Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Plugging In, Figuring Out, Moving Forward 🔌


The first mile wasn’t heroic — it was exhaling, gripping the wheel, and finally moving forward. And that’s when the fun began.

Cruise America sent pre‑pickup videos and FAQs to “familiarize” ourselves with RV operations. A nice young man at their office walked us through the highlights and reminded us of the 800‑help line. Yet as we pulled out of the driveway, we still weren’t sure whether the refrigerator ran on propane or the generator.

As we drove away, this is what I thought while looking out the rear-view mirror:

·       Never underestimate the importance of clear instructions. There’s always a gap between what’s taught, what’s heard, and what’s actually learned — and that gap shows up in the awkwardness of doing something for the first time.

·       Effective instructional communication helps people become comfortable and productive more quickly.

·       And the real measure of communication is whether the message was received and understood as intended.

In the service business, this responsibility often falls to supervisors. Whether they do it themselves or delegate it, they must go beyond asking, “Do you understand?” People often don’t — and rarely admit it. Be clear. Ask questions. Listen to their answers. Have them show you how. Coach them accordingly.

We eventually figured out the refrigerator, but that’s not the point. It was another reminder that onboarding is a process, not a checkbox.

After that, the world shifted to what was outside the windshield:

Yesterday delivered some of the most breathtaking geography of the trip. They call it Utah’s Panoramaland — wide‑open spaces, canyons, farmland, and arches stretching to the horizon. It looked exactly like the sales brochures, and for once, the brochures didn’t exaggerate.

We ended the day at The Mt. Lincoln Peach Company in Palisade, Colorado. Warm people greeted us, sold us peach and pear jellies, and showed us how to plug into the electrical hookup. Just like that, we were home for the night.

The day was a masterclass in planning, communication, and follow‑through. When messages land clearly, people move faster, feel more confident, and get to the meaningful work sooner. And when they don’t — well, you end up guessing which button keeps the milk cold. Make sure your people really understand today.

Laozi (6th Century BC): also romanized as Lao Tzu, was a legendary Chinese philosopher and sage traditionally credited with writing the Tao Te Ching, one of the foundational texts of Taoism.

Sunday, May 31, 2026

The Road Leading Out of My Comfort Zone ✈️➡️🚐


Life recently nudged me out of my comfort zone and shoved me onto a completely different road.

It’s the start of the summer heat in Las Vegas and and our annual migration to the Adirondack Mountains. Last year’s trip went sideways before it even began: our 10‑pound chorkie (a chihuahua/yorkie mix) barked while boarding, and the captain had us thrown off the plane. That moment has lived rent‑free in my nervous system ever since.

So this year, instead of a one‑day flight across the country, we’re renting an RV and taking six days to drive 2,300 miles through the heartland and on to the East Coast.

Our daughter is joining my wife and me — something we’ve never done before. We’re total newbies to RV life, and will be stopping each night at a Harvest Host farm, described on their website as one-of-a-kind places to stay and connect with fellow travelers. 

People who know me would say I like getting where I’m going quickly — but life had other plans for this trip. Now I’ll be learning to embrace the slower road. For me, this trip will be a disruption, a forced change, and a reluctant beginning all rolled into one.

So, this week’s messages will take a detour also. Instead of loyalty (normally next up on my theme wheel), I’ll be writing about curiosity and adventure — qualities equally at home on the open road and in the workplace.

·       Curiosity is a cognitive and emotional superpower. It transforms your brain, sharpens problem‑solving, reduces burnout, and boosts empathy by helping you see the world through someone else’s eyes.

·       A sense of adventure is its companion. It pushes you out of your comfort zone, builds resilience, boosts confidence, and rewires your brain for growth. It lowers stress and expands your sense of what’s possible.

Needless to say, I’m curious to see how this all plays out. We leave Las Vegas at 6 a.m. Monday, heading toward our first stop in Grand Junction, Colorado. And this week’s messages will have a travel‑log tie‑in — all about the perspective out the windshield and the rear view mirror.

So buckle up and stay tuned. Life outside the comfort zone starts today.

