The  best leaders love to learn. And the greatest organizations are learning  enterprises – places where ideas are the currency of success. Yet, so  many amongst us resist learning and embracing the new ideas that change  brings with it. The deeper question is why?
What I’ve realized, as I  travel across the world helping people Lead Without a Title, is that the  very act of learning something new means you must also disrupt your  thinking of yesterday. To accept or even just to entertain a new idea  means you must leave the safety of your former way of perceiving the  world and open up to something foreign. And that means you’d have to  leave the protection of your comfort zone/Safe Harbor of The Known and  sail out into the unknown – even for just a moment.
The unknown is a  pretty scary place for most people. Ordinary people get threatened  there. Victims get frightened there. And  so the average person in business (and within life) avoids learning and  exposing themselves to any idea or influence that might cause them to  have to rethink the way they think and re-behave the way they have  always behaved. But the fascinating paradox is that trying to avoid new  ideas to stay safe is actually enormously dangerous – and infused with  risk.
On the other hand, those who make the choice to Lead Without a  Title have a lust to learn. They remain blindingly curious. They read  books daily. They drink coffee with brilliant people. They have long  conversations with role models whose ideas provoke/challenge/irritate  them.  Real leaders truly get that learning and ideation is the fuel of  life. And that all it takes is a single idea to change the game at work  (and rescript the story that is your life). Sure they too feel  uncomfortable or even scared when faced with an idea that confronts  their most closely cherished beliefs. But they  understand that to resist the idea is to resist growth. As well as  their next level of Mastery+Progress+Leadership. And so they move  forward. Into an uncertain yet gorgeously exciting future. 
- Robin Sharma, 
  Renowned Author
  "The Monk Who Sold his Ferari" and other best sellers.
 
 
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