perfection of the present.
So here's a question for you, Libby. Let's start with this fourth leaders who are
listening to this, leaders across all spectrums.
How can genuine communication occur across generations?
In spite of such delusion disillusionment? And I do think
this is a core question, for our time, particularly in the United
States as we have 4 generations in the workplace right now.
We have baby boomers. We have gen xers. We have millennials, and we have,
we have gen zers. And we've always had 4 generations in the
workplace, so there's always been issues with communication and disillusionment.
But I think those issues become sharper with social media
and the speed with which trends move through our society and
culture, particularly communication trends. So how do we
how do we communicate successfully?
It is a good question
because as you noted, their voice been in multiple
generations, you know, in the workplace together and in civilization
together. What's changed
is the speed
of communication, but more importantly,
the shift in, focus
and direction specifically that the younger generations
can can take. Like, they, it's hard
to focus them. You know, their belief you know, they're not aware
that their belief structure is constantly changing and in flux.
But, yeah, I think
yep. Now I'm in a hurry. Well, this is a tough one because, like,
when you, if we look back at history, you know, in the United States, the
generation that came up with the whole idea of never trust anyone over 30
is the current generation that can't retire. Book
They're also saying, you know, get over it. Trust us. You know? Like
you know? Right. So if you understand human
nature, all you're seeing is that, you know, no one wants
to to be out of power. So when you're feeling powerless,
you're fighting against the power. When you have power, you wanna stay in power.
Yeah. And I think there's more righteousness
on one side than the other. 1 is more, you know, stay off
stay off my book. I'll stay off you don't tread on me, and the other
is, like, do as I say, but as I do,
because I know better. You know, and so we throughout
history and, you know, in society, in general, you have
the nanny state, and you have the don't mess with me state.
And it's a constant movement of
1 going from the bottom to the top. And when you're in the
top, know it. Yeah. Especially, those who love the
power don't wanna relinquish it, and,
and ration and reason don't always work. But where I
was gonna go is
knowing that these trends and cycles are constant,
knowing, recognizing, again, human nature.
We are designed to repel,
those telling us about to act certain ways.
That's why you have youth questioning their parents.
You know, when you learn something new for the first time and you're
new at learning things for the first time, you think everything that you
learn for the first time is the truth and new and absolute. And anyone
who doesn't think the same way as you, is just
not as enlightened. But once you get
more experience and you realize that the less you you have the more you
know, the less you know, you're a bit more,
accommodating of others as they're moving through that natural
life cycle of, like, learning and growing, experiencing
life, idealism into reality.
If you you know, you you are intended Tom like, you're designed to
be idealistic when you're when you're young. Everything is new. You
think everything
and so from my perspective, you
know, I was a brash know it all,
especially in my late teens and, you know, through my
twenties, and I cringe now at some of the things
that I had said to, you know, my elders who
were incredibly smart and accomplished. And now I look at, yeah,
I look at myself, yeah, I I look at myself from their
perspective, and they, you know, they knew who I was
and that I was just going through a stage. Mhmm. You
know? They never got emotional about it. They,
were rational, indulged. They quest yeah. They use the
Socratic method. They provide different,
examples to, you know, plant seeds fourth
me as a youth of different ways to think. But I
think the wrong way of working of having
multi generations think is telling people that they're wrong or they're
stupid, and it's my way or the highway, and it doesn't matter if
you're an elder or a youth. So as
most leaders that inspire, they inspire because you
don't feel judged. You then you you you're
they inspire you because you feel heard. Even
if they don't necessarily agree with you, you feel heard
and that you matter. And so
from where I sit, it's continuing to be, you
know, strong in your principles and convictions.
But as a leader, knowing that
there are maybe things that you don't know and having an open mind,
but also not judging
others for things that are, you know, for things that are different
than, what you believe in and that you actually know to be
true. The
challenge we have is creating
can't believe I'm gonna say this. A safe space for actual work.
