First assumptions can be the most difficult to recognize. Beginning assumptions that guide one’s thinking before one has even had a chance to begin thinking.
What if such assumptions were to trap one’s thinking? To mislead and ensnare one in a labyrinth of well-meaning but ultimately self-defeating dead ends.
Peter Block begins his reflections in chapter one of The Answer to How is Yes with just such a survey of fallacious starting points.
If you are new to Thought Leaders Unpackedâ„¢ we are not summarizing or reviewing content when we explore these books one chapter at a time.
We are learning, each one of us in particular. We are responding to what challenges us personally.
I am stunned by the insight that asking “How?” assumes that I don’t know and that someone else does know.
I am stunned to witness how easily I denigrate my power, my experience, my wisdom, my expertise and my ability to solve problems by how I frame the question. How I frame the question in terms that assume I am not a crucial part of the answer.
The second personal challenge I encountered was the possibility that my “How?” questions were helping me to miss or avoid more significant questions like, “Is (more…)


I’m almost to the point where I think we’d be better off never reelecting an incumbent rather than always reelecting the incumbent.
“Go to the people. Learn from them. Live with them. Start with what they know. Build with what they have. The best of leaders when the job is done, when the task is accomplished, the people will say we have done it ourselves.”