Neale Donald Walsch (born 1943) is an American actor, screenwriter, speaker, and author of the series Conversations with God.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Integrity Is the Courage to Question Yourself 🧭 🔍🔥


“Better to trust the man who is frequently in error than the one who is never in doubt.” Eric Sevareid

The leaders who worry me aren’t the ones who make mistakes. It’s the ones who refuse to question themselves.

Integrity isn’t about being perfect. It’s the courage to admit uncertainty — to acknowledge what you don’t know and stay open to what you might be missing.

Uncertainty, when handled well, is a powerful catalyst. It clears out assumptions, disrupts autopilot thinking, and forces us to stretch beyond our comfortable routines. It fuels curiosity, sparks creativity, strengthens resilience, and deepens engagement. In other words, uncertainty is not a weakness. It’s a doorway.

But many leaders still believe they must project unwavering certainty, strength, and positivity at all times. The truth is more nuanced. Showing some uncertainty can increase trust and authenticity. Showing too much can undermine confidence. The key is framing uncertainty as purposeful, focused learning. Here are three ways to do that effectively:

·       Frame it as an investigation: “I don’t have the answer yet, but here’s what I’m doing to figure it out.”

·       Separate fact from unknown: “Here’s what we know for certain, and here’s what we’re still monitoring.”

·       Invite input: “What do you think?” “I’d love your perspective.” “Tell me more.”

Bottom line: leaders don’t build trust by pretending to know everything. They build trust by being authentic — open about what’s real, clear about what’s uncertain, and committed to learning forward.

If you’re certain, explain why. If you have doubts, share those too — and explain what you’re doing about them. Do that well, and your team won’t lose confidence. They’ll join you in figuring things out today.

 Eric Sevareid (1912 – 1992): American author and CBS news journalist from 1939 to 1977.           Learn more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Sevareid

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Reliability Is the First Promise You Should Make and Keep 💥🕰️


People don’t trust you because you’re talented. They trust you because you show up — consistently, predictably, and without drama.

Ask any manager what they value most, and you’ll hear the same word every time: dependability. Schedules get built, shifts get assigned, and leaders wait to see who walks through the door ready to work. When everyone shows up, the day runs smoothly. When they don’t, it becomes a fire drill — notifications, scrambling for coverage, reshuffling tasks, and trying to keep team dynamics intact.

Most employees are reliable. But the few who aren’t can drag down performance, morale, and even the company’s reputation. And the consequences are predictable: discipline, termination, and the ripple effects that follow.

But there’s a quieter threat — the people who show up physically but not mentally. Gallup has been sounding the alarm for years: disengagement is rampant. Not just inattention, but careless waste of time, money, and opportunity. And while disengagement is hard to coach, research is clear on one thing: leadership engagement is the antidote.

People rise when leaders model the behaviors they expect. Reliability isn’t complicated. It looks like:

·       Meeting deadlines

·       Being punctual

·       Following through

·       Communicating proactively

·       Owning your responsibilities

These aren’t heroic acts; they’re the everyday signals that tell people you can be counted on. And that’s how trust is built.

Reliability is a two‑way street. If you want employees to show up for their colleagues and customers, you must show up for them. Consistently, visibly, and with integrity.

Ethical behavior starts with something simple: showing up today.

Wolfgang Schäuble (1942 – 2023): German politician who was the longest-serving member of any democratic German parliament. He served as the 13th president of the Bundestag from 2017 to 2021.

Truth Delayed Is Trust Destroyed ⏳💥


Most people don’t set out to deceive. They’re often just trying to avoid discomfort. And that’s exactly how half‑truths slip in — quietly, politely, with just enough honesty to feel safe and just enough distortion to feel convenient.

But here’s the problem: A half‑truth doesn’t stay small. It grows in the dark.

What begins as a “white lie” meant to spare someone’s feelings or smooth over a moment eventually creates something far more damaging — doubt. Doubt about motives. Doubt about intentions. Doubt about whether someone can be trusted the next time. And once doubt enters a relationship or a team, trust starts to leak out faster than anyone realizes.

Why does this happen? Because people fear the consequences of saying what’s real. They fear conflict, judgment, embarrassment, or disappointing someone they care about. So they soften the truth, or delay it, or wrap it in something more palatable.