And what I mean by that is we just wanna work.
Like, I just wanna make great products. I just wanna
work with a team where we're focused on get GSD
Mhmm. And helping each other Tom be successful. I don't care about
your politics. I don't care about who you're married to and
what you're doing in your bedroom. I don't care if you have a
tattoo or not. You know, what
I don't care who you're voting for. Like, for me, what matters is
who you are in the room. And are you focused
on getting the work done that you committed to? Are you
able to support a team member who may need support?
You know, but helping each other to thrive
around the work we're doing and keeping the noise out of the
system. Now that doesn't mean that I don't care about individuals as
humans. I do. But, you know, there
yeah. Religion, community
service, politics is for outside of work, and we can
discuss that outside of work, or we create specific times and
forms for in work where that's all that you're talking about.
But, you know, just like they did at Coinbase, just like they're
doing at a lot of other, Palantir,
companies that you wanna work for, even Twitter and x. Like, the companies I wanna
work for are the ones that are passionate about the product, and
the people is, you know, are the is the culture and
the teamwork to get the product done.
So let me ask you a question here because this is this is an idea
that some companies have gone
all in on, but the vast majority of
publicly traded companies
still seem to be really
focused on all of this other stuff that's that that's
hooked into workplace culture, but actually erodes
culture, and they don't seem to be as hooked
into the product. So case in point,
I get a lot of one of the parts of our business, we do a
lot of my consultancy. We do a lot of,
bidding on corporate gigs. Right. So we'll
bid for a gig. Right. And I I'm actually
I'm I can actually glance over to my email and see this in my email.
Now I've got a bid that was emailed to me. I'm not gonna bid on
this, but it was emailed to me, by a corporate client with
a name that you would know if I said it. And they are
bidding out, diversity, equity, inclusion, and
belonging training. Now, again, I'm not gonna
go into sort of the benefits of DEI or the drawbacks or any of that.
I'm clear on the record on all of that, my thoughts on all that. You're
a publicly traded company, and you're bidding out this
project. Now on the one hand, you
could say at Libby, as you've already stated, maybe they'll they're
just bidding this out for one specific time, for one specific area that's
in book, and that it won't impact the rest of everything else because they'll be
ridiculously focused on the product. But this company
hasn't been ridiculously focused on its product for a while.
Again, if I said the name of the company, you would know who they are.
They haven't been focused on their other stuff for a while. And And so I
look at all of these sort of I call them side games,
right, that corporations are doing. Yeah.
And the side games get a lot of
fire and smoke and attention in a in a
cycle a media cycle, But all they
do is create distractions with people that just wanna, like you said,
GSD and show up and do the work.
And They're not they're not focused on
actual value creation for their customer.
Right. They're focused on metrics that that matter to a
broader stakeholder group. And quite honestly, you
know, excellence is the exception. It's not the rule. You know,
publicly traded companies, especially those, you know, with
50,000 employees, a 100,000, 250,000,
they're attracting the average and the mediocre.
You know, and so what are the things that they think are
going to attract the average and the mediocre. These aren't
people, as a rule of thumb, who are continuing
to who are looking for careers to thrive and grow,
to contribute, you know, value and get value in
return. For the most part, these are people who just want a
job. Show yeah.
Mhmm. They're they basically work to live, and they don't live to work.
Yeah. So when your company isn't valued
based on the value you deliver to your customer, the value you deliver to
your, partners and your employees,
or it has to appeal to the masses, you're
going to get mass programs
and mass communications. And so this
is why you're seeing a continuation of all those things that on the
surface be good, but you and I
both know our, candy
for yeah. Or or empty calories for the
company. Yeah. I always say, like, HR, for the most part, is a
make work function. Yeah. You
know, there are key elements of it that
turning and development you know, there are things that I think
are important, but I don't think you have to have them in house. They are
Right. Functions that I think you build the capability,
you deliver it, it's embedded in the culture, and you move
on. But when you have a full time function that,
you know, that isn't actively
and directly creating value for your customer
or your partners, you have a make work function.
