Full-Brained Leadership


The kick-off presenter at Willow Creek’s 2007 Arts Conference was a renowned photographer. Twenty-some years with National Geographic, Dewitt Jones wowed the audience with his photos – people and nature in rare and breathtaking candor. As the photos scrolled, he spoke of falling in love with life. Finding the extraordinary in the ordinary. Immersing oneself in the moment at hand and being fully, unabashedly aware.

To a few leaders looking for “the download,” Dewitt’s message may have seemed like a disconnect. They may have come for the latest trends in worship music. Tips to tweak their worship sets. Lessons in smooth segues. Places to get good drama scripts. New video and audio technologies.

But Dewitt wasn’t speaking to any of this.

dandelion.jpgThis soft-spoken master of the camera humbly and simply drew attendees into the why. Into the reasons they do what they do. Into the core of what it means to be here on this earth, alive and in attendance in God’s creation. Could he have given them a Photography 101 workshop? Of course. Could he have wowed them with a hands-on session, “How to Spice Up Your Worship Screen in 10 Easy Steps.” Absolutely. But he didn’t. Instead, he taught about being fully and unapologetically alive. About seeing the divine in a dew-drop. About experiencing God in a little boy’s face.

From a craftsmen who knows every bell and whistle of every camera invented, lessons in seeing may have seemed like a waste. (Hey, Dewitt, I just want to know how to get my camera off the auto-setting…I think it’s stuck in that position!) But bells and whistles are just tools. Without the ability to see what is there, they mean nothing. Michelangelo wasn’t known for his great chisels. He was known for seeing the David trapped inside the stone.

To create—whether photography, painting, inventing, composing, or leading—is to access that part of our brains and souls that isn’t consumed with the how. It is concerned with the essence of what is before us. It is the overflow of awareness. And increasingly, those who are the most aware in our world and who have the ability to express that awareness—those are the people who are leading our culture.

In his book, A Whole New Mind, Daniel H. Pink talks about “a future that has already arrived”: a world increasingly transformed and propelled by right-brain thinking. In Pink’s analysis, the age of left-brain dominance is gone. We may have been prodded to define success as lawyers, accountants, software engineers, and hard science. According to Pink, it’s now the designers, entertainers, counselors, caregivers, inventors, teachers, and storytellers who are holding sway.

Pink writes:

“Ascendant in the Information Age, L-Directed Thinking (left brain) is exemplified by computer programmers, prized by hardheaded organizations, and emphasized in schools….R-Directed Thinking (right-brained) is a form of thinking and an attitude to life that is characteristic of the right hemisphere of the brain - simultaneous, metaphorical, aesthetic, contextual, and synthetic.

“Left-brain thinking used to be the driver and right-brain-style thinking the passenger. Now, R-Directed Thinking is suddenly grabbing the wheel, stepping on the gas, and determining where we’re going and how we’re going to get there. L-Directed aptitudes – the sorts of things measured by the SAT and deployed by CPAs – are still necessary. But they’re no longer sufficient. Instead, the R-Directed aptitudes so often disdained and dismissed – artistry, empathy, taking the long view, pursuing the transcendent – will increasingly determine who soars and who stumbles.”

You may have a very healthy left brain, and in Pink’s estimation, left and right are meant to work together (i.e., you don’t have to trash your left-brain in order to release your right.) But if you’re left-brain heavy, it may be time for you to begin using other skills. The skills you haven’t trusted, simply because it wouldn’t be safe to use them. They wouldn’t fit the mold. Lessons in self-editing and disempowerment, reinforced so often in school, work, ministry, and relationships.

Who knows. It may be your time to carve your own David.

img alt="Morgenthaler_Sallysmall.jpg" src="http://blog.christianitytoday.com/giftedforleadership/upload/2007/02/Morgenthaler_Sallysmall.jpg" width="80" height="98" style="float:left; margin-right: 15px;" />Sally Morgenthaler is a frequent speaker and writer, Christian educator, author of Worship Evangelism and other books, and innova

Posted by Caryn Rivadeneira on July 20, 2007

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Comments

Yes, that's true. Thank you for writing this. As a writer, I feel it's important to create and be released from thinking that only my left brain matters. It's good that you wrote it, because I am surrounded by people who have defined success in terms of lawyer, doctor, accoutnant, etc. and this makes me feel...freed.

Posted by: renee on July 22, 2007

The beauty of Dewitt's thought and praxis is that he completely, simply, and profoundly articulates what it means to be made in the image of God. What a thrill to read the words of one who clearly knows of what he speaks, who practices what he preaches, and unwittingly (at least to himself) reveals God to us all.

Thanks, Sally, for bringing his voice into this context and the church; one that so desperately needs what he has to say, what he has to offer. And thanks for being a woman who does the same - with much to say and much to offer.

Posted by: Ronna on July 23, 2007

Thank you for your insight, Sally. As someone with the gift of administration, as well as other creative gifts - writing, music, art - I often feel like a split personality! Trying to utilize both sides of my brain - of my self - has been difficult, as so many seem to believe a person is either one or the other. Either right-brained or left-brained. I'm thankful to hear that trend of thought may be changing.

Posted by: Mary on July 24, 2007

this article explains me,
I'm blown away,
Sally writes and summarizes well words I look for,
awesome understandings,
it leaves me hopeful that the work I've done can be publicly accepted,
hopeful that I can be accepted as I am.

How I have handled the awkward responses to me through the years
makes me at this stage keep my distance from people and drag my feet in presenting work.
Ultimately it would be nice before I die to resolve my complete acceptance of me; and
more complete acceptance of God as He is and His way of creating me.

Reading this article helped me see that the above conflict is there
and is not finished being resolved.
Writing this as I see it at this moment is way far open and is scary.

Posted by: Carla Jo on July 26, 2007

It is when we use both sides of the brain, created to be used simultaneously that one makes a wholesome judgement. Come to think of it,had our Creator intended for some to use the right and some to use the left only, He would have created us just in that way. Limited to the extent of one only! But He did not do that, obviously for the reason that He expected us to be led by both. Today, if our right side or the left does not function as effectively, the reason is becoz we have allowed it to die, pushed it to the back burner ...!!! So what next...REVIVE what is dying and bloom to the fullest as God intended.

Posted by: Rosy William on August 10, 2007

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