Every organization eventually becomes a reflection of the beliefs it refuses to question, thus I say:
Power, in
its most refined form, is not merely exercised, but reflected. And nothing
reflects power more convincingly than the presence of those who revere it.
People who worship you are not simply admirers; they are amplifiers of your
existence. They validate your stance before you have to defend it, they echo
your voice before you have to raise it. In a world governed by perception,
their belief becomes a currency you spend sans ever depleting.
To
dismiss admiration as vanity is to misunderstand its utility. Worship, in this
context, is not about ego, it is about structure. It creates a psychological
perimeter around your authority, a quiet consensus that you are not to be
questioned lightly. Those who admire you become informal gatekeepers, filtering
doubt, deflecting criticism, and often silencing opposition before it reaches
you. This is not accidental; it is strategic, whether consciously built or
naturally attracted. Give followers a reason to be that.
There is
also an efficiency in being revered. When people already believe in your
capability, your actions require less explanation. Your decisions are
interpreted with generosity rather than suspicion. Where others must constantly
prove themselves, you are granted the benefit of assumption. This allows you to
operate with a kind of speed and decisiveness that others cannot afford. In
many arenas, that alone becomes the difference between influence and
irrelevance.
However,
worship is not born from demand, it is cultivated through consistency and controlled
exposure. People do not admire chaos; they admire coherence. When your actions
align with your words, when your presence carries a predictable weight, people
begin to attach certainty to you. And certainty is deeply attractive. It offers
people something stable to believe in, especially in environments where
instability is the norm.
There is a subtle conjugation required in maintaining this dynamic. Too much
accessibility dilutes reverence. When you are constantly available, constantly
explaining, constantly accommodating, you become ordinary. Worship thrives on a
degree of distance, on the preservation of mystery. It is not about being
unreachable, but about being measured and knowing when to appear, when to
speak, and when to withdraw.
Equally
important is the understanding that not everyone should worship you. Universal
approval is a weak foundation. The presence of dissent sharpens the devotion of
your supporters. It creates contrast, and contrast strengthens perception.
Those who choose to stand with you do so more deliberately when there is
something to stand against. In this way, even opposition becomes a tool that
reinforces your position.
Ultimately,
people who worship you are not just followers, they are extensions of your
narrative. They carry your ideas into spaces you may never enter, defend your
image in conversations you may never hear, and uphold your influence in moments
you may never witness. Their belief becomes a decentralized form of your
presence, multiplying your reach sans demanding your direct involvement.
In conclusion
To have
people who worship you is not a matter of indulgence, but is a matter of
leverage and power. It is about constructing an environment where your presence
is felt beyond your immediate actions, where your influence operates even in
your absence. Managed with intention and restraint, this dynamic becomes less
about admiration and more about enduring impact. Leadership is a leverage when
followed, and worse, when worshipped. A Leader gains its strength from being
followed because it suggests alignment, trust, and a shared direction. People
who follow still think, still choose, still hold the Leader accountable in
subtle ways. That tension keeps Leadership honest. It forces refinement. It
keeps the structure alive rather than rigid.
But when
it shifts into worship, something changes. The leverage becomes heavier, almost
dangerous. Worship removes friction, and sans friction, there is no natural
correction. Decisions stop being tested, they get absorbed. The Leader is no
longer just influencing outcomes but shaping reality unchecked. That’s where
the 'worse' comes in, not because it’s ineffective, but because it’s too
effective in the wrong way.
There’s
also a quiet cost to being worshipped. You stop hearing truth in its raw form.
Feedback becomes curated, filtered through admiration. Over time, that can
isolate a Leader from the very environment they are meant to understand. Power
remains, but awareness begins to thin out. And without awareness, even strong Leadership
can drift into miscalculation. The real art, then, is knowing how to carry
influence without becoming dependent on reverence. To be followed, but not
deified. To allow belief in you, but never at the expense of people’s ability
to think independently. Because the strongest form of leverage isn’t control, it’s
alignment that can still question you when it matters.. .dp
_Another reflection from the intersection of commerce, power, and human behaviour.
Examining the human pulse beneath the corporate machinery, for the future rarely defeats defines of organizations, and more often, it simply waits for them to outgrow their own thinking.. .
¦KgeleLeso
Contributor: ChatGPT