So Okay. So let me ask you this question then. How much of a But
but but not in a nut shell, it's because they're appealing to the masses.
They're not trying to be exceptional. Okay. They don't need to be
exceptional. They have right they have cash flow that like, why why
do you think the cable companies haven't shifted in, you know, in 25
years? Yeah. Right? Fourth, you're right. Because they don't have to.
Okay. To the masses. So I asked this question on
LinkedIn. Well, I didn't ask it. I sort of did a rant on LinkedIn, and
I got in a whole bunch of trouble. It's fine. I'm used to getting
in trouble. And my
rant basically came down to this. Bring back
the cantankerous disagreeable.
I'm gonna tell you what to do the right way to do it because I'm
competent, but I'm probably not gonna tell you in a way that's gonna make you
feel good leader. Like, bring that, and it is gonna be a guy. Sorry,
ladies. Fourth bring that guy back because that
guy will make sure doors don't fall off the planes of your
product in midair. There are many women like that
too. There are many women like that. Yeah. Bring
back the kind of leader who will
get the bridge in Baltimore up faster than 10
years because it shouldn't take 10 years. Like, you just need one
person who's willing to be disagreeable and just yell at everybody
and tell them to do it right and that we're gonna be here 25 years
until you do it right, or we could be here 10 minutes. Do it right.
Yeah. I don't know that it I Well, well, the reason why it's disagreeable,
but it's not compromising on the things that matter.
Okay. Well, not compromising these days seems like being disagreeable.
Because people yeah. Yeah. Because we're in this make work
because and I'm drawing We're in we're in this make work feel good. Give me
a dopamine give me a dopamine hit world. Right. You know? And
I can also say that these startups are also
appealing to the average because these startups are
funded by VCs. They have no accountability,
other than exiting. And when there's a ton of money,
chasing noneconomic entities, they can do a lot of stupid
stuff that doesn't actually deliver deliver any value.
So what you like, so the reason you're seeing this stuff continue
is because there's no accountability Libby. Like, the businesses are
gonna continue to be going concerns because they're either funded
by, legacy cash flows and brand
or by VCs that are funding them, and they don't actually have to produce
positive cash flow. The only reason you can produce positive cash flow is
because you actually have products that people love, partnerships that
people value, and employees committed to your company. But are we to a point
where we have to be have to be. Are we to a point
where the the the only way out we were just talking about this
before we started. The only way out is through. And
and the way to get through sort of the mediocrity and the
lack of focus on product and and and the lack of
accountability. The only way through and I'm asked this as a challenge question to you
because I'm I'm I don't know what the answer is myself,
but I know what I want the answer to be based on my temperament. So
but that's not true. Right? It's just based on my temperament. Right? Like, is the
only way through to find that unlikable
person, man or woman? I don't care. Find that unlikable person and give them the
Tom, or or or do we need to find
a way is there a third way Tom paraphrase from Bill
Clinton? Is there? The likability is, like, overrated.
Like, I like you know, likability isn't
what you what you need to run a a business. It
might be nice to be light, but there's there's a difference between
being respected and being hated or disliked.
Right. Disliked, like, yo, to me,
respected is I'm telling you what our decision criteria
is. I'm telling you where we're heading. I'm telling you why we're not
investing in these functions. And I'm giving you kind of
our like, likability is emotional driven. Respect
is rationally driven. We need more rational
leaders, who can share things
from a rational basis. And
right now, you just have too many like, apologizing,
because someone's feelings are hurt. Well, I'm sorry you interpreted it something
differently than I intended it, but you need to take accountability for what
you're feeling. I'm gonna check my intentions, but
my intentions, I know my intentions. I'm not gonna apologize for how
you receive them because you have had a different experience that
interprets my actions one way that was not actually
real. So the only way through, yes, is just like
Elon did. I'm sorry. Elon did it. He didn't apologize.
