Consumer Bankruptcy Journal Summer 2016 | Page 24

A LIFE OF LEARNING By USMC General Anthony C. Zinni USMC (Ret.) W e all know him, or somebody like him. When he was young and starting out in life, he was eager, energetic, and a fast learner. Everyone thought that he would rise through the ranks in his chosen profession and he seemed to have so many interests. You meet him now, in mid-life, and you wonder what happened. He seems to have intellectually flat-lined. He has few interests outside of work. At work, he has settled into a mediocre position and is content to let things play out as is until retirement. No real plans after that. He remains resistant to change and transformation of any kind. Two things happened to him. He never really adopted a life-long commitment to learning and growing and, he was never part of an organization committed to developing its members through continuous learning. Lifelong learning requires a personal and professional commitment. It means developing a sense of curiosity about all aspects of your life and the discipline to feed that curiosity through self-education and personal growth. You need a passion for learning and for teaching. Those who develop a tremendous wealth of knowledge and competence, and use that to mentor and coach, feed that passion. As you learn and grow, you create a greater ability to reflect and analyze your experiences. You become an effective critical, systems, and creative thinker. This leads to a level of decision-making 24 CONSUMER BANKRUPTCY JOURNAL that makes you a powerful and valued leader. People who are committed lifelong learners tend to be visionaries who think an act strategically. They can see an alternative future and how to shape it and succeed in it while others are stuck in a transactional life, moving tactically from day to day in a mode of survival decision-making. need to develop an environment to encourage and support this way of life. The organization must become a learning organization. This requires a commitment to the education of its members, investment in their development, rewarding and valuing learning, and creating a team learning approach to doing business. There are certain characteristics of lifelong learners that are clearly evident. They are always reading. They continuously devour books, ebooks, and audio books. They enjoy stimulating conversations and have a wide breadth of knowledge and interests. They always seem to have some sort of project that they are involved in. Besides their self-learning, they seek structural learning. They eagerly look for opportunities to take formal professional courses or increase their educational level. Learning becomes a way of life that inspires their personal and professional lives. They possess a logic and understanding that is demonstrated in how they define and analyze problems and issues. Our society is full of individuals who claim to be lifelong learners and organizations that claim to be learning organizations. In my experience, however, most of those making such claims do not walk the talk. It takes a true, tough commitment on a personal and organizational basis to make lifelong learning a reality. I don’t see survival in this environment for those that can’t or refuse to commit. In today’s world, organizations face an environment that is highly competitive, complex, and dynamic. To succeed and be relevant, they need members who are innovative, exceptionally knowledgeable, mentally agile, and highly analytical. Those willing to commit to a life of learning fit this bill. An organization that sees clear advantages to having its members be lifelong learners, however, Summer 2016 General Anthony C. Zinni is a retired United States Marine Corps four star general and a former Commander in Chief of the United States Central Command (CENTCOM). In 2002, he was selected to be a special envoy for the United States to Israel and the Palestinian Authority. While serving as special envoy, Zinni was also an instructor in the Department of International Studies at the Virginia Military Institute. Currently, he is an instructor at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University, a public speaker, and an author of bestselling books on his military career and foreign affairs, including Battle for Peace. National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys