Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Joy of Recognition

 Joy of Recognition

Joy of recognition has often guided my reflections. Karl Jung once said: “Every great person must write his autobiography.”

Those words made me pause. Should I write mine?

That pause became Abhiyantriki Spandane. Not a strict biography, but something close. One may feel greatness within, yet others may perceive it differently. Against this backdrop, the book stands between Jung’s vision of autobiography and the perceptions held by others.

The response was overwhelming. Some suggested an English version, and I embraced the idea. What emerged was not a translation but a transformation—that is, Engineering Heart Beats. It is a new creation, born from the same spirit but shaped differently.

And when the Zen Master says, “Empty your cup first,” I realised that to learn more, I must first pour out what I had already gathered. Value-Based Leadership is my attempt to empty the cup—to share my insights on leadership so that I can make space for new learning.

The cup is not fully emptied, perhaps it never will be, but in the act of writing, I found myself enriched.

The Step of Recognition:

Maslow described the hierarchy of needs. My heart still fills with joy when someone recognises my work. That joy tells me I remain at the step of recognition.

And then another question arises:

When joy is already abundant, is it necessary to climb to the next step—self-actualisation?

Perhaps recognition itself is a form of self-actualization when it is received with gratitude and humility.

Joy as a Companion:

When love and respect are received everywhere, what more can life offer?

At this moment, joy has become my companion, and recognition my mirror.

These reflections come when I pause.

And I feel it necessary to share them with you, because you have given me your most precious commodity in today’s world—YOUR TIME—reading my blogs and my books. For that, I am deeply grateful.

Invitation:

Where do you find yourself in Maslow’s hierarchy today?

Is recognition enough, or do you feel called to climb toward self-actualization?

Pause with me, reflect, and let joy guide your answer.

I would love to hear your reflections on mvingale2405@gmail.com

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on March 17, 2026

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Why I Write Books, Not Papers

Why I Write Books, Not Papers

Leadership is too vast, too alive, to be confined within the rigid boundaries of a single article or research paper. It is a philosophy that breathes, evolves, and touches everyday life.

In recent months, I have immersed myself in articles, books, interviews, and podcasts on Value-Based Leadership. I have reached out to thought leaders like Harry Kraemer and Simar Ghuman, and explored papers in the Journal of Values-Based Leadership. At one point, I even registered on the journal’s website, thinking I might contribute an article myself.

But then another realization struck me: When I have already written a book titled Value-Based Leadership, is it necessary to write a paper?

The Limits of a Paper:

Academic writing has its place. It demands structure—literature reviews, citations, abstracts, and bibliographies. Yet, for me, these formats often feel restrictive. Leadership is not a formula to be dissected; it is a lived experience. To present a holistic view in a few thousand words feels limiting. Since I do not seek academic recognition, I asked myself: Why not continue with the form that allows me to express freely?

The Freedom of a Book:

A book offers space. It allows artistic and poetic expression. It speaks directly to the common reader, not only to the academic circle. In 200–300 pages, one can do justice to the theme, weaving ideas with rhythm and resonance. My book already embodies this approach, and future books may emerge from the hundreds of blogs I continue to write.

This is not a rejection of research papers. Rather, it is an affirmation of the style of writing that aligns with my spirit. For me, blogs and books are living forms—accessible, expansive, and deeply human.

Choosing the Path That Fits:

So once again, I set aside the journal format and chose to write this blog instead. In doing so, I reaffirmed that leadership, at its core, is not about fitting into formats—it is about finding the medium that allows truth to flow freely.

Your Turn:

Do you believe leadership ideas are best expressed through structured research papers, or through books and blogs that speak directly to everyday readers? Share your perspective on mvingale2405@gmail.com —I would love to hear how you balance academic rigour with creative freedom.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on March 14, 2026

#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

Friday, March 13, 2026

Heartfelt Reflection

Heartfelt Reflection

I feel deeply humbled and grateful to share the beautiful words of Mr. Dhairyashil Borde, a former senior executive with a distinguished career in a U.S. multinational. His thoughtful reflections on my book touched my heart, and I am very happy to see that the work resonates with readers of his stature.

He wrote about Value-Based Leadership :

"…It is very lucid and the attention to detail becomes evident when you went on to describe the inspiration behind the cover page and the bird's eye view of the 42 chapters.

I am also quite impressed by the finesse of vocabulary, particularly, less common words like ennoble, parable, and others.

Among different leader types, what drew my particular attention was wrie style and blend of intuition and prayer. I paused to mull over this concept. Superficially, intuition is primordial, comes before emotion and rationality. And prayer is an excuse for inaction. Yet you explained it unequivocally and convincingly that when data is unavailable, overwhelming, or biased, you have to draw upon your intuition, which is grounded in your life experience. Further, prayer is not inaction, but a call for ethical action, going beyond self. Excellent concept which I have not come across in any of my voracious reading on philosophy, psychology, management, business, or history...

I feel very enriched when I read the lifetime work of learned people like you. What you learned in 40-50 years, you imparted that knowledge to me in a few hours…"

Dhairyashil Borde, USA

My Gratitude

Reading such reflections fills me with joy and reinforces the purpose behind my writing. To know that ideas—whether about leadership, intuition, or the role of prayer—spark thoughtful contemplation in readers is the greatest reward an author can hope for.

The words of  Dhairyashil hold special meaning for me, as he himself is a voracious reader, writer, and deep thinker. His inspiring book on Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj in English reflects his own depth of scholarship and vision.

His reflections remind me that knowledge is not merely about accumulation, but about sharing. What takes decades to learn can, through writing, be passed on in hours—enriching lives across boundaries and generations, when hearts are connected by the cosmic thread of love and affection!

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on March 13, 2026

#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

Monday, March 9, 2026

The Beauty of Words!

 The Beauty of Words!

Reviews are coming…

And each comes with tones of joy and inspiration! 

The path is long and journey unfolds slowly when it walks in an organic way!

May take years to reach the destination…

Yet the journey itself is beautiful…More beautiful still when shared with those near and dear!

Some have offered praise in its highest form.

The words they have chosen to praise are exaggerations, perhaps!

May be born of love and affection for me!

But, sure, it is their goodness shining through!

And now, I am sure, these words will travel far, to hands that shape what futures are !

When the words give immense joy and inspiration to me, those are bound to give others, too!

After all, we all are human beings, connected by an invisible cosmic thread of humanity.

And when I look at it, from a distant, I wonder …. How beautiful words truly are !

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on March 9, 2026

# ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Leadership: Traits, Values, and Evolving Dimensions

Leadership: Traits, Values, and Evolving Dimensions

Leadership is not a static concept—it is a living, evolving force shaped by human traits, training, and circumstance. As David McClelland emphasized, the need for affiliation and other motivational drives form the foundation. Yet traits alone are not enough. Training builds capability, and situations provide opportunity. Leadership emerges when willingness, ability, and circumstance converge.

Value-Based Leadership in Society and Politics

In the social and political arena, leadership succeeds in the long run only when it is value-based. A leader without character cannot take decisive action in times of crisis. Determination requires integrity. Followers place their trust in leaders who embody values, and such leaders can harness the deeper power of the subconscious mind—a dimension of human potential that researchers continue to explore.

Recent global discussions emphasize that trust deficits and ethical grounding are now central to political and social leadership. The World Economic Forum (2025) has highlighted the need for leaders to embrace service, ethics, and co-creation to navigate volatility and inspire optimism in unsettled times.

Economic and Organizational Leadership

Most business schools prepare leaders for organizations, especially multinational and giant corporations. In such contexts, profit often becomes the primary objective. Yet profit and values frequently clash. Increasingly, organizations are realizing that value-based leadership is not only ethical but also sustainable. Companies that integrate values into their leadership practices find long-term benefits: trust from stakeholders, loyalty from employees, and resilience in times of uncertainty.

According to Harvard Business Publishing (2025), digital disruption and AI adoption are reshaping organizational leadership. Leaders must now balance profitability with responsibility, ensuring that technology serves humanity rather than undermining it. Economic leadership, therefore, must integrate values with digital fluency.

Spiritual Leadership

Another dimension often overlooked is spiritual leadership. Spiritual leaders follow values rooted in their faith, religion, or sect. Their leadership is guided by principles of compassion, service, and transcendence. While organizational and political leadership often focus on external outcomes, spiritual leadership emphasizes inner transformation. Integrating spiritual values into broader leadership frameworks can enrich the human dimension of leadership, reminding us that leading is not only about achieving goals but also about nurturing souls.

