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Don’t put the cart before the horse... - Part 1

by Rick Baker
On Aug 25, 2010
Another father-to-son note…
There are carts and horses and chariot drivers and chariot warriors.
 
I figure the Greeks, about 3000 years ago, looked at it this way:
  • Horses were horses and they were worked so hard they knew enough to drink when they were taken to water. If they didn't, then they died. Then the soldiers ate them. Horses also became eaten if the soldiers ran short of other meat.
  • War carts were chariots. Horses pulled these carts, these carts didn't get to go before the horses. If the carts broke then they were either fixed or taken apart and the pieces were used for other things. If fuel was in tight supply then carts could be burned to create warmth and to cook food.
  • Chariot drivers: chariots contained two men. One drove. He was either junior, less skilled at fighting or both. His key roles were to protect the other more-valued man, the warrior, to protect the horses and the carts because they were expensive, and to place the warrior in a position where the warrior could have a good shot (spear shot, bow shot) at the enemy.
  • The warrior. He was the leader. He got all the gold - the spoils of war. He also, as a general rule, took the largest risk and got to die first. He only drove the chariot when the driver was thrown, was too injured to drive or was killed. If a driver was injured or killed then, after the skirmish, the warrior would replace the lost driver. I mean: the warrior wouldn’t want to be the driver because warriors fought, while drivers drove.
Drivers and warriors didn't pull the chariots. If the horses were injured or killed and the chariot was immobilized during the battle then the driver and warrior either ran, or tried to hitch a ride on another ‘single-manned’ chariot...or they stood their ground and fought.
 
Carts were deaf. The chariots simply could not hear or think or do anything on their own. So, they required hands-on supervision and controls. Without horses the chariots were only as valuable as the adornments they displayed, the cargo they held, and the protection and the maneuverability they provided to the men. Without horses, the chariots just stood around and did nothing. With horses but no men, the chariots looked good but for the business at hand (warring or terrorizing or perhaps parading) they were absolutely useless. At best when men weren’t around the horse and cart ran around in circles or took off and got lost.
 
When a driver was added, the cart and horse did a lot better. As a unified group they really got places. And, as long as the path was simple, without obstacles and without treachery the horse and cart and driver got along just fine. When minor issues arose, including attack by lesser-skilled fighters, the horse, cart, and driver prevailed. They did some off-road stuff and they killed some guys, got some loot, returned to camp, and bragged to their buddies over some wine and roasted meat.
 
But, when the combo of horse-cart-driver met an unfriendly horse-cart-driver with a warrior the following happened: the driver without the warrior died and was stripped naked and left for the kites to pick away at, the horse and cart and the driver's armour and weapons all got a new owner. That new owner was the opposing warrior…he took their lives then their stuff. However, when there was a shortage of manpower or a real dirty job needed doing, sometimes the driver didn't die. The opposing warrior just stripped him down and took him into slavery.
 
Warriors had a wonderful, absolutely terrible life.
 
The horses had it pretty good. At least, they had it good as long as they could perform. Horses really didn't plan for the future. They didn't have to worry about planning their day, or next week, or next year. They just plodded along until they got whipped - then they ran. When their usefulness was over, and that is something they didn't worry about because they were pretty much thinking about a bag of oats, their life ended quickly. The only pain they had was the pain of the whip and the pain of injury sustained in battle. But, when the pain was extreme it was quickly ended when they were killed and eaten.
 
Carts: again, they were senseless. Just tools for the men and work for the horses.
 
Drivers: these guys were doers. They got to manage carts and horses and from time to time they got to fight. Of most importance, they had the vital job of protecting the most-valuable asset: the warrior. They succeeded when they managed the horses and chariots in a manner that allowed the warrior to do his job. Killing. They got to fight after the warrior had taken his best shots or when the warrior was injured. If they fought well then they received rewards (a bit of loot, plunder, and maybe even slaves). If they had sufficient skill then they might be able to become warriors.
 
What's the point?
 
There are several:
  • horses are horses
  • carts are carts
  • drivers are drivers
  • warriors are warriors
 
Don't get them confused.

Tags:

Family Business and CFFB | Father-to-Son Lessons | Personalities @ Work

Comments (1) -

Rick Baker Canada
8/26/2010 9:28:52 PM #

About 5 years ago, I wrote a series of 70 or so notes to my son, Jack. My goal was to share some of my business philosophies and explain to him my thoughts about a variety of business topics. The notes were always related to real-life business situations we were experiencing.

I labelled these notes "the father-to-son notes".

This blog contains the first part of one of those father-to-son notes.

Often the father-to-son notes contained metaphors and big doses of my [allegedly] somewhat quirky sense of humour. I injected 'personality' in an effort to make the father-to-son notes more interesting and more memorable. And, I suppose, that’s my natural writing style, [which I have learned needs to be tempered…at least some of the time].

This “Don’t put the cart before the horse” father-to-son note actually does relate to some serious aspects of business, however, I am not sure that jumps out when we look at Part I alone.

As I will mention in my 100th MIN blog next Wednesday…I rank this blog and other father-to-son notes high on the fun factor scale. I enjoyed writing them…and I still get a kick out of re-reading them. [I wonder if Jack does too.]

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