The Blueprint with Dr. Jelani I. Reid
He saw a coworker lose his hand. Then he watched a company try to make it "go away." He said no. Brendon James was working offshore in Trinidad's energy sector when an explosion on a platform changed the trajectory of his life. A 2,500 psi gas line had failed. A valve flew across the deck and hit a colleague in the face. Blood and oil everywhere. That day, Brendon switched his university major from geomorphology to process safety. He decided that someone had to figure out why these things happen—and how to stop them. In this episode of The Blueprint Podcast, Brendon sits down with Dr. Jelani Reid for a conversation that moves far beyond industrial safety. He reveals the systems-thinking principles that underpin everything from Toyota's production system to Nelson Mandela's post-apartheid truth commissions. He explains why "we've always done it this way" is the most dangerous phrase in any organization—and why near misses are gifts, not problems to be hidden. Brendon doesn't shy away from hard truths. He shares the story of a company that tried to sweep a severe injury under the rug—and why he refused to be silent. He reflects on the Paria diving tragedy and why his wife pushed him to write Leading Through Fire when he wanted to retreat into introversion. Along the way, he offers a radical vision for Trinidad and Tobago: a 20-year national mandate, codified in law, removed from the five-year political cycle. He argues that we need to engage young people now—not with speeches, but with real mentorship. And he reveals the personal systems that keep him curious, grounded, and effective: meditation, atomic habits, and the relentless pursuit of the question "why?" This is a conversation about responsibility, courage, and the architecture of trust—in our workplaces, in our systems, and in ourselves. Listen now.
41 episodios
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