But the truth doesn’t disappear. It waits.

This is why leaders — formal or informal — have a responsibility to create spaces where honesty isn’t punished. That’s what psychological safety really is: the confidence that speaking up won’t cost you your dignity, your standing, or your relationships. When people feel safe, they stop editing themselves. They stop performing. They stop hiding.

My partner has a phrase I’ve come to rely on: “The facts are friendly.” Not because they’re always pleasant, but because they’re reliable. They give you something solid to work with. They let you adjust, improve, and move forward. Avoiding them only delays the inevitable and makes the landing harder.

Think about the last time someone wasn’t fully honest with you. It didn’t just sting — it stole your chance to respond with your best self. That’s the real cost of half‑truths: they deny people the opportunity to rise.

The next time you’re tempted to soften, delay, or decorate the truth, remember this: Integrity isn’t about being harsh. It’s about being clear.

And clarity is one of the greatest gifts you can give another person today.

Yiddish proverbs are legendary for their blend of earthy realism, sharp wit, and deep philosophical wisdom. They offer timeless, practical advice on navigating life's absurdities, sorrows, and joys.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Integrity Shows Up in the Small Moments 🧭 🔷


If you want to know a person’s character, watch what happens to their integrity the moment they get distracted.

At Wynn, we called this being in the moment — eye contact, full engagement, and immediate followthrough with customers and employees. People knew they had our complete attention and our commitment to whatever was happening right then. We took care of things in the moment. Not later. Not “when we get a chance.”

That’s how our customers were treated. That’s how our employees were treated. No questions. No excuses.

We made big promises in every communication, and our Mission Statement — Keep the Promise — made the expectation unmistakable. Leaders and employees at every level understood exactly what that meant. Clear. Unequivocal. Simple.

Handbooks often talk about ethics and integrity, but most people only understand those concepts in theory. Leaders owe their teams more than vague ideals. They need to spell out what integrity looks like in real behavior — in role plays during training, in coaching talking points, in examples on appraisals and commendations.

Clarity gives people confidence. Confidence gives them courage. And courage is what sustains integrity when the pressure hits.

This isn’t something to soften or hint at. Employees want standards they can see, understand, and act on. That’s what they deserve.

Give the gift of your attention to everything you do today.

Jim Rohn (1930 – 2009): American entrepreneur, author, and motivational speaker.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

Integrity Begins with Your Words 🗝️ 🗣️


Integrity doesn’t begin with behavior. It begins with language — with the words you choose, the intentions behind them, and the discipline to speak only what you mean.

New supervisors often learn this the hard way. Wanting to be liked, they slip into “friend talk” — casual promises, off‑hand comments, and conversational shortcuts that feel harmless but carry unintended consequences. What they say doesn’t always match what they mean, and what they mean doesn’t always match what they do. Trust erodes quietly, one poorly chosen sentence at a time.

Supervisors who speak with clarity and intention build something very different. They create trust, eliminate miscommunication, and establish accountability. Their teams don’t have to guess. Expectations are clear. Words and actions align.

Many organizations promote their best employees into leadership roles but fail to equip them with the communication skills leadership requires. My boss used to say the difference between a good manager and a great one is the ability to communicate effectively. Not by giving speeches — though that matters — but by thinking before speaking, choosing words carefully, and ensuring actions match the message.

Effective communication is a full discipline: listening carefully, using clear verbal and non‑verbal cues, confirming understanding, and recognizing the context in which the message lands.

It sounds complex, but most of it is learned through guided practice — the kind new supervisors rarely receive unless leaders intentionally provide it.

Leaders must spend real time with their new supervisors. And new supervisors must feel safe asking for guidance before small issues become big ones. When you build that relationship, you help them learn to speak — and act — with integrity. 

Start there. Start with the words today.

Miguel Ángel Ruiz Macías (born 1952), better known as Don Miguel Ruiz, is a Mexican author of Toltec spiritual and personal development texts.

Plugging In, Figuring Out, Moving Forward 🔌

T he first mile wasn’t heroic — it was exhaling, gripping the wheel, and finally moving forward. And that’s when the fun began. Cruise Ameri...