Leadership as an Interdisciplinary Study

Leadership is perhaps the most challenging area of interdisciplinary study. It draws from:

  • Anthropology (human evolution and culture)
  • Sociology (social structures and cooperation)
  • Psychology (motivation, cognition, emotion)
  • Spirituality (values, meaning, purpose)
  • History & Geography (context and environment)
  • Economy, Science & Technology (forces shaping society)

Because leadership is about human beings—and human beings are constantly evolving—leadership itself must evolve. New research findings will continue to add dimensions, but certain traits remain timeless: the need for power, recognition, fulfillment, cooperation, generosity, and love. Their forms may change, but their essence endures.

The Five Dimensions of  Leadership for Legacy 

Recent thought leaders describe leadership through five enduring dimensions:

  1. Vision – clarity of purpose and direction.
  2. Values – ethical grounding and integrity.
  3. Voice – communication and influence.
  4. Virtue – character and moral courage.
  5. Vitality – resilience and adaptability.

As Forbes (2025) outlines, these dimensions ensure leaders not only succeed in the present but leave a lasting impact for generations to come.

The Eternal Core of Leadership

At its heart, leadership is about guiding human beings through change while staying rooted in values. It is both scientific and artistic, poetic and philosophical. It is about solving problems, inspiring cooperation, and creating meaning. Leaders who understand this duality—who balance timeless traits with evolving dimensions—will shape the future with wisdom, resilience, and compassion.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @Pune on March 8, 2026

#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

рдЬाрдЧрддिрдХ рдорд╣िрд▓ा рджिрдиा рдиिрдоिрдд्рддाрдиे ...



рдЖрдЬ рдЬाрдЧрддिрдХ рдорд╣िрд▓ा рджिрди!
рео рдоाрд░्рдЪ рд╣ा рдЬाрдЧрддिрдХ рдорд╣िрд▓ा рджिрди рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рд╕ाрдЬрд░ा рдХेрд▓ा рдЬाрддो. рдд्рдпा рдиिрдоिрдд्рдд рд╕рд░्рд╡ांрдиा рд╢ुрднेрдЪ्рдЫा! 

рдХाрд╣ी рд╡рд░्рд╖ांрдкूрд░्рд╡ी рдорд╣िрд▓ा рд╣ी рдЕрдмрд▓ा рд╕рдордЬрд▓ी рдЬाрдпрдЪी. рдЖрдЬ рддी рд╕рдмрд▓ा рдмрдирдд рдЖрд╣े. рд╡िрд╡िрдз рдХ्рд╖ेрдд्рд░ाрдд рд╕рдорд░्рде рдиेрддृрдд्рд╡ рдХрд░ीрдд рдЖрд╣े. рджрд╣ाрд╡ी рдЖрдгि рдмाрд░ाрд╡ी рдкрд░ीрдХ्рд╖ेрдЪ्рдпा рдЧुрдгрд╡рдд्рддा рдпाрджीрдд рдоुрд▓ींрдЪे рдк्рд░рдоाрдг рдЕрдзिрдХ рдЕрд╕рддे. рдЖрдпрдЯी рдХंрдкрди्рдпांрдордз्рдпे рдЕрдиेрдХ рдоुрд▓ींрдЪे рдкॅрдХेрдЬ рдоुрд▓ांрдкेрдХ्рд╖ा рдЕрдзिрдХ рдЖрд╣े. рдЬेंрдбрд░ рдмाрдпрд╕ рдирд╕ाрд╡े рдЕрд╢ी рдЕрдиेрдХ рдХंрдкрди्рдпांрдЪी рдкॉрд▓िрд╕ी рдЕрд╕рддे. рдорд╣िрд▓ांрдЪ्рдпा рд╕ोрдИ-рд╕ुрд╡िрдзांрдХрдбे рд╡िрд╢ेрд╖ рд▓рдХ्рд╖ рджिрд▓े рдЬाрддे. рдорд╣ाрд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ рд╢ाрд╕рдиाрдиे рдорд╣िрд▓ांрдХрд░िрддा рд▓ाрдбрдХी рдмрд╣ीрдг рд╡ рдЗрддрд░ рдпोрдЬрдиांрдмрд░ोрдмрд░рдЪ рдмाрд▓ рд╕ंрдЧोрдкрди рд░рдЬेрдЪी рд╕ुрд╡िрдзा рджिрд▓ेрд▓ी рдЖрд╣े.

