Thursday, August 6, 2009

Effective Leadership: Get Your Kicks on Route 66


My family just completed our annual vacation. This year we took an RV to Oklahoma to visit Laura's parents and then swung over to see the Grand Canyon on our way home. It was a great visit. I wanted to share at least one thought I had while driving home - and trust me, we did alot of driving!

If you've ever driven on I-40, which runs across the southwest US, you'll notice that much of its path parallels Route 66. In fact, every few miles you can exit I-40 and actually drive on "Historic Route 66". Perhaps it's because Route 66 has such an iconic presence in our culture or perhaps I was just spending too much time watching mile markers and cacti roll by, but I kept thinking about this old stretch of pavement. I thought about how times have changed since it was originally built. I thought about how the construction of I-40 forever changed Route 66 and the little towns that had sprung up beside it - many of those towns are now ghost towns. I thought about the men (there were probably a few women too) who built the old highway. In all of these instances I was really thinking about a legacy - I was thinking about what was left behind.

The hundreds or thousands of people that built Route 66 are, for the most part, dead and gone now. Yet there is something left behind - some of it good, some of it bad. There's the romantic aspect of Route 66 that recalls a different, maybe cooler and more care free time, that makes us sing songs and think of old TV shows or grainy home movies from the 50's and 60's. But there is also a legacy of lonely stretches of crumbling asphalt running past abandoned gas stations, hotels and restaurants - a street of broken dreams. I guess the true legacy of Route 66 is in the eye of the beholder.

As leaders, what will our legacy be? Will our life's work be left to crumble and decay after it's replaced by "Interstate 40". Or will we leave something behind that will be of true value for all that follow in our footsteps - something that won't be discarded when the next new thing comes along. Again, as so often is the case with leadership, it comes back to that stewardship question: did I leave people better than I found them?