“Where
there is power, there is resistance.”
―
Michel Foucault
This is a great truth that leaders
everywhere should be aware of. Truly inspiring leadership caters for
perceptions around power, acknowledging that resistance isn’t something to
resist; that it’s an opportunity to be harmonised. When we respect the
expression of resistance, seeking to understand its oppositional power base, we
may reduce the resistance through cooperation. The power of two is greater than
the power of one.
Where There is a Violation...
... then there will be resistance.
Nothing is surer in the relational setting.
And conflict, as it is, is a relational construct of two sides at odds
with one another – whether it’s conflict within one person, between two or more
people, or between two groups (or more).
If we understand the dynamics between people
– and the inner forces of psychology that drive us all – we can subsume much of
the passive aggressiveness and overt hostility in a sense of mutual productiveness.
This we do by creating a relational relationship. They say that it pays to keep
our enemies closer than our friends; there is a great advantage in having the
interest and the pluck to maintain a troubled relationship.
Surely good leadership – and wise
partnership (for that’s what true leadership is about) – is about knowing the
influence of resistance. When we can lead in such ways as to meet the
resistance through understanding, we gradually dissolve the resistance, for
there is less to fear in those resisting.
But leadership voices that do not cater for
resistance very well will increase the presence of resistance – unless they
smash it altogether, creating a dictatorship. But there will always be tacit
resistance in any case of a violation of power; the disjunct of relationship.
Relationships were always designed as
vestibules of teamwork, and more-or-less the institution of power was always
meant to operate as a dance. After all, who really is in control? It can only
be God.
Our ever-present challenge is to come back
to the solemn truth that one who insists upon being a friend to all is the one
committed to forgiveness, because the relationship – and hence any project –
lays contingent on our willingness and capacity to forgive. Forgiveness
transforms power into something palatable and it’s a spiritual destination
where resistance can’t stand.
“One who forgives an affront fosters friendship, but one who dwells on
disputes will alienate a friend.”
— Proverbs 17:9
(NRSV)
***
If we have power or
influence let’s know,
We’re positioned to stifle
or to grow,
This is about the people we
lead,
So let’s resolve now to sow good seed.
© 2013 S. J. Wickham.
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