рд░िрдЕрд▓ рдЗрд╕्рдЯेрдЯ рдХ्рд╖ेрдд्рд░ाрдд рд╕ेрд▓्рд╕ рдкрд░्рд╕рди рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рдХाрдо рдХрд░рдгाрд▒्рдпांрдордз्рдпे рдкुрд░ुрд╖ांрдкेрдХ्рд╖ा рдорд╣िрд▓ांрдЪे рдк्рд░рдоाрдг рдЕрдзिрдХ рдЖрд╣े. рди्рдпूрдЬ рдЪॅрдирд▓्рд╕рдордз्рдпे рдЕँрдХрд░ рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рдЖрд╡्рд╣ाрдиाрдд्рдордХ рдХाрдо рдХрд░рдгाрд▒्рдпा, рдк्рд░рдд्рдпрдХ्рд╖ рдлीрд▓्рдбрд╡рд░ рдЬाрдКрди рд╡ाрд░्рддांрдХрди рдХрд░рдгाрд▒्рдпा рдорд╣िрд▓ांрдЪे рдк्рд░рдоाрдг рд▓рдХ्рд╖рдгीрдп рдЖрд╣े. рдорд╣िрд▓ा рдкेрдЯ्рд░ोрд▓ рдкंрдкांрд╡рд░ рджिрд╕рддाрдд. рд╣ॉрд╕्рдкिрдЯॅрд▓िрдЯी рдЗंрдбрд╕्рдЯ्рд░ीрдордз्рдпे рдорд╣िрд▓ांрдЪे рдк्рд░рдоाрдг рд▓рдХ्рд╖рдгीрдп рдЖрд╣े. рдЕрд╢ा рдк्рд░рдХाрд░े рд╕рд░्рд╡рдЪ рдХ्рд╖ेрдд्рд░ाрдд, рдорд╣िрд▓ा рдк्рд░рдЧрддी рдкрдеाрд╡рд░ рд╡ाрдЯрдЪाрд▓ рдХрд░ीрдд рдЖрд╣े.

рддрд░ीрд╣ी рдЕрдиेрдХрджा рдорд╣िрд▓ांрд╡рд░ीрд▓ рдЕрдд्рдпाрдЪाрд░ाрдЪ्рдпा рдШрдЯрдиा рдШрдбрддाрдиा рд╕рдордЬрддे. рдпाрдмाрдмрдд рдЕрдзिрдХ рдХрдаोрд░ рдХाрдпрджे рд╡ рдд्рдпाрдЪी рдЕрдорд▓рдмрдЬाрд╡рдгी рд╣ोрдгे рдЧрд░рдЬेрдЪे рдЖрд╣े. рдд्рдпाрдЪрдмрд░ोрдмрд░ рд╕рдоाрдЬाрдиे рд╕ुрдж्рдзा рдкुрдвे рдпेрд╡ूрди рдЬрдмाрдмрджाрд░ी рд╕्рд╡ीрдХाрд░рдгे рдЖрд╡рд╢्рдпрдХ рдЖрд╣े. рдк्рд░рдд्рдпेрдХ рдХुрдЯुंрдмाрдд, рдоुрд▓े рд▓рд╣ाрди рдЕрд╕рддाрдиा рдд्рдпांрдиा рд╕्рдд्рд░ीрд╡िрд╖рдпी рдЖрджрд░ рдХрд░ाрдпрд▓ा рд╢िрдХрд╡िрдгे рд╡ рддрд╢ी рд╡рд░्рддрдгूрдХ рдШрд░ाрдд рд╕рд░्рд╡ांрдЪी рдЕрд╕рдгे рдЖрд╡рд╢्рдпрдХ рдЖрд╣े.

