Why I Chose Not to Run for Office

First, I support people who choose to work through government to stop our degrading Earth's ability to sustain life. I believe they can achieve a lot. I want to get them votes. But I see other ways to lead that others aren't doing where I can affect more. When I concluded the most important missing action on sustainability was leadership about a decade ago, I considered running for office. We often call our elected officials leaders, though few lead by my definition. My role models who changed cultures, like Mandela, King, Gandhi, Buddha, Jesus, Laozi, and their peers, started outside…

Continue ReadingWhy I Chose Not to Run for Office

What Actions Reduce Greenhouse Emissions Most?

People often ask what personal actions they can do to reduce emissions most. I'll give the answer by the numbers, then give a better answer. Sadly, most people who ask then respond with reasons why they can't do anything, rationalizing that they are powerless when they aren't. They just want to feel better. By the numbers As you can see, having fewer kids dwarfs everything. I do all of the things in the chart and have never been happier, healthier, or connected to supportive community and family. I spend less money, have more free time, live more adventure, and connect…

Continue ReadingWhat Actions Reduce Greenhouse Emissions Most?

12 Sustainability Leadership Lessons Unplugging My Fridge for 6.5 Months Taught Me

Isn't a refrigerator essential? Isn't life with them better? I thought so. I'll quote my mom from my podcast to illustrate where I came from: I grew up where it was easily ninety degrees every single day. In fact, where I worked, the store if it got ninety degrees outside we got to close the store and go home because it was that unsafe. To me, air conditioning was wonderful. And to my mom and my grandmother, not having to use ice box refrigerators was great. I really appreciate all of that today and I understand that we've gone overboard…

Continue Reading12 Sustainability Leadership Lessons Unplugging My Fridge for 6.5 Months Taught Me

Hear me on My Wakeup Call with Dr. Mark Goulston

Mark Goulston hosted me on his podcast My Wakeup Call. He is the bestselling author of Get Out of Your Own Way: Overcoming Self-Defeating Behavior and Just Listen: Discover the Secret to Getting Through to Absolutely Anyone among other books. Recent guests on his podcast include Ram Charan, Jordan Peterson, and the CEO of the 76ers (I grew up in Philadelphia). We've also overlapped many, including Jeff Madoff and Dorie Clark. From his about page: Originally a UCLA professor of psychiatry for over 25 years, and a former FBI and police hostage negotiation trainer, Dr. Mark Goulston’s expertise has been…

Continue ReadingHear me on My Wakeup Call with Dr. Mark Goulston

Richard Nixon: Environmentalist (compared to us today)

Environmentalists today like to try to enlist conservatives and republicans by pointing out how Richard Nixon started the Environmental Protection Agency and other environmental initiatives. As summer begins, I propose citing him to enlist environmentalists to take personal responsibility---a necessity to lead others. Would you like to influence others? Air conditioning It's not yet summer. Have you turned on your air conditioner? I can hear them all over my neighborhood. How much do you plan to use the air conditioner this summer? Richard Nixon said How many of you can remember when it was very unusual to have a home…

Continue ReadingRichard Nixon: Environmentalist (compared to us today)

458: The Spodek Method: How to Lead Someone to Act Joyfully Sustainably

I’ve taught a half-dozen people the technique I use in this podcast---the hosts of the other branches of the This Sustainable Life podcast. They started calling it The Spodek Method, so now I do too. It's enabled me to reach amazing people, many of global renown, who enjoy the experience. It doesn't alone solve all the world's problems, but it works. The Spodek Method leads a person to share and act on environmental values. You can do it too with communities you’d like to join. You would contribute to a mission of changing culture from seeing stewardship and sustainability as…

Continue Reading458: The Spodek Method: How to Lead Someone to Act Joyfully Sustainably

What was it like to watch Mandela, Gandhi, and Dr. King and not help?

Imagine yourself back in the 1950s and 60s during the civil rights movement. People traveled across the country to sit at lunch counters with people of different skin colors, walk for a year to avoid segregated buses, and so on. Most people didn't do anything. They must have talked about it since it made the news, but most people watched from the outside without acting. Not everyone can do anything. Different people value things differently. Many people did important unrelated things. But many people knew, had time and resources to act, but didn't. I wonder how it feels to look…

Continue ReadingWhat was it like to watch Mandela, Gandhi, and Dr. King and not help?