He fired 80% of the staff because the staff was noise.
They weren't actually creating value. When you focus on what you
need you just need to build and deliver an amazing experience, look at the
innovation that has happened at x in the last, like, year. It's
insane. Look at the innovation that happened at Zoom in the last
year. 0. Right. You know, one
company is focused on being liked and probably has
20,000 employees that are talking about politics
or, you know, lots of other stuff we don't care
about during the work day, and the other one is turning to
get us done. So the the biggest the biggest example right
now of what you're talking about is Google. I I mean, just I know.
Right. Like, that's the biggest example right now. About it today. Right. Yeah. Right. Right.
Right. Like, Google Gemini and that entire disastrous rollout and all that. Okay.
So my follow-up question to that is this,
because I'm not I don't know what the answer is. This is why I'm asking.
Writers. Will younger generations
who have been communicated with differently?
Risk and by the way, have different expectations of communication
still follow that sort of leader
or not even follow will listen and be appreciative of the
communication style of someone fourth whom likability is
on like number 10 of their list of the top 10 things they have to
be. And effectiveness is number 1 or maybe number 2. Whatever. Whatever is
number 1. Number 2, it's not likability. Our younger generations,
because this is the challenge question for all of us out here, not just
publicly traded, but small, medium sized businesses all the way up and down because the
cancer is everywhere. I have conversations with folks all the time. The
cancer is everywhere. Okay? In all of our business
sectors, all of our economic sectors. It is. Yeah. It's even in our families. I
mean, it's everywhere. Right? Yeah. It is. And so will
younger generations follow that person if that person sets
those expectations correctly, or will they rebel?
From where I say it, it yeah. It's the exception. It you know?
If you're looking for excellence, if you're looking for,
working in a, you know, in an empowered way, if you're
focused on in a challenging
experience that you get excited about, you are going to
work for that effective leader and not just the nice leader. We
have all worked with nice leaders. They're like, I'm gonna I'm gonna
quit. I don't care how nice you are if you're actually not removing the
barriers to my success. Mhmm. Like, I you know, at the
end of the day, I'm at work. I don't wanna have to jump over, you
know, 30 bad processes and redundant work
and people not doing their job because you're not doing your job
as a leader. I don't care how nice you are. You might be the nicest
thing on the planet, but if you're not helping me to be effective in my
role, I'm moving on to the next, you know, the next role
and the the next leader. So I always talk
about this outside in kind of transformation. Google is
lost. You have 200,000 employees, one of the largest
publicly traded companies around, and all they do is search.
You know? Like, what was the last innovation that they did that you were excited
about? 0. They're only about search and then
talking in their Slack channels about politics and gender
ideology. You know, that's an example of
where cash flow is allowing them to not be accountable to
their shareholders for new innovation and great ideas.
But, yeah, do you need to be loud and vocal, or do you just
set the example and attract like like,
you know, attract bees to honey? Like, you can find that there
are lots of incredible there's lots of incredible
talent who actually wants to have their potential
unleashed, who doesn't wanna talk about BS, that
actually wants to do great things. They just haven't seen
it. So show it to them. And, you know, they'll
start talking to others, and others will want to be a part of your organization.
I would I actually would love to do more, research on Coinbase to see what's
happening there. I'd like to do more around Palantir and
then, what Lucky Palmer's company is. Mhmm.
Like, I'd really like to see what they're getting
with respect to employee feedback Mhmm.
You know, and employee engagement. You book? Because those are companies
where you have strong
leaders who also have strong teams
working within their businesses. I wanna see how satisfied those
employees are because those guys are gonna be the
examples, at least Palantir and Coinbase, around trying to live by
your principles and focusing on delivering great product. The same
would be for Twitter and not, and not,
you know, Glassdoor, you know, free
Elon, but, you know, maybe the last 6 months, you know, where you have
engineers who are actually able to deliver and continue to deliver new features and
functionality. Yeah. So the only way is through.
