REASON: (Antonym) Madness.










Like purpose, reason has a part in everyone’s life.  Some reasons are small while others are large.  But to fully understand what significance a reason can take hold of is to evaluate its twofold stage.  There can be two reasons for everything we do.  One is the good reason we share; the other is the real reason we dare.

We can explain to others how the good reason performs.  How we do what we do because of the good things we desire.  But there is only one guard we must answer to when the real reason is dawned, the real reason for doing what we really did it for.

You will discover great fears in the things that we do.  For the reason rarely reveals what unreasonable things we’ve done.  And reason will cease to reason…when revealing what ought to be, especially if the reason is about things that should not be.

Pain compels a reason as does the fears we have.  If you dare to reason a way, find it, and you dare to eliminate your burden to some form of oppression.

When you do something that is beyond reason for doing, learn to reason your way through what irrational acts you did.  If you fail to learn this lesson of leadership, be patient, others will do it for you.  But your leadership will find its end.  It would be best at that point to learn to follow.  You will be doing a lot of it until you catch up.  A fine reason is where they went.

Most leaders believe leadership is lonely.  But loneliness is lost leadership.  Lost leadership is born of losing a noble reason.  And a noble leader cannot fail to reason this crowded truth.




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