Monday, April 29, 2019

Inspirational Ethics - The Value of Integrity

Integrity - from

noun;
from

  Unswervingly adhere to strict moral or moral norms; unharmed state; robustness; quality or condition of overall or undivided; integrity.

The date is January 16, 2009. American Airlines Flight 1549 pilot Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger Danville, California, the second day, drove his crowded passenger plane in New York City and successfully abandoned it on the Hudson River. All 155 passengers and crew were safe and miraculously escaped major injuries - really just collisions and bruises. The national media's enthusiastic coverage and first-hand interviews with passengers are now safe, warm and dry, and their rescuers and security experts describe the test. NBC called the accident "the Hudson miracle."

Suspend your values ​​as if you had to list and describe them. What are your core values? If you are like most individuals and organizations, Integrity will appear in your list of values. But what does this mean, the word, 'integrity' [sometimes the ultimate value]? What does this mean for you? How does your integrity value appear on others every day? How did you develop your integrity? How do you further develop this quality? Why is this related?

For most of us, honesty means "doing what you say you will do" or "how do you act when you have no one to watch". These are good tests of integrity, but they don't really explain how one develops integrity. The structural integrity of a building is defined as "an unparalleled ability to safely resist the required loads." A person's structural integrity can be defined as "uncompromising ability to properly resist the merit challenge." How do we develop this firm adherence to strict ethical standards, and this kind of voice' response to difficult situations?

Like what we do best, honesty comes from practice. In fact, the correct way to call the quality of integrity a human value would be "right" from

practice
from

 Honesty. A person speaks and acts in practice is complete. Honesty is the result of preparation and choice. When a person lives long enough, he has realized his natural ability to whimsy, wayward or selfish. It is not the principle of perseverance. Integrity comes from training and increases with quality, length and adherence to training intentions. Integrity follows a solid neural pathway that develops over time, stimulating certain attitudes and habits, producing The correct behavior of instinct. These behaviors are not based on animal instinct; the correct behavior stems from human desires and practices.

My favorite definition of value-based leadership is "real self-expression that adds value through relationships." This includes relationships with people and events. When self-expression begins to increase in value over time, you have integrity through every encounter with humans, through every decision, and through every second reaction to the event.
Desire to have integrity: Practice to identify the right things, say that you will be right, the way and reason you are doing right, whether or not others are paying attention to it.

You can bet that at least 154 people in the world thank Chesley Sullenberger for adding value through their short relationship. What is the relationship between "Sully" Sullenberger and Flight 1549 and integrity? According to reports, Sulenberg is a graduate of the US Air Force Academy, driving the F-4 during the Air Force in the 1970s. He started driving commercial jets in the 1980s. "His goal is to get the airplane to achieve precise precision," said her hero's husband's wife. In addition to working for American Airlines, he also runs a security consulting firm that focuses on keeping airline crews in a crisis. He is an investigator of the National Transportation Safety Board. As far as I know, he has also been certified as a flight glider - these skills have clearly helped to land the Airbus A320, both engines being controlled to fall on a near-frozen river, not in the middle of the world's largest region. a densely populated city.

When he drove his plane to the icy Hudson waters, the instinct did not succeed Sullenberger, practice kicking - honesty. This is a person who decides safety and human life is very important to him early in life, and he is committed to protecting these goals. He trains, he studies, he studies day after day, remembering these goals year after year. The tenth first flight that used to be a pilot began to become unconscious in the course of 40 years of practice - the right attitude, practice, decision, action and manner to save lives in a crisis.

Thinking about stimulating personal growth and integrity [with your learning partner]

If you practice integrity with greater intent and consistency, what is the difference in your life? What can you do every day to improve your integrity? What are your personal ethics? What do you have to change to show them more comprehensively? Find an accounting partner or hire a coach to help you practice integrity and take the following actions:

  • Integrity is the glue that binds your other virtues. What are your other core values? Why are you?
  • How do these values ​​define your identity, how you think and behave, and how do you see others?
  • What statements and behaviors are observed by others every day to prove your values?
  • What purpose do you have for your life leadership to be willing to practice day after day, year after year, and prepare for the opportunity event that may provide the ultimate test of your integrity?
  • What specific attitudes, habits and behaviors must you consistently practice to become the person you are eager to be honest?
  • An experience or event that describes your personal best and demonstrates integrity.
  • Describe the current situation in your life, and in your mind, you can apply the same integrity as in the example above.
  • Make a plan and contact your learning partner next month to discuss how everyone practices integrity. Responsible for each other.




Orignal From: Inspirational Ethics - The Value of Integrity

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