I think the biggest risk that we run, though, is,
is that the momentum from the rate is
not good enough to offset
the cancer that is everywhere. Yeah.
K. Back to the book.
We're rounding it. We gotta round our corner here. We take it a lot in
the business time. We gotta round the corner here. We gotta we gotta wrap
this sucker up. We gotta bring this home. So let's
get back to the book, back to fathers and sons.
By the way, you can pick up, Turgenev.
It is an open fourth, book now. So it's
published in a wide variety of different formats. You can get it
online, as well, from
any major or minor publisher. So I'd encourage you to go out and
pick up a copy of fathers and sons.
Back to the book. We're gonna pick up in chapter
8, with with
Nikolai Petrovich's, new mistress,
Finichka. Nikolai Petrovich had made Finichka's
acquaintance in the following manner. He had once happened 3 years before to stay
a night at an inn in a remote district town. He was agreeably struck
by the cleanliness of the room assigned to him, the freshest of the bed linen.
Surely, the woman of the house must be a German was the idea that
occurred to him, but she proved to be a Russian, a woman of about 50
neatly dressed of of a good looking sensible countenance and discreet
speech. He entered the conversation with her at tea. He liked her
very much. Nikolai Petrovich had, at the time, only just moved into his
new home. And not wishing to keep serfs in the house, he was on the
lookout for wage servants. The woman of the inn on
her side complained with the small number of visitors to the town and the hard
times. He proposed to her to come into his house in the capacity of a
housekeeper. She consented. Her husband had long been
dead, leaving her and only daughter, Fenichka. Within a fortnight,
Arina, Savishna, that was the new housekeeper's name,
arrived with her daughter at Merino and installed herself in the little
lodge. Nikolai Petrovich's choice
proved a successful one. Irina brought order to the household. As for
Panitchka, who was at that time 17, no one spoke of her and
scarcely anyone saw her. She lived quietly and sedately, and only on
Sundays, Nikolai Petrovich noticed, in the church, somewhere
in a side placed the delicate profile of her white face
More than a year passed thus. 1 morning, Irina came
into a study and bowing what was usual. She asked him if he could do
anything for her daughter, who'd got a spark from the stove in her
eye. Nikolai Petrovich, like all stay at home people, had studied
doctoring and even compiled a homeopathic guide. He at once told Irina to
bring the patient to him. Fenichka was much frightened when she heard the master
had sent for her. However, she followed her mother. Nikolai Petrovich led her
to the window and took her head in his two hands. After thoroughly
examining her red and swollen eye, he preside a he prescribed a fomentation,
which he made up himself at once and tearing his handkerchief to pieces. He showed
her how it ought to be applied. The finished go Jesan to all he had
to say and then was going. Kiss the master's hand,
silly girl, or said arena. And Nikolai
Petrovich did not give her his hand and in confusion himself, kissed her bent
head on the parting of her hair. Benyushka's
eye was Sorrells again, but the impression she had made on Nikolai Petrovich did not
pass away so quickly. He was forever haunted by that pure, delicate,
timidly raised face. He felt on the palms of his hands that soft hair and
saw those innocent slightly parted lips through which pearly teeth gleamed with moist
brilliance in the sunshine. He began to watch her with great attention in
church and tried to get into conversation with her. At first, she was shy of
him, and one day, meeting him at the approach of evening in a narrow footpath
through a field of rye, she ran into the tall thick rye overgrown with
cornflowers and wormwood so as not to meet him face to face.
He caught sight of her little head fourth golden network of ears of rye fourth
which she was peeping out like a small little animal and called affectionately to
her, good evening, I don't bite. Good evening, she
whispered, not coming out of her ambush. By degrees,
she began to be more at home with him but would still shine his presence.
