Gracie Kay Close-Leadership and Culture
In my leadership class, we often discussed topics of worldview that I found myself connecting to certain discussions we had in class. In a particular reading I did for this class, we discussed the importance of immersion and depth when considering another's perspective. I believe it is hard to achieve such when living a day-to-day life, but initiative to find other perspective's can teach someone wonders.
I reference back to the films we watched in class, and how peculiar they seemed. I often found the leadership in the movie very different but moving. For example, in the one Spanish speaking film, the man became slave to a native when he did not truly understand the way of their people. It took a very spiritual moment to show both of them what one another could bring along their journey. The native took the lead in guiding the man throughout his land and his people, while the slave took on a more neutral position while aiming to learn in his experience rather than fight against it. Though a very extreme version of showcasing leadership, both men came from different worldviews and yet embarked on a path of learning about one another rather through movement or spiritual awakenings. In the article I discussed in class, one of the best ways to be embraced to such perspective was to be open to it, and this film showed such.
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