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Corresponding Author

Elizabeth Luckman

Abstract

Some of the most important leadership lessons don’t come from classrooms or boardrooms—they come from the people who coach us through life’s turning points. For me, that coach was my Dad. An engineer turned leadership coach, he taught me that curiosity, courage, and the ability to navigate complexity are the foundation of ethical leadership. In this editorial, I share three of his favorite phrases and the values they carry: get curious before reacting, be courageous by starting to experiment, and check your assumptions because sometimes the problem is your lens, not your limits. Along the way, I connect these lessons to Aristotle’s Golden Mean, systems thinking, and the challenges leaders face in today’s complex, adaptive world. In a time when leadership is too often confused with control, perhaps the best leaders are those who, like my dad, start by helping someone else grow—one “fascinating” at a time.

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