But suddenly her mother, Irina, died of cholera.
What was to become of Faniqa? She inherited from her mother
a love for order, regularity, and respectability, But she was
so young, so alone. Nikolai Petrovich was himself so good and
considerate. It's needless to relate
the rest.
This is one of those, moments in a in a book,
in a Russian novel. Russian novelists in general have this little twitch that they
do where they Dostoevsky did it. Tolstoy did it. I mean,
it's all of a war and peace is about. My gosh. And, and Turgenev.
Even even Nabokov, we're we're readers. We're trying to get through and
read Lolita. Had tried to pull some interesting things from Lolita. That's a
fascinating little little book there. But
every single one of these Russian writers is consumed with the
idea of how relationships develop between men and women,
in particular, how relationships develop between men and women of different social
classes and across different ages.
Now it's interesting. As I was reading this book, I I also, the other day,
watched a movie fourth watched a television show from the 19 seventies where
this, this older man was having an affair with his younger secretary and
my 13 year old daughter getting ready to be fourth, happened to be in the
room where we're watching the show, And she was like, and it's the 1970s.
This is the Rockford files actually. And my daughter goes, oh, he's so old.
It's like, yeah, well you're 14. That's the correct, that's the correct response. Thank you.
You're right. You're exactly right. He is so old.
But I said, they're only separated by like, this is the seventies. They're only separated
by like 20 years. It's fine. She's in her twenties. He's in his fifties or
thirties or whatever, or forties. It's fine. She even and and she still looked
at me. She gave me the side look with the sneer that only a 14
year old girl can give her father. It's
fine. It's whatever. But it puts me in mind
of what I was just reading there in this book.
And Nikolai is attempting to be
a moral man in a culture where
the morality of connection
and of interpersonal
sexual behavior between people of different classes
and between people of different ages is strictly
bounded. And one of the interesting things about finishka
is when our Katie, who is closer to
Panitchka's age, and Nikolai's son, when Arkady
and, Bazarov turning to the property,
has a little baby boy. And,
of course, because it's Russian, everyone's very discreet about such
things, but everybody knows what is happening.
This, of course, creates tension between Arkady and Bazarov.
And, Arcadia basically says my
father has a right to be happy, and Bazarov
also says that your father has a right to be
happy, but they're coming from different perspectives on this. Bazarov is coming from a
nihilistic perspective. Arkady is coming from a perspective that's
way more personal, way more individualized to what he
knows about his father.
The challenge that Turgenev presents to us in this
part of fathers and sons and further on in the book is
the challenge of whether or not such morality should impact state policy.
Do we really need to, and we, by the way, we've done this in our
own country. We've scaled up in people's individualized experiences to the
level of state policy that is currently what is happening with
the, transgender, contra Tom. And
I don't call it a movement. I call it a contra Trump. We're taking
people's individual collect individual experience, and we're scaling it
largely to a collective, interestingly enough, involving
children. And
in an attempt to as we did the 19 fifties 19 sixties in
America Tom enfranchise those on the fringes, We
moved to the edges closer to the center, but what we didn't realize was that
the fringe that's way out there now becomes closer
to the center. This happens in cross generational
transitions and this occurs, fourth this is a danger
that can occur. And I think this is what Arkady is really focused
on. Not Pavel, not Bazar. Tom, I think he senses it, but doesn't know how
to say it in the book. The danger of scaling
the individual experience to the collective is that you will lose the
morality that the collective has relied upon all of
this time. And, of course, Basarov doesn't see it as being
a problem. We've
talked about cross generational wisdom a little bit on some of this,
Libby.
