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What can authenticity bring to leaders and coaches during times of change and disruption?
How does resilience intertwine with purpose and authenticity in motivating leaders and executives to excellence?
Andrea Goseco, an ICF PCC-credentialed executive coach and a Gallup-Certified Strengths Coach, was our guest on a recent Called to Coach. Coach Anda, who has more than a decade of coaching experience, shared her insights on coaching leaders and executives during a pandemic. Leaders who are authentic know themselves really well, according to their CliftonStrengths and are able to manage themselves well are, in turn, better able to manage their work environment. And an integral part of knowing yourself well is identifying your purpose which is sometimes difficult for leaders to articulate. Together with authenticity and purpose, resilience is a key element for leaders to cultivate in themselves. Leaders who know their purpose, and are authentic and resilient, wi
Navigating Life Crises via Care Coaching and Strengths gallup.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gallup.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Exactly, how in the world?
To explore for an answer to the question, we have to begin with a second question: What were the exciting events and changes happening in the United States in the 1830s, 1840s, and early 1850s that gave birth to a Mason City? How did all this cause two entrepreneurial adventurers from Winnebago County, Illinois, to make their way to a small wooded area at the junction of two creeks to build cabins ⦠and declare a few acres of wooded land the community of Masonic Grove?
The two entrepreneurial adventurers, John B. Long and John L. McMillin, were close friends, possibly cousins, in Rockford, Illinois. Both were Freemasons. Long applied for membership in Acacia Lodge No. 67 (Acacis SM Dalzell Lodge No. 67, in Spring Valley in LaSalle County, Illinois) in 1849. He earned his Fellow Craft within six months and became a Master Mason on Jan. 2, 1850. John McMillin also was raised to Master Mason in the Acacia Lodge on Sept. 8, 1852.