Conversations With the Dead
One of the most powerful ideas from Ryan Holiday’s Wisdom Takes Work is that you can have conversations with the dead. Not in a mystical sense, but in a practical one – through books.
Holiday tells the story of Harry Truman, who, by age 15, had read nearly every book in his town’s library, including the Bible multiple times. He was building wisdom early; not by experience alone, but by learning from those who came before him.
That is available to all of us. The question is not access. It is hunger.
Curiosity Builds Wisdom
Holiday makes it clear that wisdom is built through curiosity.
Through questions
Through research.
Through a relentless desire to understand.
Questions are the gateway.
They unlock knowledge.
They drive discovery.
They lead to mastery.
And this has massive implications for leadership. When your team asks you questions, the goal is not to just give answers. The goal is to teach them how to think. To help them ask better questions. To guide them toward discovering answers themselves. That is how leaders are developed.
Focus Is a Competitive Advantage
Wisdom requires focus.
A chaotic mind… a distracted life … a short attention span … These are the enemies of wisdom.
If you cannot sit with a problem long enough to understand it fully, you will never lead with clarity.
Great leaders develop the ability to focus deeply.
To think thoroughly.
To examine problems from every angle.
To stay with something long enough to truly understand it.
That is rare today. And that is precisely why it is so valuable.
Learn From Others, Don’t Start from Scratch
Holiday also emphasizes the importance of listening.
If someone has already solved the problem you are facing, go to them.
Ask questions.
Listen carefully.
Learn from their experience.
The goal is not to start at zero. The goal is to start where they left off.
He tells the story of Bill Belichick, who, early in his career, would drive older coaches just to get time with them. Those short conversations accelerated his growth and shaped his future success. That is wisdom in action.
Your Environment Shapes You
Where you learn matters. Who you learn from matters. Holiday writes about finding your scene and your people. Because when you surround yourself with the right environment and the right leaders, growth accelerates.
And the inverse is also true. Your environment is either building you or limiting you.
The Leader’s Responsibility
Here is where this all comes together.
Wisdom is clarity. And leaders are called to bring clarity into chaos. That does not happen by accident.
It comes from being a student.
Learning constantly.
Thinking deeply.
Asking better questions.
Listening to others.
But it also comes from being a teacher.
Helping others think.
Helping others focus.
Helping others grow.
Great leaders are both – a student and a teacher at the same time.
A Simple Challenge
This week, I challenge you to do three things:
Read something that challenges your thinking.
Ask one question instead of giving one answer.
Spend uninterrupted time thinking through a problem.
Because wisdom takes work. And the leaders who commit to that work are the ones who bring clarity when it matters most.
Stay steady.
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God Bless!
~ Schuyler Williamson