The head is the bowl, and the cup which holds all the water and has the handle is the body.
The head is much bigger than the body, like people's egos are bigger than their sense of responsibility.
Today, I read again about some leaders blaming others for the world problems:
"Obama said Trump's election and the U.K.'s vote to leave the EU were spawned by world leaders' mishandling of globalization."
Note, he blames these unspecified "world leaders," with no attribution or responsibility to himself.
To be clear, he is resolute that his policies and way of governing had no impact on the rise of President-elect Trump, his diametric opposite!
This is similar to Hillary Clinton blaming her election loss on the FBI Director investigating her, and not taking responsibility for her own lengthy history of scandals.
Again on Sunday, the New York Times blamed the gender-based, glass ceiling on Hillary's defeat, rather than acknowledging the impact of the "corruption ceiling" that may have prevented her winning.
And there is a long pattern of this blaming in politics whether for gridlock, the deficit, healthcare, divisiveness, violence in inner cities, terrorism, improprieties, distrust of government, and more.
In the extreme, some leaders even blamed the U.S. people themselves for the suffering caused by radical Islamic terrorism!
Even in the recent election, some blamed their own constituents for insulting and ruining their legacy if they don't go out and vote for his DNC hand-picked successor.
Yet despite the endless blame game, Obama attacked Trump for whining and blaming rigged elections, saying that this demonstrated a lack of leadership or toughness to be president.
But at the same time, he takes credit for everything good that happens: for ending Iraq war, for killing Bin Laden, for saving the world economy, for reforming our schools, for "stamping out" Ebola, for $2 gas, and even for the success of Fox news!
How wonderful (NOT) is this philosophy and practice of leadership:
If something good happens, you take the credit; If something bad happens, you blame someone else.
That's a very big head on top of that very narrow body. ;-)
(Source Photo: Andy Blumenthal)