Maybe just some brief comments on how we practically kinda get through this
moment. And I think it is I think it's different in in America because it's
it's a moment by moment sort of thing, with us
as I think it is in all countries. I do think that because the
messaging and the speed of the messaging has increased, we don't have we don't have
5 years to think about something now. We don't have 2 years to think about
something now. Now we have to make a decision, a split second decision about
someone doing something on TikTok in about 10
seconds before we can like scroll to the next thing. Right. We're not being given
time to think. I think that's on purpose, but putting that aside,
how do we transition that
wisdom that knows he has, but doesn't know how
to articulate? And I think a lot of people know they have it. They do,
but they don't know how to get that across to to
people who are trying to scale up their individualized experience to collective
state policy?
It's that question as old as time. Right? It is a
question as old as time. Yeah. I mean, for forget it. We we covered this
in the Republic of Plato. So, yes, it's it's as old as time. Yeah. Yeah.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
I I really like the Socratic method around this.
And, specifically, I'm turning to remember
this author's name. I can't think of it. I think can't think of her name
right now. She's kind of in the woo woo space,
But she asks yeah. She has fourth core
questions that she asks when she has
a response, you know, yeah, positive or negative
towards something she's seen or observing. And it's like
questions like, how do I know this to be true? Why do I believe this
to be true? What would the world look like if it wasn't
true? So it recognizes that our belief systems
are based on our experience overlaid by, you know,
thoughts and narratives from others, And that reality
our belief structure system is actually relative to
only our experience. So if we start to actually
ask why we believe something and why we might be
hesitant to not believe something different. Book.
Because who would I be if I believe something different? My tribe might not like
me anymore, or, I might have to reexamine
so much so much more about the
world if, you know, if what I believe is not no longer
true. Yeah. So
framing by asking the youth the things they
know, and, yeah, in those fourth
questions, can help them.
It just creates a thought process and plant seeds for them
to question what they know and to maybe be more open,
as they experience life or take in information,
to maybe think differently. So what we see as
a natural progression already from young to old for the most
part, is they go from idealist
idealist to pragmatists, and hopefully don't lose
their lust for life and become cynical in that process, but actually
enjoy life more, as they become
practical and, you know, and see
how much more they have to learn. Yeah. I think if we just
open someone's aperture, like, you allow
that movement into maturity so much
faster. Does that make sense? Yeah. That makes
sense. And
it sort of answers the question as we sort of round the corner here. Where
do we go from here? Right? Right. Like, opening that aperture of
experience, opening that
back in the sixties, they called it the age of Aquarius. Right? You know, we're
gonna have a new a new consciousness raising, right, a new understanding.
No one's turning about language. No one's talking a language like that now.
Matter of fact, the the recent solar eclipse that we had in North America, I
told my, my 7 year old that his 3rd eye was gonna open, and he
was running around telling other people that. And, my wife was
like, you probably need to stop talking to
him. Yes. Yeah. Well, I do some things to
amuse myself with my children. Anyway, but my
point is that that that
opening of the aperture, that understanding. Right?
I I think it has to operate on so many different levels that it befuddles
us. And so I think at certain points in
Tom, particularly in American culture, we can only focus on one level at
once. Like, right now, we're hyper focused on the technological level. We think
that if we just open up our aperture around all these technologies,
then then enlightenment, for one of a better
word, will will will appear.
But there's always a poverty that's attached to that.
Right? Because the enlightenment has to happen in a bunch of different
places. It can't just you can't just have your
your perceptions expanded in one
spot. That's too narrow. You've gotta have
your ex your your your your your perceptions expanded in
your communication, in your, in
your finances, in your spirituality, in your technology. Like,
it's all books all these things come together in in who you are, right, as
a leader, but also who you are as a follower? Well, I
think the the one thing I do know for sure is that
telling people that there's only one way Yeah. Or my
way is the fastest path to people
shutting down. Correct. So people will change
when they are ready to change. And, like,
you know, first is helping yeah. We talk about the change curve a lot
in transform yeah, in enterprise transformation, but it's also
in in personal transformation is, like, first, you have an
awareness of something, and then you,
like, maybe seek deeper understanding of it. And then you
have knowledge, and then you have mastery. But what our goal is
is to just help build awareness.
