Integration Training Journal - Mark Walsh's Blog

Brighton (Sussex)/ London UK

Where business training, management & leadership training, time & stress management, coaching and team building meet "alternative" content. For all who integrate BOTH worlds as human business beings - to benefit themselves, their work and the world.

Leadership and the Body

What is the reationship between leadership and the body?

Most leadership training reflects the common privileging in the Western World with the cognitive. My claim is that this is a grave mistake and that leadership is an embodied affair.

Leadership and the body

The body is integral to who we are and how we lead. It is much more than just a way of carrying the head around, and is involved with every aspect of leadership. For a leaders to know and manage themselves, let alone others, they must be familiar with embodied knowing and presence. What do I mean by this? When I refer to the body I don’t just mean the body athletic or aesthetic – while appearance is important and physical health is of course any leader’s foundation, there is much more to it than that. Let’s look at a few aspects of leadership and see how the body is relevant.

Presence

Charisma, gravitas, presence – that special something that leaders have is an embodied phenomena. If you have ever been in a room with Bill Clinton or the Dali Lama this much is clear. It cannot be learnt from a book.

Communication, Emotional Intelligence and Trust

What most leaders are paid for is communication. Can they influence and inspire? Can they build trust? Do they have the necessary emotional as well as cognitive intelligence? These matters rely upon the body.

Stress Management

A leader must be calm under pressure, embodied techniques are vital for “centring” and “grounding” as stress is a bodily not purely psychological occurrence.

Disposition

Each of us has a disposition for certain actions and not others. Perhaps you have a friend who is optimistic and cheery whatever the weather, or another who would curse their luck even if they won the lottery? This long-term mood is normally apparent from a leader’s posture and movement and can be managed through these once body awareness has been established.

“Embodied” Management and Leadership Training

There are many more aspects of leadership that are related to the body; in fact I would say that as the body is part of being human, all aspects of leadership are intertwined with embodiment, however the our above will give a flavour. The next question then is what can leaders do to develop skills in this domain? Basic physical health and wellbeing are a good starting place and beyond this I would recommend some kind of body awareness discipline. Martial arts, yoga and dance are particularly useful.  There is also non-athletic Embodied Management Training that is highly beneficial for any leader looking to “get themselves together”, manage how they are perceived and what they are capable of, and step-up to the challenges of the modern work-life. The world desperately needs leaders who are in touch with themselves physically and this opens up emotions, ethics and integrity.  The future will not, and should not, be written by those who can not walk their talk.

Mark Walsh heads leadership training providers Integration Training: based in Brighton, London and Birmingham UK.  Specialising in “embodied” ways of working they help organisations get more done without going insane (stress and time management), coordinate action more effectively (team building and communication training) and help leaders build impact, influence and presence (management training). His background includes work with blue-chip companies, non-profit sector work in war zones, an academic degree in psychology and an aikido black-belt. In his spare time he dances, meditates and enjoys being exploited by two cats and one baby niece. His life ambition is to make it normal to be a human being at work.

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18 Responses to Leadership and the Body
  1. Paul Nicholas
    November 26, 2010 | 5:34 pm

    Thank you – this is one of the most thought-provoking items I’ve seen on leadership for some time – and even though I want to go away and ruminate on its content I feel compelled to make an immediate response. A follower’s perception of “objective reality” is their own subjective experience – all they know or can ever know happens inside their heads. Leaders enact or model or demonstrate new realities – shaping their followers perceptions and so creating “new realities” for them. This is exactly what happens in performance arts. Generally speaking most leaders are performance artists. I think all leaders instinctively know and understand the “embodiment” that is needed to lead effectively – leadership is a presence thing – it is animal and grows out of evolutionary biology. Leadership is not something delivered via email or telephone or letter – it is performed and in that sense all effective leaders are performers.
    Hope this provokes a response.

    • Mark Walsh
      December 4, 2010 | 12:04 pm

      HI Paul, I think we’re in agreement, although while people may have some unconscious embodied skills bringing these to light and developing them with awareness is highly beneficial.

      • Paul Nicholas
        December 13, 2010 | 6:20 pm

        Hi Mark,
        Yes, I think we are in agreement – and I also agree completely with your point about bringing unconscious skills to light and developing them with awareness. With so much of my development work with colleagues and clients I feel that I’m only a catalyst acting to expose what is there in some form already. Bringing unconsciuos skills, aptitudes and predispositions to light in others is a fantastic shared discovery – a real buzz that seems to get endorphins flowing – and in that way seems positively addictive!
        And Hi Baume,
        I’m also intrigued by your response and look forward to finding out how we are wrong. One of the few words that stimulates and challenges as much as “No” is “Why?” So let’s go for it.

  2. baume mercier
    December 8, 2010 | 6:40 pm

    I think, that you are not right. Let’s discuss.

    • Mark Walsh
      December 8, 2010 | 9:22 pm

      OK, say some more, what points do you disagree with? Happy to discuss.

  3. Paul Nicholas
    May 21, 2011 | 12:19 am

    Revisiting again impatiently – gloves off Baume Mercier – get your ass into gear – if you want a discussion or argument let’s go for it – I’m sick of waiting for you.

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    • Mark Walsh
      February 6, 2012 | 5:25 pm

      thanks and also not clear on the question?

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