рдпा рдиिрдоिрдд्рддाрдиे рд▓рд╣ाрдирдкрдгी рдоाрдЭ्рдпाрд╡рд░ рдЬ्рдпा рдХрд░्рддрдмрдЧाрд░ рд╕्рдд्рд░ीрдЪा рдк्рд░рднाрд╡ рдкрдбрд▓ा рдд्рдпांрдЪा рдоी рдХृрддрдЬ्рдЮрддाрдкूрд░्рд╡рдХ рдЙрд▓्рд▓ेрдЦ рдХрд░рддो – рдоाрдЭी рдЖрдЬी рдЫрдмाрдмाрдИ. рдЕрдд्рдпंрдд рдХрдаीрдг рдкрд░िрд╕्рдеिрддीрдд рд╕ंрдШрд░्рд╖ рдХрд░ीрдд рдд्рдпांрдиी рдХुрдЯुंрдмाрд▓ा рдкुрдвे рдиेрд▓े. рдмिрдХрдЯ рдЖрд░्рдеिрдХ рдкрд░िрд╕्рдеिрддीрдЪा рд╕ाрдордиा рдХрд░ीрдд рдЕрд╕рддाрдиाрд╣ी рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рднाрди рдаेрд╡ूрди рдЗрддрд░ांрдиा рдд्рдпा рдЖрдкрд▓्рдпा рдкрд░ीрдиे рдорджрдд рдХрд░ीрдд рд░ाрд╣िрд▓्рдпा. рд╕рд▓्рд▓ा рджेрдд рд░ाрд╣िрд▓्рдпा. рдЪांрдЧрджेрд╡ рдЧ्рд░ाрдордкंрдЪाрдпрддीрдЪ्рдпा рд╕рджрд╕्рдп рдо्рд╣рдгूрдирд╣ी рдд्рдпा рдХाрд░्рдпрд░рдд рд╣ोрдд्рдпा. рд▓рд╣ाрдирдкрдгीрдЪे рдоाрдЭे рд╕рд░्рд╡ рд╣рдЯ्рдЯ рдд्рдпांрдиी рдкुрд░рд╡िрд▓े.

рдмाрдмांрдЪा рдЙрджाрд░ рд╡ рдк्рд░рдЧрддिрд╢ीрд▓ рджृрд╖्рдЯिрдХोрдг рдЕрд╕рд▓्рдпाрдиे, рдЖрдордЪ्рдпा рдХुрдЯुंрдмाрдд рдорд╣िрд▓ांрд╡िрд╖рдпी рдиेрд╣рдоीрдЪ рдЖрджрд░ाрдЪे рд╕्рдеाрди рд░ाрд╣िрд▓े рдЖрд╣े. рдЖрдпрдЯी рдЗंрдЬिрдиिрдпрд░ рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рдкौрд░्рдгिрдоा рдЕрдоेрд░िрдХेрдд рдЬाрдгाрд░ी рдШрд░ाрддीрд▓ рдкрд╣िрд▓ी рд╕рджрд╕्рдп рдард░рд▓ी. рд╕ौ. рдЬ्рдпोрддि рд╢ैрд▓ेрди्рдж्рд░ рдЗंрдЧрд│े рдпांрдиी рдЬрд│рдЧाрд╡ рдорд╣ाрдирдЧрд░рдкाрд▓िрдХेрдд рд╕्рдеाрдпी рд╕рднाрдкрддी рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рдХाрдо рдХрд░рддाрдиा рдЖрдкрд▓्рдпा рдХाрдоाрдЪा рдард╕ा рдЙрдордЯрд╡िрд▓ा. рд╕ौ. рджрдордпंрддी рдХिрд░рдг рдЗंрдЧрд│े- рдорд░ाрдаे рдмाрд▓ рд╡िрдХाрд╕ рдк्рд░рдХрд▓्рдк рдЕрдзिрдХाрд░ी рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рдХाрд░्рдпрд░рдд рдЖрд╣ेрдд. рдмाрд▓рдХांрдЪे рдпोрдЧ्рдп рдкोрд╖рдг рд╕ुрдиिрд╢्рдЪिрдд рдХрд░рдг्рдпाрд╕ाрдаी рд░ाрдЬрдоाрддा рдЬिрдЬाрдК рдоाрддा рдмाрд▓ рдЖрд░ोрдЧ्рдп рдЖрдгि рдкोрд╖рдг рдоिрд╢рди ‘– рд╣ा рдпूрдиिрд╕ेрдлрдХрдбूрди рд╕рд╣ाрдп्рдп рдоिрд│ाрд▓ेрд▓ा рдорд╣ाрд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ рд╢ाрд╕рдиाрдЪा рдорд╣рдд्рдд्рд╡ाрдХांрдХ्рд╖ी рдк्рд░рдХрд▓्рдк рд░ाрдмрд╡िрдг्рдпाрдд рдд्рдпांрдЪा рд╕рдХ्рд░िрдп рд╕рд╣рднाрдЧ рдЖрд╣े. рдд्рдпा рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рдмांрдзिрд▓рдХी рдоाрдиूрди рд╕ेрд╡ाрднाрд╡ी рд╡ृрдд्рддीрдиे рдХाрдо рдХрд░ीрдд рдЖрд╣ेрдд. рдд्рдпांрдЪ्рдпा рдХाрд░्рдпाрдЪा рд╡िрд╡िрдз рд╕्рддрд░ाрд╡рд░ рдЧौрд░рд╡ рдЭाрд▓ेрд▓ा рдЖрд╣े. рд╢ाрд╕рдиाрдЪे рд╡िрд╡िрдз рдк्рд░рдХрд▓्рдк рдд्рдпा рд╕ेрд╡ाрднाрд╡ी рд╡ृрдд्рддीрдиे рд╡ рд╕рдорд░्рдкिрдд рднाрд╡рдиेрдиे рд░ाрдмрд╡िрддाрдд.

