I blogged about tribal consciousness 3.30 – after hearing a talk from Rob Bell. I wrote about it in light of identity formation and the safety that one can find in identifying with a tribe. In the past few weeks, I’ve been reading and learning about Seth Godin’s ideas of a tribe. As an identityspecialist, I’m trying to now think about the tribal consciousness of the type of Tribe that Seth is describing. As someone interested in human developmental psych and identity formation, what makes up the tribal consciousness of some that leads a Seth Godin Tribe?
Seth says that anyone can be a leader of a tribe if they want to be. I would agree with him. He says that he can’t give the formula or the secret. Leadership also is not bound by geography, personality, or even position. It’s just that thing that someone has.
Using some identity formation constructs, an individual has to at the very least pursue several “personas” or “selves.” It could be as simple as pursuing several versions of one’s self as a leader – different leadership styles. In theory, as one explores and comes up against crisis, one is forced to make commitments to the possible leader that emerges from the crises.
Also, it is possible to project yourself as a leader (self-constructed), but it is also possible to project your perception of other people’s perception of you as a leader (socially-constructed). Either way, you sculpt these identities and project them. There is something about that that causes a leader to become one. It’s starting to sound more like the consciousness of the leader of a tribe – more than tribal consciousness.
I was wondering if it might be personality-but Seth says that it is not. I was wondering if it might have been some past experience that causes it, but the stories used are so vast and different. I think I’m in a causal-comparative mode because that is the mode of my current research. He does talk about risk and vision. He talks about painting a picture of the future and challenging the status quo. It’s about willing to fail. It’s about not listening to the negativity. It’s about not using excuses. It’s about change. I’m not sure how quantifiable that is, but I’ll read the book a few more times and hopefully I can make a list of themes that come up.

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