We Can’t Change the Past But We Can Choose Our Values

  • Post category:Leadership

I uttered these words in regular conversation with a friend about living in a polluted world. I didn't ask to be born into so polluted a world, nor a culture so ignorant about what's happening and what they can do about it. I'd rather people took more responsibility and acted in stewardship more. But the world is polluted and nearly everyone is polluting it more. Most of my life, I didn't know or care much about my effect on others through how much I polluted the world. Do I give up? Do I accept the direction we're going? No, We…

Continue ReadingWe Can’t Change the Past But We Can Choose Our Values

More reasons to act now, not wait for governments or corporations

"But what I do doesn't matter" "Only governments and corporations can make a difference." These excuses are the top Addictions Speaking people use to lie to themselves to abdicate responsibility for acting on their environmental values. Well, note this timeline: 1955: Private citizens organize Montgomery Bus Boycott1956: Court rules segregated buses unconstitutional and bus company changes1964: Civil Rights Act of 1964 Does anybody think the Civil Rights Act of 1964 would have happened without individual citizens acting well beyond just voting? Do you think India could have attained independence and then had a Great Salt March? I could have picked…

Continue ReadingMore reasons to act now, not wait for governments or corporations

Finally, I illustrated what’s missing from sustainability

Working on the book proposal, I finally saw how to illustrate what's missing from sustainability. It's simplicity almost embarrasses me that I didn't think of creating it before, except that I remember that simplicity comes from more work, not less. The Venn diagram below illustrates what we're missing. We don't lack facts or bold ideas. We lack leaders experienced in LeadershipScience and complex systemsLiving sustainably, not just talk. It won't come from scientists, professors, journalists, or politicians---the "experts." I put the term in quotes because, however brilliant and effective in their fields, they don't know how to lead effectively. Facts,…

Continue ReadingFinally, I illustrated what’s missing from sustainability

More evidence it’s wrong that only government and corporations can make a difference

  • Post category:Leadership

Which came first, the 1956 Montgomery Bus Boycott or the 1964 Civil Rights Act? No trick question. The boycott was closer to grass roots people-led project and it preceded the Civil Rights Act, as big a step as governments make. We may not have reached the Civil Rights Act had they not boycotted. Government action results from people acting first, which we can do. Corporations react to people too. We all can change our behavior here now even if we only see the results later. But if you believe what you do doesn't matter, you miss out on influencing and…

Continue ReadingMore evidence it’s wrong that only government and corporations can make a difference

Bill Gates and environmental leadership, part 2: His Addiction Speaking

I posted the other day Bill Gates and environmental leadership on how he is undermining his own attempts at leadership in the environment that anyone would see as blatant if he acted similarly around the pandemic. We excuse his pollution and overconsuming because we want what he gets for them, like travel and mansions. A friend quoted a relevant passage from his book. I'll post my thoughts on reading the passage, then the passage. My thoughts on Gates's passage I see Martin Luther King paying others to go to jail in civil disobedience extra to offset his doing what he…

Continue ReadingBill Gates and environmental leadership, part 2: His Addiction Speaking

Bill Gates and environmental leadership

Did you see Bill Gates's TED talk on pandemics from 2015, years before Covid? He foretold what scientists had predicted for decades and we came to see unfold around us. From the pandemic's start, he spoke on the news on the importance of wearing a mask. Imagine if after speaking about masks, he held a party for hundreds of people in close quarters, none of them wearing a mask. From a numerical standpoint, one person's actions or even hundreds', even Bill Gates and his friends, hardly matter out of 7.8 billion. Only governments and corporations could change things at that…

Continue ReadingBill Gates and environmental leadership

How I improved on Eisenhower

  • Post category:Leadership

I'm not going to say I improved on the guy who led the Normandy invasion, led Columbia University as its president, or led the United States as its President, but I did accidentally improve on a quote of his. For years I've described part of the leadership I teach by quoting Eisenhower as having described leadership as getting the other guy to do your thing for his reason. He lived when people used masculine for gender-neutral. I elaborate on my technique that to know the other person's reasons requires listening and before listening, asking, and before asking, behaving and communicating…

Continue ReadingHow I improved on Eisenhower

Pandemic Fatigue? How to Achieve Pandemic Thriving

I posted on handling what people call pandemic fatigue to Thrive Global today: Pandemic Fatigue? How to Achieve Pandemic Thriving. Here's the text of the article: When I learned I would be locked down indefinitely, knowing we were all heading into unknown territory, I looked for role models. Who had handled such a situation successfully? Nelson Mandela had been locked down for twenty-seven years, most of that time on a cold island, breaking rocks, with a bucket for a toilet. He negotiated with presidents of the nation that locked him up and emerged to get their jobs. I could see…

Continue ReadingPandemic Fatigue? How to Achieve Pandemic Thriving

“The 11 Best Leadership Books You Should Read This Year” named Leadership Step by Step

Brunchwork's "The 11 Best Leadership Books You Should Read This Year" named Leadership Step by Step along with favorites including, 1. Let My People Go Surfing: The Education of a Reluctant Businessman by Yvon Chouinard 3. The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Stephen R. Covey 6. 5 Levels of Leadership by John C. Maxwell 7. How to Win Friends & Influence People by Dale Carnegie 9. Leading with Gratitude: Eight Leadership Practices for Extraordinary Business Results by Adrian Gostick and podcast guest Chester Elton For my book they write 5. Leadership Step By Step by Joshua SpodekPublished in…

Continue Reading“The 11 Best Leadership Books You Should Read This Year” named Leadership Step by Step

Where Is the World Going, Mr. Spodek?

