Dr Livingstone, I Presume.
Presumely, this is what Henry Stanley said to Dr. David Livingstone, a missionary who had gone into the "wilds of Africa," and Stanley was paid to find him which took about six months, a difficult and tortuous expedition.
So it was this morning when I said essentially the same thing, mentally of course.
Dr Schweitzer, I Presume.
So it was with Dr. Albert Schweitzer and I, although my Viking journey was less physically strenuous, but probably more mentally hard, because I am an devout Atheist and he is faded celebrity and a Christian to boot. I was vaguely familiar with him, even though we had decided to use him as our Compassionate Leader, one of sixteen Leaders as primary illustrations in our forthcoming book, Please Understand Me for Different Leaders.
I had difficulty before in reading his biography. Frankly, at the time it was boring as I began to read it. Being busy with many other things, I didn't finish much of that biography, and return the book to the library. All this mushy Idealism, and Christian stuff that I can't relate to: it makes me sleepy. I had other leaders I could work on. I let my colleague take Albert Schweitzer as his assignment -- since he is a Christian and could write, and be interested in all that stuff.
But just the other day I had gone to the 30th anniversary of Saddleback Church, Saturday's -- Easter service in Anaheim Stadium (with probably 10,000-20,000 people, Sunday apparently another 40,000 would be attending), with my co-author and his family to watch Rick Warren, our Fieldmarshal Rational, leader example for our leadership book. Rick Warren has written the most popular modern book in the world today. His book is even more popular than my father's book. 50 Million copies sold, Purpose Driven Life. I listened to his sermon (rather long -- it was Easter and "special") and observed the spectacle. Being really the second sermon in my life I actually had to sit through and listened to, I had a better feeling for the jargon that Christian's (and my Great Grandfathers) used.
We are trying to finish up the last few Leaders in our book, Albert Schweitzer being one of the last, not done. So we reassigned Schweitzer to me to start the process of finding lessons of leadership. So armed with my Kindle and physical copy of a biography of Albert Schweitzer, I finally was able to explore, without my veil of boredom and non-understanding, and actually find Dr. Schweitzer as I met him at the Sorbornne in Paris -- a place and time so foreign to me, but conceptually very familiar to me, the University of the Mind.

