Col. Woodmansee said he’d like me to join him in a walk through the motor pool. I was sure this was the perfect storm of bad luck: my marriage was falling apart, I was coping by investing my time in my work after hours, and now the Brigade Commander was going to inspect the motor pool… on a Friday night, no less. For the next 20-30 minutes, he and I walked up and down the tank lines.
Oddly, he never said a word about the status of maintenance, the appearance of the tanks, or anything remotely related to my job. Rather, he talked about challenges he had faced in life and how he got through them. He never mentioned my own situation, but when we finally got back to the front gate, he put his hand on my shoulder and said: “There’s light at the end of this tunnel; you just can’t see it yet.”
I later learned that my battalion commander had told Col. Woodmansee about a young lieutenant who was facing difficult personal challenges and could use some encouragement. That is what brought the colonel to the motor pool that Friday evening. Since that day, my memory has faded about a number of things and experiences, but that small but thoughtful gesture by a senior leader to a young officer buried deep in his own personal problems is seared into my memory like it was yesterday. I can’t tell you how much his short visit lifted my spirits. Somebody cared when I felt like nobody did.
One often feels alone when things are going wrong. I put that rock in my backpack, and over the past 40 years, I’ve applied this same tactic a number of times, with similar success, on young people I have seen struggling.
I recently learned of a story from a graduate course on leadership. On test day, the instructor handed out the exam with only one question: “What is the name of the janitor who cleans this room?” Nobody knew, and most thought it a joke.
It wasn’t.
Leadership is about reaching out to ALL of those in your sphere of influence and demonstrating that you care about them, personally. The janitor had a role in ensuring the room was adequately cared for, to provide a suitable learning experience for the students. All the students had been exposed to him throughout the course, but nobody had bothered to get to know him or to thank him. But true leadership is in the details of how you care for others.
Nobody passed the test that day, but they all learned a valuable lesson.
Finally, I’m reminded of a Chinese proverb that helps to illustrate that good can come out of bad; that there is usually the possibility of a light at the end of every tunnel.
An old man living out on the Chinese steppes raised horses. One day, his prize stallion ran away. A neighbor felt sorry for him and told him so. The old man replied: “How could we know it is not a good thing for me?”
A few days later, the horse returned and brought with it a few mares. The neighbor congratulated the old man on his good fortune, but the old man replied: “How could we know it is not a bad thing for me?”
His son decided to ride one of the horses, but the horse bucked and threw him to the ground, breaking his leg. Again, the neighbor expressed sympathy for the old man, but the old man replied: “How could we know it is not a good thing for me?”
A while later the Emperor’s army arrived in the area to recruit young men to fight in a war. Because of his crippling injury, the son could not go off to war and was spared from certain death.
This popular Chinese proverb really has a double meaning: that good can come from bad, but also that bad can follow good. The reader can choose what meaning works best for them, but I would point out that there is sometimes a silver lining in misfortune. We just need to have the patience and resolve to find it. There is often light at the end of the tunnel. There was for me and there can be for you—and those in your charge.