"Vision without execution is hallucination." – Thomas Edison
Similarly, Love isn't love without discipline.
I'll never forget the phone call I received one morning from the Director of Human Resources at a hospital that had begun the Radical Loving Care initiative. "Erie, we're going to have to suspend your loving care work," she told me. "We are going through a lay-off."
"Why would that make you think you have to stop the program?" I asked.
"People we're letting go will think we're hypocrites."
Of course, I told her that Radical Loving Care was more important during tough encounters than it was during easy ones. Further, engaging Love to create a culture of healing is not "my" program. To succeed, the vision must, as Edison taught, move to each person's execution.
Any relationship uninformed by Love is simply a set of transactions.
The good outcome of my conversation with the HR director is that it led to increased training of leaders on how to "fire" someone in ways guided by Love instead of fear. In essence, layoffs and terminations in a healing organization must utilize two of Love's highest characteristics: Respect and humility.
The hardest obstacle faced in understanding loving care is that Love is never limited to tenderness anymore than a good diet is composed exclusively of sugar. Yet, I constantly encounter leaders (particularly men) who wrongly conclude that loving care is some kind of frivolous "touchy-feely" (a terrible phrase) thing.
Understanding the "tough-minded" element of loving care is as simple as noticing how muscle is built or professional degrees are won. No one ever became strong by sitting around being "nice" to themselves. No one ever became a good parent by letting their children have whatever they wanted. No marriage or friendship can succeed if the couple breaks apart after the first argument. Beauty cannot be appreciated without discipline.
This is "Radical Loving Care: 101." Unfortunately, the majority of leaders, stuck in a wrong notion of the meaning of Love, fail the course.
-Erie Chapman
Photograph: "Shirt Button – Light & Dark Series" copyright erie chapman 2013

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