The Camino Way
Lessons in Leadership from a Walk Across Spain
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Buy for $15.34
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Narrated by:
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Rudy Sanda
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By:
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Victor Prince
Stretching across 500 miles of northern Spain, the Camino de Santiago has been a pilgrimage route for centuries. Setting off as a competitive, shrewd negotiator with little patience for small talk, Victor Prince emerged as a very different person - more balanced, more caring, more present in the moment, but looking to the future. Prince translates this growth experience into seven leadership skills, each linked to values that have guided Camino travelers for centuries. With reflections from the road and for the workplace back home, he recounts how he learned to:
- Live in the moment
- Welcome each day, its pleasures and its challenges
- Make others feel welcome
- Share
- Feel the spirit of those who have come before you
- Appreciate those who walk with you today
- Imagine those who will follow you
By aligning the path to leadership with a literal journey, The Camino Way offers fresh perspectives on bringing people together and achieving goals - with a pilgrim's heart, a way-farer's grit, and a leader's vision.
©2017 Victor Prince (P)2017 HighBridge, a division of Recorded BooksListeners also enjoyed...
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Another Camino Story
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Honest, inspiring and exciting!
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This is NOT a book about The Camino.
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In addition to what I wrote above, the author wants to portray himself as one who was changed by the Camino experience, but that didn't come across for me. In fact, there were enough hints, contradictions, and observations that led to just the opposite conclusion - that he didn't change much from the experience - that I wonder how introspective he actually was, how much self-insight he really gained. He still seems to be a person driven to achieve the outward manifestations of success (title, position, money, etc.), and using others to obtain those rewards. To a far less degree he seems to have become aware of a deeper purpose, or to have become a more self-reflective, innately caring person. It is entirely possible that those things in fact happened, but it doesn't seem apparent to me from what he wrote in his book.
Lastly, I can't say I really enjoyed the narrator. I don't know what Prince's voice is like, but for a personal narrative like this, I think I might have preferred it to have been author-narrated. I have never listed to a book simply because I like the narrator, but it does make a difference to me. I will be wary of this one in future.
Leadership on the Camino de Santiago
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Blah, blah, blah, blah...
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