7 Leadership Lessons from the Eagle
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What leadership lessons could we possibly learn from the Eagle? A lot apparently. I get a lot of messages forwarded to me and most of them, I ignore. But this one I just had to share. It has a lot of solid lessons particularly if you want to live a successful lifestyle. So here are the lessons below.
Leadership Lessons
Eagles fly alone and at high altitudes. They don’t fly with sparrows, ravens, and other small birds.
Stay away from narrow-minded people, those that bring you down. Eagle flies with Eagles. Keep good company.
Eagles have an accurate vision.
They have the ability to focus on something as far as five kilometers away. No matter the obstacles, the eagle will not move his focus from the prey until he grabs it.
Have a vision and remain focused no matter what the obstacles and you will succeed.
Eagles do not eat dead things. They feed only on fresh prey.
Do not rely on your past success, keep looking for new frontiers to conquer. Leave your past where it belongs, in the past.
Eagles love the storm and does not shy away from it.
When clouds gather, the eagle gets excited, the eagle uses the storm’s wind to lift itself higher. Once it finds the wind of the storm, the eagle uses the raging storm to lift itself above the clouds.
This gives the eagle an opportunity to glide and rest its wings. In the meantime, all the other birds hide in the branches and leaves of the tree.
Face your challenges head on knowing that these will make you emerge stronger and better than you were. We can use the storms of life to rise to greater heights. Achievers are not afraid to rise to greater heights. Achievers are not afraid of challenges, rather they relish them and use them profitably.
The way the female eagle chooses her mate.
When a female eagle meets a male eagle and they want to mate, she flies down to earth, picks a twig and flies back into the air with the male eagle in hot pursuit. Once she has reached a height high enough for her, she drops the twig and let it fall to the ground while she watches.
The male eagle chases after the twig and catches it before it reached the ground, then bring it back to the female eagle. The female eagle grabs the twig and flies to a much higher altitude and drop the twig again for the male eagle to chase.
This goes on for hours with the height increasing each time until the female eagle is assured that the male eagle has mastered the art of picking the twig which shows commitment. Then and only then will she allow him to mate with her.
Whether in private life or business, one should test the commitment of the people intended for partnership.
Eagles prepare for training
They remove the feathers and soft grass in the nest so that the young ones get uncomfortable in preparation for flying and eventually flies when it becomes unbearable to stay in the nest.
Leave your comfort Zone, there is no growth there.
The Eagle ages on it’s own terms.
When the eagle grows old, his feathers becomes weak and cannot take him as fast and as high as it should. This makes him weak and could make him die. So he retires to a place far away in the mountains. While there, he plucks out the weak feathers on his body and breaks its beaks and claws against the rocks until he is completely bare; a very bloody and painful process. Then he stays in this hiding place until he has grown new feathers, new beaks and claws and then he comes out flying higher than before.
We occasionally need to shed off old habit no matter how difficult, things that burden us or add no value to our lives should be let go of.
There are so many leadership lessons you can learn from the Eagle and if you apply these to your life, you will soar!
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