Back

The Most Important Work Is Unscheduled

Jason Cummins
4 months ago

February 12, 2026

Blogs
Like Login to Like 1

In October 2016 the nation lost a golfing legend. Sam Saunders lost a
grandfather.

During his eulogy (available here), Sam described why “Dumpy” Palmer
meant so much to him. Of note, Sam stated, “He would always take my
phone call.”

Sam went onto describe that whenever he called his grandfather,
Arnold Palmer would instinctively ask, “Where are you?” On one
particular occasion, Sam answered “I’m at home,” but decided to turn
the tables and immediately asked, “Where are you?” Dumpy’s response
was classic.

“I’m with the president,” Arnie said.

“The president of what?”

“The United States.”

“Why did you answer the phone?”

“Well, I wanted to talk to you.”

Saunders’ story was personally convicting for me as a leader. If I’m
being honest, there have been, and still are, plenty of times I do not
model to my two sons — let alone to those I’m charged with leading — the
consistent availability Arnold Palmer modeled to Sam. As I reflected deeper, however, I realized my challenge centered on the issue
of interruptions and how I respond to them.

Interruptions can come in many forms, including unexpected events,
unforeseen circumstances, and distractions from daily routines.
Interruptions may range from global pandemics to delayed flights,
suicide terrorist attacks to suicide ideation, unplanned resignations to
unanticipated visitors. As leaders, we must learn how to manage these
interruptions and to continue to lead our teams, organizations, or
communities in the right direction.

Jesus was an oft-interrupted leader. In fact, many of the miracles Jesus
performed were triggered by an interruption. For instance, the feeding
of the 5000 was initially intended to be a remote weekend getaway
with a few close friends seeking a little rest. Turning water to wine was
a last-minute favor for mom, necessitated by poor planning on the
host’s part. Healing the paralytic man only occurred after he was
unexpectedly lowered through the roof. And we could go on and on.

Author and theologian Henri Nouwen perhaps said it best on Twitter
on July 31, 2012, “I used to complain about all the interruptions to my
work until I realized that these interruptions were my work.”

The next time you begin to complain about an interruption, reframe
your outlook and look for the opportunities. While interruptions can be
frustrating to all leaders, interruptions are also the catalyst for
consequence. The impetus for impact. The stimulant for significance.

Ultimately, they are your work.

By Jason Cummins


The Most Important Work Is Unscheduled was originally published in Horizon Performance on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

You're not logged in.

Apply now to gain exclusive leader insights and connect with top industry leaders, helping your team achieve higher levels of performance.

Continue without signing up

Search

The Best Leaders Are Great Followers

Articles

What If Discipline Isn’t Enough

Blogs

6 Ways Leaders Harness Stress

Articles

Cultural Drift: The Silent Current Reshaping Organizations

Blogs

When Purpose Backfires

Articles

Of Steve Kerr and “I Don’t Know”

Blogs

Unity of Effort Required When Building Strong Teams

Articles

What 128 Miles of Ocean Taught Me About Leadership

Blogs

Our Favorite Management Tips on Giving Feedback

Articles

A Dual Approach to Leadership

Blogs

The Keys to Succeeding Under a New Manager

Articles

When Leaders Get Comfortable

Blogs

Why Should Anyone Be Led by You?

Articles

On Functional Discipline

Blogs

Empathetic Leadership Can Make or Break AI Adoption

Articles

R.A.I.S.E. the Standard: Elevating the Hard Conversation

Blogs

How family and a former Apache pilot prepared Neal Brown for UNT reload

Articles

What Is a Worker Worth? From Pay Grades to Real Contribution

Blogs

Leaders, Treat Resistance to Change as Valuable Data

Articles

Old(er)

Blogs

Our Favorite Management Tips on Organizational Change

Articles

If the FDA Doesn’t Expect Perfection, Why Do You?

Blogs

When Senior Leaders Lack People Skills, Transformations Fail

Articles

Strength Doesn’t Make You Tough

Blogs

Why Your ‘Perfect’ Life Feels So Empty

Articles

Performance Isn’t Always What You Think It Is

Blogs

In Pursuit of Presence

Articles

Stewardship: A Noble Act of Leadership

Blogs

How to Turn Individual Talent into Organizational Excellence

Articles

The Sommelier’s Sage Advice

Blogs

A New Lost Generation: Why Gen Z Is Unprepared for the Workplace

Articles

Work and Workflow Analysis: The Science Behind Smarter Work in the Age of Agent AI

Blogs