рдорд╣ाрд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ рд╢ाрд╕рдиाрдд рдирдЧрд░рд░рдЪрдиा рдЕрдзिрдХाрд░ी рдо्рд╣рдгूрди рдХाрд░्рдпрд░рдд рд░ाрд╣िрд▓ेрд▓्рдпा рд╕ौ. рд▓рддा рдЗंрдЧрд│े рдпांрдиी рдХौрдЯुंрдмिрдХ рдЬрдмाрдмрджाрд░ीрд╣ी рддेрд╡рдв्рдпाрдЪ рд╕рдорд░्рдердкрдгे рдкेрд▓рд▓ी. рдПрдЦाрдж्рдпा рдШрдЯрдиेрдХрдбे рдЕрдд्рдпंрдд рдмाрд░рдХाрд╡्рдпाрдиे рд╡ рд╡рд╕्рддुрдиिрд╖्рдардкрдгे  рдкाрд╣рдг्рдпाрдЪी, рд╡ рдд्рдпाрдиंрддрд░ рдиिрд░्рдгрдп рдШेрдг्рдпाрдЪी рдХ्рд╖рдорддा рдд्рдпांрдЪ्рдпाрдХрдбे рдЖрд╣े. рдд्рдпांрдЪी рдорд▓ा рдоोрд▓ाрдЪी рд╕ाрде рд▓ाрднрд▓ी.

рдкрд░рд╡ा рдкंрдЪрдЧрдгी рдпेрдеीрд▓ Moral Re-Armament Centre рдордз्рдпे рд╢्рд░ी. рд░ाрдЬрдоोрд╣рди рдЧांрдзी рдпांрдЪ्рдпाрд╢ी рдУрд│рдЦ рдХрд░ूрди рджेрддाрдиा рдоी рдо्рд╣рдЯрд▓े: “Lata Ingale, my wife. She served Maharashtra Government as an upright officer.” рдд्рдпाрд╡рд░ рдд्рдпांрдиी рдоिрд╖्рдХिрд▓рдкрдгे рджाрдж рджेрдд рдо्рд╣рдЯрд▓े: “Then I must stand in upright position and salute her.” репреж рд╡्рдпा рд╡рд░्рд╖ी рдд्рдпांрдЪ्рдпा рдЕंрдЧी рдЕрд╕рд▓ेрд▓ा рд╣рдЬрд░рдЬрдмाрдмी рдЖрдгि рджिрд▓рдЦुрд▓ाрд╕рдкрдгा рд╕ुрдЦाрд╡ूрди рдЧेрд▓ा.

