The Oasis for
Rational Conservatives

The Amazon’s Pantanal
Serengeti Birthing Safari
Wheeler Expeditions
Member Discussions
Article Archives
L i k e U s ! ! !
TTP Merchandise

WHAT IT TAKES TO BE A TEAM

Download PDF

[Note from Jack Wheeler:  TTP would like to congratulate Joel and his team, the Santa Barbara Masters (Joel’s the goalie) for winning the Silver Medal in the National Water Polo Masters Championships (50 and over, Joel’s an old guy) held in Riverside CA last Sunday, June 9!]

Brand New Mastering Happiness Audio Course! See below!

I’ve played water polo for most of my life, and still do. I’ve had the privilege of playing on some excellent teams, and I’ve also played on some, well… not so excellent teams.

I’ve also been involved with some psychology groups who thought they knew how to be part of a team, or to build teams. I was always surprised at the lack of understanding among them. Today I want to talk about some of the things I’ve found over the years that make for an excellent team – and a not so excellent team, whether it’s for work, play, family or marriage.

This is by no means exhaustive. There is so much that goes into team building that it would be more than I could put into an article. But I want to focus mostly on doing away with one great big flawed cliché: "There is no I in team."

That’s baloney.

joel_061413.png

Anyone who plays sports knows darned well that there is a great big "I" functioning within everybody involved. Being part of a team is not an act of self-sacrifice, any more than being a great parent is an act of self-sacrifice.

Being part of a team is a deeply meaningful experience, and part of the meaning is the sense of glory and pride that comes with performing at the very best of your personal abilities.

To sacrifice is literally to trade something of greater value for something of lesser value. When you play on a team – or grow a family – the success of the others becomes part of your greater values.

When you are part of a great team, your personal goals are not somehow given up to some different and more important goals of the team; they are integrated with the goals of the team. What you want to accomplish can only be accomplished by your team doing well. So you bring your very best to the game, which includes bringing your very best to your team and your teammates.

I don’t know if I can get this across as clearly as I’d like: an excellent team has excellent players, each one of which is there for his own personal achievement, and for the team’s collective achievement. There is no contradiction between the two.

When one of these two elements is missing, the magic just won’t happen.

When you have team members who are only there for themselves, and who don’t know how to work together as a team, then you end up with a few stars, but you’re not likely to get very far as a team. The team will not have the cohesiveness that it needs to succeed.

On the other hand, if you have a team where nobody is thinking of their own personal exceptional performance, then you don’t have that individual drive that has to be there for the chemistry to work.

You need both for a team to function at its highest level.

This is what the psychology groups I mentioned just did not get. One big reason is that the philosophy they were operating under was a socialist philosophy. Their focus was "mutual connection," which sounded good in theory, but in practice they were completely out to lunch about it.

There was no way for this philosophy to succeed, because it was not in touch with the reality that each individual needs to bring his or her best for the team to function.

You cannot remove the ego from a goal. You cannot pretend that the individual can somehow just abandon his or her self to the group. If you try to do that, you get a big mushy mess, with nobody accountable, nobody performing at their best, and nobody paying attention to the real world consequences of this dynamic.

For a team, a work group, an organization to function at their best, everybody needs to take full responsibility for their role; and everybody needs to see how that role integrates with the group’s vision and goals. You need to feel that everybody involved is your ally, and everybody involved needs to feel that you are their ally. You are for their very best, and they are for your very best.

When you have that combination of individual drive and ambition, integrated with an awareness and connection and ability to work well together collectively, you create something that is truly exceptional. There’s really nothing else like it.

Well, there is one other thing like it: marriage and family life. As a couple, if you can cultivate that sense on the deepest of levels, that you are for each other, that you are each other’s most profound allies, so that each of your personal goals are integrated and supported by your vision and actions as a couple, then you will have created a truly exceptional marriage.

You also, if you want to have a great relationship, need to be the kind of person that can make a great relationship. You need to bring the best that you have to your relationship. This doesn’t mean that you spend your time judging whether your mate is bringing his or her best to the relationship – that’s just blaming and projecting, and it is the easiest and most common attitude that people bring, and it destroys relationships.

Bringing your best to the relationship means that you focus on what you are bringing.

If you can create that same spirit with your kids, you will be giving everybody the most profound of gifts in life: a sense of deep satisfaction and joy together as a family, with each person also feeling support and allegiance from the others for his or her personal vision and goals.

None of this is some idealistic, perfect vision. There are fights, there are arguments, there are missed opportunities and regrets in every relationship. But to have as a general spirit and an overarching vision and commitment, this kind of individual drive integrated with a collective goal or vision is one of the greatest experiences you can generate for yourself and those you are engaged with.

Another element of a successful team is fun. A common feature of all of the best teams I have played on is that we have fun together; fun playing, fun talking, fun spending time together. There is a sense of joy and camaraderie and friendship that creates the kind of positive emotional experience that brings out the best in everybody.

It is a game, after all. What good is it if you don’t play?

One other quality that an individual brings to his or her team is a total sense of commitment, and a mindset that is difficult to convey in words. There is a big difference between somebody who comes to a workout or a game to just sort of have fun playing around, and somebody who brings the kind of intensity that is more like all or nothing; life or death.

In the martial arts, when you learn to throw a punch, you don’t focus on hitting your opponent; you focus on hitting through your opponent. Your intention goes farther and is expressed much more powerfully by doing so than just striking the surface. In order to bring your very best performance, and to inspire the very best performances of your teammates, you need to bring a total absorption and commitment to what you’re doing.

When you have this, you are able to tap into reserves and strength that you could never access otherwise. I once watched a former teammate of mine, Terry Schroeder, playing in the Olympics (1996 Atlanta). There were just a few seconds left in a game that the US needed one goal to win. I watched Terry take the ball from half court, swim down with two strong defenders on him and literally, tangibly will the ball into the goal, to win the game.

It’s hard to describe what this can feel like, when everybody is personally firing on all six cylinders, and working together as a team. You can see it in the faces before a game. You can feel it between you, and you remember it for the rest of your life. Such times are truly peak experiences.

To bring this kind of understanding of how a team can work together into a business can be tremendously satisfying. It’s not very common, though. It’s a creative and purposeful act that requires everyone involved to join in and be on board with. But if you can create this together with others, in business, as a family, or on a team, it will boost your sense of joy and give you a quality of deep, gritty satisfaction that is well worth everything it takes to build.

~

Brand Spankin’ New Mastering Happiness Audio Course!

Mastering Happiness is now available as an audio course!

Click here for details.

Now you can listen to the audio version of Mastering Happiness your iPod while you’re walking, running or riding the train or bus. You can even burn a CD to listen to while driving your car. PLUS, you get a step-by-step Mastering Happiness Program Manual for practicing The 10 Principles to a Happy Life so you can see real results and live a happier life.

Click here for more information.