Leaders Like You – in Chiropractic and Healthcare Practices

Doctors and team members of Excel Chiropractic, Lake Geneva, WI

Empowering Others in Chiropractic Healthcare Practice

You are a leader.

You may not consider yourself a leader. But you are. So is everyone on your team.

Not only by the service you provide, but by the example you set.

What is leadership? Let’s take a look to see if you fit:

  • “Leadership is not about who you are or where you sit. It’s about what you do to make a difference in the lives of others.” — Jim Kouzes & Barry Posner, The Leadership Challenge
  • “Leadership is not about being in charge. It is about taking care of those in your charge.” — Simon Sinek
  • “Leaders become great, not because of their power, but because of their ability to empower others.” — John C. Maxwell

I think you’ll have to agree, both you and your team are leaders. Servant leaders in chiropractic and your healthcare practice.

But, as you know, leadership is tough. It isn’t easy.

But you did it in 2025.

You helped others in big ways and small, regardless of your role.

It is possible, quite likely in fact, that you may not have acknowledged the vital role you and your teammates played in the wellbeing of others last year.

Why not? Well (lol) … because of all the #@#% that occurs when trying to get things done. The list can go on and on… there is so much noise and changes that occur in practice that sometimes it is difficult to see the road we are on.

But, you made it through another year. And in your wake, people are better.

All of us at Petty, Michel and Associates are proud to work with you. We appreciate your struggles and celebrate your wins as independent health care leaders!

In this New Year, stay true to you purpose and your role as the servant leader that you are – and your path to your goals in 2026 will be straighter and more certain.

“We never know how far reaching something we may think,
say or do today will affect the lives of millions tomorrow.”
B.J. Palmer’s 1949 book The Bigness of the Fellow Within

Ed Petty

Rule #9 by B.J.Palmer, Developer of Chiropractic

[to download a PDF version: download]

The average businessman has long since forgotten Rule No. 9, “Don’t take yourself too damn seriously.”

Thousands of businessmen have one fault in common. They are so close to their own thoughts, their own minds, their own selves, desk, office friends, employees, clerks, detail, correspondence that they suffer from the illusion of the near.

They are with what they think, see and do so much at a time that they take it all too seriously and thus suffer from the nearness of themselves to themselves.

I now live in a town where I am sold to everybody. They call me “B.J.” everywhere. I live in an immediate family of some 5,000 whom I bring to that city, who love me and I love them. These people appreciate what I do for them. They tell me and I listen to the plaudits of deeds well done. People come from far and near to thank me for what I have done, via some salesman. All of which makes me take my detail seriously. I suffer from it.

YOU need the vision of the far. I need it. I keep my grip (suitcase) packed and when I begin to take my reform work seriously, right then is when I book a few Rotary, Kiwanis and other club talks and hide myself away from my thoughts, ideas, work, students, school, friends, that I might get myself away from myself, that I may walk the streets of strange towns, see strange faces, listen to strange tongues, that I may get the proper perspective of myself.

Many people suffer with a constipation of thought and a diarrhea of words. Many a man has the eyesight of a hawk and the vision of a clam.

Going away from home makes a man shut up and think. It also teaches him to overlook the hawky detail and gain a distant vision of himself, his service and his Big Job.

Every man owes it to himself, his people and his service to go away about every so often. The more detail he has, the oftener he should go. The more worries, the more he needs to go. The bigger his work, the longer his vacation should be.

He should go to conventions, attend luncheons, go fishing or hunting, anywhere that he may get away from himself; that he may sit on the banks of the river and there see himself at his desk, with his people, on the job. It is surprising how foolish all of us look when we gaze at ourselves after we get away from ourselves and see ourselves as others see us.

Many a man realizes without analyzing. A certain clothing merchant of our city is noted for his ancestral business qualities. Business and money are his gods. Yet this same man told me but recently that he is now playing golf two afternoons a week. I inquired as to how he could get his mind into that state where he could make it pay. He tells me that the next morning he works three times as hard and accomplishes more than three times as much work. He comes home tired, sleeps sound, wakes up refreshed and piles in solid. Playing golf, he realizes the vision of the far without the mental analysis that accomplishes the end. He stumbled upon the conclusion and even yet doesn’t know. You and I can go into this with comprehension and intention.

I am told that John D. Rockefeller rarely went near oil fields; that Mr. Carnegie knew little about steel itself; that John Patterson spends months in Europe away from his huge plant to know better how to run it when at it; that James Gordon Bennett managed the New York Herald from Paris; that Mr. Pulitzer manages the New York World from afar; that Mr. Wanamaker spends and Marshall Field did spend four months out of twelve in Europe for the express purpose of gaining vision; that a Boston department store manager is responsible for this statement:” I must study other business at least THREE MONTHS every year in order to manage my own business properly the OTHER NINE.’

We should get away from ourselves, our office, our business to get the proper perspective on its services.

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[to download a PDF version: download]