And you do you can help build awareness through
questioning and maybe sharing, you know, ideas
and sources. But, yeah, by
telling people that they don't
know what's in their best interest and you know better Right.
You'll shut people down to discovery.
You also shut yourself down to discovery
because the other thing that I know for sure is that we don't know anything
for sure. Well, that's and that
is that's where leadership Yeah. And, fundamentally, this is a
leadership podcast, so we covered a lot of different areas today. And thank you
for listening. And leadership
takes all of that that you've talked about and
then transmits that because that's all called wisdom,
transmits that through coaching, through communication, through
mentoring, through creating succession plans.
And here's another way. Actually leaving when you say you're going to
leave. Mhmm. Right. Right.
Do what you say. Do what you say you're going to do.
And these
are areas that we struggle with, but I'm starting to see people
saying things like the future is bright,
or I have optimism. And they're
looking at some of the same things that you and I are looking at, and
they're drawing different conclusions.
But I think that that wisdom transfer
that I don't know what I don't know is probably
the humility that needs to be at the core of all leadership communication
cross generationally. I would agree, and that's where the power of
story comes into. It is, like, how did you get, like
so sharing like, so share my experience of how I got
to Right. Believe the thing that I believe Yep.
Currently. And Yeah. And also share that
if in 10 years from now, I'm not questioning everything I believe now, then
I haven't learned and grown. Right. But by sharing the
journey, you can you can share with people the thought processes and
experiences that, at some point, they may be able to mirror
or relate to that can help them, like, you know,
with their own journey. But it
gives, like, treat I, 1, treat people as
adults. Yeah.
You know, 2, provide kind of readers to
support you why you believe what you believe.
Mhmm. Help yeah. Like, for me, it's also
about being you know, it's about coaching, but it's like showing as
well. So I don't ask anyone to do
what I won't do myself, and I'll sit
side by side with folks to help them, you know, to
learn or understand something.
But I wanna go back to, you know, the other
strengthening your adherence to your principles and not compromising
on your principles. Mhmm. So, you know,
from a leadership perspective, the how may I may not care as
much about the principles to have
a have a how element to it True. But not
compromising on quality. Right. Right. So outcomes.
Right? And I do care about how we get to those outcomes. Right? Like,
I I don't want a person with poor values
who's walking all over the team, you know, getting to
the out you know, to, like, a tangible outcome. You know? So I
have principles about how we work together, holding each other accountable,
integrity, collaboration.
I also have principles around quality standards and not
lowering them because they're hard. You know? Like,
figure out, like, that the challenge and the
excitement is around actually
achieving hard goals and objectives. Yeah. But
giving people space
to actually use their own brain and to
create to get there. So, you
know, leadership is about balancing the principles
Mhmm. With the how. And
people there's a
lack of soul and, excitement when
you're told how to do everything. If you understand
where you're going and the why, and you're given some
Yeah. Yeah. The whole goal is to allow
people to feel empowered, allow people to create,
but not giving them so much rope that they can hang
themselves and fourth provide you know, create risk for
the for the company. For the company. So Yeah.
So the disagreeableness is only around radical candor.
It's only about questioning, but not holding,
but not giving up on your principles. And too
many leaders we've seen have given up on their principles
in order to stay in power, in order to be liked.
And when you do that, you're losing your soul.
But that yeah. But, effectively, to be a good leader, it's the power of the
question. Yeah. You know? It's the power of the question. It's the power
of the story, and it's belief in the individual
to be able to, you know, take on big challenges and
succeed. I think Turgenev would,
or Turgenev would agree. So I would
encourage you to pick up a copy of fathers and sons.
Take a look at Tom, mark it up, read it, contextualize
it for our time now. I'd
like to thank Libby Younger for coming on the Leadership
Lessons fourth the Great Books podcast today. And with that,
we're out.