Cutting the Head Off the Monster
Her husband complains about not getting enough action in bed, yet offers little help with the kids or the housework. In the workplace, his employees are criticized for being under-engaged, yet he hasn’t taken the time to learn anything about their strengths and priorities. With friends, he only talks about…
Asking for Help
An emerging awareness of the need for help usually begins long before the request. Perhaps there’s pride on the line for proving self-sufficiency. Maybe the benefit of a few failures hasn’t yet been realized. For some, the extra resources aren’t within reach. Either way, the request for help frequently escalates to a crisis state before it’s communicated.
You Don’t Own Anything
Even if the idea germinates in your brain, it becomes jointly owned as soon as it’s exposed to feedback. The original form evolves. Often, this is how teams are built. We run something past a trusted family member, friend, or coworker and our perspective morphs to include their reaction. We seek a second opinion and the future becomes a ‘choose your own adventure’ book.
Tension and Resolution
Conflict, by nature, is uncomfortable. It’s difficult to see that it has a purpose when tension is mounting. Even if you knew that the friction had an instrumental role in pushing growth, the anticipated pain might not justify the benefit. It’s easier to find a way to make it go away and get back to familiarity. Growth hurts.
What’s Wrong With This Picture?
Unprecedented macroeconomic pressures are creating vulnerability in nearly every industry. Public health workers face rising patient acuity with fewer resources. Medical research must be advanced without funding. Education can no longer honor diversity without disabling consequences. Law firms opting not to capitulate to the party line are blacklisted. Retail sellers must decide whether to eat costs or pass them on to their customers. Working class immigrants fear deportation threats. Supply chain ports must prepare for shrinking volumes. Auto manufacturers need to rethink where to buy parts to assemble their cars. Venture capitalists and private equity firms are having trouble finding investors willing to bet on the future. The list goes on. No industry is immune.
The Power of Nonverbal Communication
It doesn’t take much of a physics lesson to understand how people share energy. Often, you can feel the vibe of a room within seconds of entering. Sometimes it’s just the space but, most of the time, it’s the people in the space. Emotions are contagious, positive or negative. You can lift or sink someone with a glance. And whether your energy-sharing partner is a friend or a stranger, you can be knocked off balance by imperceptible shifts in their mood.
The Case for Returning to the Workplace
If you are really going to make me add a 90-minute commute to my workday, I’ll have to work for an hour and a half less. Fine. As long as we’re not counting billable hours, I’ll exchange productivity for whatever benefits you decide result from water cooler conversation. Also fine. I’ll catch the bus, ride the elevator, park myself at my workstation, and wait for you to drop by my office with a creative idea that never would have happened if not face-to-face.
At What Point Are You No Longer the Author?
LinkedIn offered to rewrite my blog post using AI before I pressed the ‘publish’ key. While I declined, I wondered at what stage of the process I would cease to be the author of my own article. Presumably, the AI tool would make it more readable and likely reach more readers. A better blog could be achieved if I was willing to relinquish authorship. Beyond the philosophical debate around AI, it got me thinking about basic creativity and collaboration.
Insight to Action
Those of us who keep bookmarks in more than one book are at risk for spending more time learning than we are actually applying the lessons to daily life. Many of the books I absorb and recommend to others (including the books I’ve authored) tell you what to do and why to do it. They don’t, however, activate change on their own. Insight and action are very different competencies.
The Case for Flight When Crisis Occurs
When you consider the fight/flight/freeze options that our instincts select, remember that you don’t have a choice. When an emergency occurs, no one stops to consider their response options. Our next action (or inaction) is already wired into our neurology. You’ll either go toward, escape, or become a statue with all five senses consuming data. Look back on any crisis in your history and review your response if you are interested in learning how you are built.
The Catch Phrases That Stick in Your Head
Like a musical hook, there are catch phrases people say that become earworms. They come from parents, mentors, teachers, and coaches. They are kernels of wisdom that simplify our complex world. They end up on posters, mission statements, and locker room bulletin boards. They shape our perspective whenever generic guidance is needed. Below are a few examples of ‘truisms’ that, upon further review, may not be true after all.
Pendulums Swing Both Ways
Difference of opinion is usually the fodder for division. Us and them factions split easily. Yet, both extremes are needed to understand the whole picture. Darkness makes us appreciate light. Active phases need dormant periods for refueling. Conservative views provide a counterbalance for liberal perspectives. Embracing opposites as necessary components of the whole is far more valuable than outright rejection. Each side relies upon the other. Consider the advantage that welcoming dichotomy brings to teams.