TGL010: SOLITUDE: THE SECRET WEAPON OF LEADERSHIP

W/ MICHAEL ERWIN

02 March 2020

On today’s show, I talk with Michael Erwin, the co-author of Lead Yourself First: Inspiring Leadership through Solitude.  Michael, a graduate of West Point in 2002, served three combat tours with the First Cavalry Division and 3rd Special Forces Group in Iraq and Afghanistan. Michael talks about the role solitude played in forging his military leadership experience, and how it led him to found the veteran’s service organization, Team Red White & Blue, and write.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • What is solitude and why it’s so important for leadership
  • The difference between being “alone” and “productive solitude”
  • How solitude can provide clarity for leaders
  • How emotional balance and creativity are cultivated through solitude
  • The importance of moral courage for leaders to have conviction
  • How General Eisenhower used solitude during WWII
  • How leaders use writing and running to become even better leaders

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial ntelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors may occur.

Sean Murray  00:03

Welcome to The Good Life! I’m your host, Sean Murray. On today’s show, I talk with Michael Erwin, the co-author of the book, Lead Yourself First: Inspiring Leadership through Solitude. Michael, a graduate of West Point in 2002, served three combat tours with the 1st Cavalry Division and 3rd Special Forces Group in Iraq and Afghanistan. Upon returning back to the States, he founded the Veterans Service Organization: Team Red, White & Blue. And he’s an assistant professor of leadership and psychology at West Point.

On the show today, he talks about the power of solitude; how in today’s world with all the noise and information that’s coming at us, if we want to truly succeed in our careers and in life, we need to stop reacting to the thoughts and opinions of others, and make time to listen to our inner voice; getting clarity on our purpose and our values. Mike talks about the role solitude played in forging his military leadership experience, and he draws on research detailing how leaders like Lincoln, Eisenhower, and Martin Luther King, Jr. also used solitude to achieve success. I hope you enjoy my conversation with Michael Erwin as much as I did. My friends, I bring you, Michael Erwin.

Intro  01:18

You’re listening to The Good Life by The Investor’s Podcast Network, where we explore the ideas, principles, and values that help you live a meaningful, purposeful life. Join your host, Sean Murray, on a journey for the life well-lived.

Sean Murray  01:41

Michael, welcome to The Good Life!

Michael Erwin  01:43

Hey, thanks so much for having me, Sean. Really appreciate it.

Sean Murray  01:47

The topic of today’s discussion is your book, Lead Yourself First: Inspiring Leadership through Solitude, which you co-wrote with Raymond Kethledge. It’s a book about leaders, who view solitude to function more effectively, and I love the topic. When we often think about leadership, we envision people in front of a group, delivering inspiring speech, maybe working together collaborating with a team. It seems very social, but you make the claim in the book that it’s the time in solitude when we are alone in the quiet of our own thoughts, where the leadership is often forged, or where the leader is really most effective. I’m kind of biased towards that. Right at the start, I’ve got to get my biases out there. But maybe we could start with this idea solitude because the way you defined it in the book is maybe a little bit different than what we think when we hear the word solitude.

Michael Erwin  01:49

Absolutely. Yeah, so when you think about solitude, we often envision someone who’s off on their own out in the mountains, or far away from a lot of people. And what we have done is defined solitude really is a psychological state, where the mind is isolated from the input from other minds. And so, that means you can be in a coffee shop, where you can be around other people. But if you are inside your own mind and you’re journaling, or your writing, or your thinking, right? That is solitude. At the same time, you can be on top of Mount Rainier, and there can be no other human being within a couple of miles of you, but if you are ripping through your Instagram feed, or you’re on your phone, right? That is not solitude, even though there’s no other human being within a couple of miles of you. So it really is about the psychological space, where the mind separates itself from all the noise and all the input from other sources and other minds.

Sean Murray  03:35

Well, when you define solitude like that, it definitely brings up the challenge we have today with these phones in our pocket. I’m an avid listener of podcasts, so I often will throw a podcast, and if I have a little time here or there, and so if I’m by myself, but yet I’m listening to a podcast, I’m sort of getting streamed ideas into my head. That’s really not the kind of solitude you’re talking about, right?

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