Where Is the World Going, Mr. Stiglitz? I saw a dvd at the library called Where Is the World Going To, Mr. Stiglitz and recognized the name and face of, Joseph Stiglitz, honoree of the economics Nobel and professor at Columbia Business School, where I got my MBA and friends took his course so I felt connected. Libraries lend for free, so I borrowed it, not knowing what to expect. I loved it---amazingly, because it was over six hours of an economist just talking to the camera. I normally don't enjoy economics, but I loved how he presented things---simply, directly,…

Continue ReadingWhere Is the World Going, Mr. Spodek?

Old person: get with the program

  • Post category:Leadership

I forget if I wrote about this problem before, but I keep hearing old people acting like they're praising young people: "I'm so glad young people are organizing. They'll fix all the problems we created." Despicable abdication of responsibility. They could lead or at least speak honestly about declining to act on problems they mostly created. I'll translate what they're saying in to plain language: "Not me, not now. Someone else, some other time." Their only saving grace is that everyone else is saying it too, at least around the environment. Why despicable? Because they know they're talking about people…

Continue ReadingOld person: get with the program

Hear me again on the Ask Women podcast on seductive conversation

You may remember from my post Hear me on the Ask Women podcast that I spoke about my coaching men on attraction and seduction for a few years as the #1 coach in the #1 market for the #1 guru. That post began describing that podcast: What do a female comic and a professional wing girl have in common? The realistically raw and hilarious perspectives on what women ACTUALLY want in a man. Prepare to be offended and awed as Marni Kinrys & Kristen Carney take you through the uncensored and often ridiculous mind of a woman to help you…

Continue ReadingHear me again on the Ask Women podcast on seductive conversation

Senate hearings on Lloyd Austin III, who invited me to speak at West Point

I learned more from the Cadets at West Point than they could possibly have learned from me, but retired General Lloyd Austin III invited me there to co-lead workshops on leadership My mentor Frances Hesselbein introduced us. As I type, the Senate is holding hearings on his nomination to Secretary of Defense. I wrote an Inc. story on the experience, “6 Lessons I Learned Teaching Leadership With a 4-Star General at West Point,” 6 Lessons I Learned Teaching Leadership With a 4-Star General at West Point My years of working with department heads at West Point and reflection on the…

Continue ReadingSenate hearings on Lloyd Austin III, who invited me to speak at West Point

The problem with “Governments and corporations have to change”

"What really has to happen is governments and corporations have to change." People say it all the time. Do they think they're helping? Duh! Of course. We knew that already. Everyone knows that. That's the goal. When they change, we only have to implement---a big challenge, but swimming downstream, not upstream. It's as pointless as to say What really has to happen is we have to score more points than the other team. or . . . we have to create a better product and market it better than the competition. Thanks for stating the obvious, smartypants! They're implying and…

Continue ReadingThe problem with “Governments and corporations have to change”

Government and corporations are more problem than solution

"Our environmental problems are so big, individual actions don't matter. Only governments and corporations can make a difference." I've come to see this view as backward. Governments and corporations are causing the problems. They are what we have to change. If we wait for them to act, we will lose. When you recognize that we have to motivate them to act, you realize they are the problem. I include universities too. I hope this message helps change the situation. Eventually government, corporations, and universities will become a part of the solution so I believe we as individuals have to work…

Continue ReadingGovernment and corporations are more problem than solution

A recent video overview on sustainability leadership

Eugene Bible of the Verdant Growth videocast and soon host of a This Sustainable Life podcast offshoot hosted me on sustainability leadership. (Stay tuned for his podcast launch). Speaking communicates differently than writing, so you'll hear me express things I can't hear, plus I cover many things I haven't covered here at all. It's interactive so not just me talking. I recommend checking it out. It's one conversation split into four parts. We cover environmental stewardship from several perspectives, beyond what any book or video I know of does. I hope more accessible since we don't just talk more science…

Continue ReadingA recent video overview on sustainability leadership

What one person does matters. What more evidence do you need?

  • Post category:Leadership

I'm always amazed at how much an individual's whole being plays out in his or her interaction with the world. Look at how much Facebook, for example, manifests Mark Zuckerberg's personality. It's part of why I consider integrity so important everywhere in life, but especially among leaders. You might try to hide parts of yourself, but the parts you want to hide the most reveal themselves most under times of stress. Whatever your thoughts on January 6th's activities, I think you have to agree one person played a huge role in creating a historic situation. The past five years, even…

Continue ReadingWhat one person does matters. What more evidence do you need?

Government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth

  • Post category:Leadership

As a bone heals stronger where it broke and an immune system learns to heal when invaded by disease, we will emerge stronger. I mainly write about sustainability and cleaning the air, water, and land we share. I have never wavered from achieving these goals only through freedom and democracy. I will do all I can to enable future historians to mark January 6, 2021 as the day we recognized our jobs, stopped hoping for the best, took responsibility, and restored participation in democracy. Freedom is never free nor easy. People like Trump and his supporters will always cheat a…

Continue ReadingGovernment of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth