CEO Exercises
Episode 10 adapts one of the most psychologically sophisticated meditations in Ignatius of Loyola's Spiritual Exercises — the Meditation on the Two Standards — into a practical leadership tool. At its core is a single, unsettling claim: there are two competing value systems alive inside every leader at all times, the destructive one and the life-giving one. The destructive one never announces itself. It always arrives looking like good business. Host Mike McDonnell stages Ignatius's cinematic image of these two value systems. He then traces each one’s strategy step by step. The destructive value system moves from riches to honors to pride, and its genius lies in plausibility — every step feels reasonable, even admirable, until a leader arrives somewhere they never would have chosen, without ever making a decision that looked wrong in the moment. The life-giving value system runs the precise inverse: spiritual poverty, a willingness to be lowered, and humility. Crucially, Mike refuses to let the life-giving system register as the "soft" alternative. He builds a direct business case for why the life-giving standard is the higher-performing one, producing clearer perception, more honest information flow, and the discretionary effort in followership that gets the hardest things done. Virtue, he argues, is where durable performance comes from. He carefully rehabilitates two easily misread ideas — "spiritual poverty" and “willingness to be lowered.” Spiritual poverty is the capacity to have possessions without being possessed by them. It's holding your wealth, your status, your reputation, your title as gifts and as instruments — useful, even good — rather than as the thing that makes you who you are. The "willingness to be lowered" is the freedom to do the right thing even when it costs status and honors. He then makes a practical turn: small, visible, costly acts of humility move a culture far more powerfully than any framed values statement. Throughout, Mike insists that virtue and performance are an AND, not an OR — humility fused with a fierce passion for results — and offers a hollowness-versus-aliveness diagnostic grounded in consolation and desolation. He shares a candid reckoning with his own drift under the wrong banner during successful stretches of his career, closes with a five-part guided meditation, and connects the exercise back to the Examen, the Foundation, and the Field Notes. Send CEO Exercises a message [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2601888/fan_mail/new]
11 episodes
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