рдоी рдоाрдЭ्рдпा рдкुрд╕्рддрдХाрдд рд▓िрд╣िрд▓े рдЖрд╣े:

“Smt. Lata Ingale – who exemplified integrity and dedication in her role as an officer in the Town Planning Department, consistently upholding rules and regulations with precision and fairness. 

Her professional journey reflects an unwavering commitment to public service marked by sensitivity and responsibility. 

Incidentally, she is also my wife, and it is with profound respect that I acknowledge her contribution—not merely as a distinguished officer, but as someone who has left behind a personal and professional legacy of dignity, discipline, and service to society.”

рдЬाрдЧрддिрдХ рдорд╣िрд▓ा рджिрдиा рдиिрдоिрдд्рдд рдкुрди्рд╣ा рдПрдХрджा рд╕рд░्рд╡ांрдиा рд╢ुрднेрдЪ्рдЫा! 

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @Pune on March 8, 2026

#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Importance of Parables

The Importance of Parables 

Beyond Data and Information

Data, information, and even knowledge cannot transform a human being unless they themselves resolve to change. True transformation begins with an inner decision. As a trainer in leadership development, I have found that three approaches—Stories and Parables, Self-Exploration, and Group Dynamics—create the conditions for such resolve. Among these, parables hold a unique power.

1. Stories and Parables: The Gateway to Change

Stories must be crafted meticulously. I often begin my sessions with a story rooted in real incidents, people, places, and timings—details that lend authenticity. The narrative is not about preaching a conclusion; instead, I leave the meaning open, allowing the audience to interpret. This subtlety keeps them connected throughout the session, and the effect lingers long after the session ends.

Parables, introduced once the audience is already engaged, transport them into another world. They spark imagination, reconnect participants with their own experiences, and stir emotions. Even familiar parables, when retold with fresh emphasis and emotional resonance, can inspire joy, excitement, and reflection. The litmus test of an effective parable is the emotional response it evokes—if the storyteller feels inspired, the audience will too.

Most importantly, parables invite multiple interpretations. The meaning drawn by the audience may be deeper and more personal than what the trainer envisioned. This autonomy makes the lesson transformative, because participants feel they have discovered the truth themselves.

Parables from Value-Based Leadership

In my work, I have used parables such as:

  • Wings Are Born in Struggle – illustrating that struggle is not cruelty of nature but its gift: the very force that shapes resilience, confidence, and independence.
  • The Sparrow’s Leadership – The sparrow's courage was not about extinguishing the fire alone, but about refusing to remain idle.  In life and in organization, leadership begins with the individual- one act of conviction.
  • Learn to Unlearn – To learn without unlearning is like pouring tea into a full cup- knowledge spills away, wasted.
  • The Sword of Awareness –Awareness is the true weapon. The subconscious when trained guides instinctive action.

Each of these parables carries timeless lessons. They do not dictate conclusions but invite reflection, allowing participants to discover meanings that resonate with their own journeys.

2. Self-Exploration: The Mirror Within

In self-exploration, participants are invited to share their achievements, failures, joys, sorrows, dreams, and inspirations. Speaking on stage is not merely an act of communication—it is a commitment. Before words are spoken, the cognitive domain is activated; when words are delivered, the affective domain comes alive. This dual process initiates change that lasts long after the session. Even if unnoticed at first, the seeds of transformation grow over time.

3. Group Dynamics: The Power of Collective Learning

Groups of six to eight participants engage in tasks designed to elicit cooperation, recognition, and excellence. Human psychology drives individuals to seek acknowledgment and to demonstrate their best selves. Within groups, people learn from peers, observe behaviors, and emulate positive traits. The desire to appear polite, cooperative, and generous reinforces constructive habits. Carefully chosen tasks ensure that the group dynamic fosters the desired change.

The Transformational Triad

Together, these three approaches form a triad of transformation:

  • Stories and Parables open the heart and imagination.
  • Self-Exploration engages the mind and emotions.
  • Group Dynamics anchor change in collective practice.

Parables, in particular, act as catalysts. They bypass resistance, stir emotions, and leave lasting imprints in the subconscious. When told authentically, they inspire leaders to change—not because they were instructed to, but because they discovered the meaning themselves.

Dr. Mahendra Ingale @ Pune on March 7, 2026

#ValueBasedLeadership #EngineeringHeartBeats

 

Joy of Recognition

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