When we lived in California we used to take the dogs swimming in the lakes a little inland. We’d back up for a day trip, drive through the wine country, and find a little spot to park the car and cool off in the water. As with most lakes in the area, there wasn’t really a beach, but more of a grassy area that led to a drop about a foot high into the water.
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| Lake Berryessa was our favorite | 
 As  my wife and I would wade in, Zeke would just jump right in and start  swimming to nowhere in particular.  As we’d make it out into the deeper  area past where we could touch the ground, Zeke would be happily  swimming around us looking for a stick or some toy to retrieve.  
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| no worries | 
 Paco,  on the other hand, would stay right at the edge of the shore, clearly  annoyed that he was left behind, and just start barking at us.  Being a  herding dog, he is happiest when everyone is in a group- cattle, sheep,  people, it doesn’t matter- as long as everything is in a group.  Having  waded out, we clearly had broken up the group, and he let us know.   “Well come on out then!” we’d call to him, which only made him yip more  desperately.  I’d head back to shore and try to coax him in the water,  but he would not have any of it.  I led him a little into the water,  where he could still stand, but once he got out to the point where his  belly hit the water, he’d try to climb on top of the water.   Since he could see there was a surface, he thought well, I should just  be able to climb up on that surface.  The result was futile, if  hilarious.  He would go completely vertical, smack his front paws on the  water to try to catch hold of it to pull himself up, and at the same  time point his nose straight up in the air to avoid splashing himself in  the face.  It never worked- he never could figure out the water.
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| better on land, thank you very much | 
 The problem, it appeared to me, was that he was thinking about it too much.  Zeke, being a little less of a cerebral dog, just jumped in and figured it out.   He may have splashed around a bit the first few minutes the first time  he tried it, but he quickly learned on the fly and was swimming in no  time.  In fact, with his short hair, muscular body, and big round head  he looked just like one of those seals you see on the docks at  Fisherman’s Wharf in San Francisco.   
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| Zeke, is that you? | 
To be fair, Paco is an Australian Cattle dog and probably doesn’t have the swimming gene in his blood.  But he over-thought how to approach the water, and therefore never learned how to swim and could not join us.  
We  have all experienced times when something seems impossible to tackle  because we just can’t figure out how to go about it.  The clearest  memory of it for me was book reports back in grade school.  I remember  having read the book, or most of it, and sitting down at the computer  looking at the blank page.  How do I begin this thing?  Although  there were guidelines I was supposed to follow, there was no one right  way to start it.  The older we get, the fewer guidelines there tend to  be.  The places that have the strictest rules on how to accomplish a  task tend to be the ones that stifle us, bore us, or make us feel like  we are suffocating.
I  worked for a while after college for a large cell phone company doing  collections work.  I was the guy that called you when you didn’t pay  your cell phone bill for several months.  The way we were supposed to  make a call, what we were supposed to say, and how we were supposed to  say it were all strictly regulated.  We even were given scripts of  exactly, word for word, what to say to a customer that had not  paid his bill.  I didn’t last too long there as I felt too stifled.  I  also felt that this “one size fits all” approach did not allow me to  work with each person as an individual for the best outcome.  The more  interesting work I got into, though, the more freedom I had to  accomplish the tasks in the way I saw fit.  I was held accountable for  the results of the work I did, not the path I took to get there.
These are the times that leadership comes into play.  Leaders, by definition, push past what is already established and known and chart a new path.  If they are lucky they may have some rough idea of how to move forward but often they do not.  The key here, the lesson from the dogs, is to not over-think or over-strategize how to begin.   At some point you have to jump in with the imperfect knowledge you have  and just figure out the rest as you go along.  There is a quote (I  think it was Jack Welsh) about leaders being the ones acting on 75%  complete information.  If they wait until the information is 95%  complete, they would be a follower.  Sometimes you just have to make a  move with the information you have.
Some  of us, especially those of us who push ourselves and aspire to improve  ourselves, tend to rely heavily on strategy before action.  Of course it  is wise to learn what you can and devise an approach to tackle an issue  or chart a course of action, but at some point you have to put the map down and start driving down the actual road.   Often the time we have to prepare is less than what we’d like.  There’s  the presentation to give next week at work, or the family dilemma that  arises at the last minute and has to be resolved.
My wife read that blue heelers, Paco’s breed, when they are herding often will run across the top of the backs  of a group of animals just to get to the straying animal on the other  side of the pack fastest.  This dog was built to over-think, and to  strategize each move for most beneficial results.  It’s funny to think  that water, one of the simplest and most ubiquitous aspects of living,  has confounded him.  These people even taught their heeler to play UNO  with them:
There  is one situation, however, where the roles are reversed: Zeke is the  hesitant one and Paco just goes for it.  Here the situation is treats.   From when he was a puppy Zeke had sensitive skin and was prone to  periodic rashes.  Some even got infected and required rounds of  antibiotics, for which I had the undesirable task of trying to get him  to take a pill twice a day for a week or more.   
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| fun | 
After a while there are only  so many ways that you can hide a pill in food before the dog finds out  what you are doing.  After a few successes hiding the pill in bread, he  figured out what I was doing and refused to eat the bread.  Next I tried  peanut butter, again with limited success.  He would chew up the peanut  butter and spit out the pill.  All of these tricks and deception to get  him to eat his medicine made him very suspicious of any food that isn’t  delivered in a bowl.  Now, years later, if I call the dogs over and  tell them I have a cookie for them, Zeke treats all offerings as potential poison.   I’ll toss a cookie to Paco, who will rise up on his back legs to snatch  it out of the air, but if I toss one to Zeke, he will let it bounce off  of his nose and then eye it suspiciously once it hits the ground.  Of  course, it only lasts a second on the ground before Paco snaps it up as  well.  
It’s  not that Paco hasn’t had pills hidden in food too.  He just doesn’t  care.  The payoff of getting the treat is worth the slim risk of any  hidden pill.  But for Zeke, who lets a few negative experiences color  his current perception of treats, he misses out on getting most treats by being too suspicious and taking too long to act.  
There  are times when over-thinking not only keeps us from advancing, but it  can also lead us into worse situations than the one we started out in.   A few years back, for my birthday, we went camping north of San  Francisco by the Russian River.  We rented inflatable canoes that would  hold two people and two dogs, and planned on spending the day lazily  floating down the river.  Getting the dogs in the canoe was challenging  enough, but once we had pushed off and started paddling to the middle of  the river, Paco flipped out.  
 He  somehow decided that since he was around water (but not in it), the  water posed a threat and he jumped out of the canoe and started  splashing his way towards the shore, about 20 feet away.  My wife jumped  out after him, and was able to walk on the riverbed as the water was  only about 4 feet deep.  Paco, of course, was splashing around in  circles with his head straight up in the air but somehow drifting closer  to his intended destination, the shore.  Lining this section of the  shore was about three feet of reeds that started in the water and  reached about two feet into the air.  Paco headed right for them as  Michaele tried to catch up to him.  He got there first.  His thrashing  twisted him around in the reeds and it looked like he was being devoured  by some thousand-tentacled creature.  While he was never in any real  danger, tangling all four of his feet while he was still technically  over his head in the water was not his idea of a good time.  After  Michaele extracted him (for which she was thanked with a patchwork of  scratches from his flailing claws), he bounded on to the shore wide-eyed  and spent the rest of the day running alongside us safely from the  shore.  
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| you go ahead and float- I'll run | 
Zeke,  meanwhile, was contentedly sitting in the canoe, watching the drama  unfold.  If he could have popped open a beer and munched on some  cheetos, he would have.  In his stress and over-thinking the danger he  was in, Paco had created three undesirable outcomes for himself.  First, he made his fears come true by choosing to get in the water by jumping out of the canoe.  Second, he immediately got himself into a worse situation by getting tangled in the reeds.  And third,  he ended up spending the day separated from the group and having to run  alongside us rather than enjoying a leisurely float down the river.  
This  “out of the frying pan, into the fire” theme is common in entertainment  too.  How many times have we seen a character on a sitcom take a  situation, over-think it and stress about possible negative  consequences, and then work themselves into an even worse situation than  the original one?  This theme is so often used, and so obviously used,  that we may not see that it actually happens to us as well.  Next  time you are confronted with a difficult situation or some task that  seems insurmountable, know when to stop thinking about it and  strategizing and when to jump in with the knowledge you have and just  give it your best effort, learning as you go.  
Leaders  gather information, but know that at some point you have to take what  you have, whether you like it or not, and just act on it.  Being a  leader often means being in situations that are not clearly defined.   These are the situations where most people are afraid to act.  Leaders  take what they know and just jump in when the situation demands it.
Lesson:   Sometimes the solution is not as complex as you think, and the solution  is best found by just jumping in and giving it your best shot.  It  helps to have a strategy, but it is important to know when to move from  thinking about the strategy to implementing it, even if you feel like  you have incomplete information.



















