~ Please forgive me.
~ I’m genuinely sorry. How can I make it right?
~ Thank you for extending grace.
All three of those phrases require a posture of humility …and you have no idea how many times I’ve said them.
Early on in my life, I hid my mistakes ...and rarely, if ever, apologized for my behavior.
This made me almost impossible to be in a relationship with …and I owe a lot to the men I dated over the years for putting up with my arrogance.
Internally, I would move from a place of pride ...
... to self-flagellation, shaming myself for my imperfection …
… yet never acknowledging my mistakes publicly.
It’s taken me a lifetime to become friends with failure …
... and seek to be more honoring of others than worry about how I look …
… or whether I got something wrong.
This hasn’t been easy.
I grew up in a family system where you didn’t talk about the things you got wrong.
Whether it was substance abuse or teen pregnancy, poor choices or errors in judgment were swept under the rug, hoping if it wasn’t discussed that no one would notice.
Because when it was, you were fodder for the family gossip, which for me felt worse than being tarred and feathered.
So this never had me want to admit the times I got stuff wrong.
Comfort doesn’t change the world which is why I’ve taken this leadership journey.
Recently, I was in a situation where I sent information to someone’s work email that they would have preferred not to have disclosed at their place of employment.
When they shared this with me, I was aghast.
Oftentimes, I deal with someone’s personal email, and in this situation, I didn’t think to ask.
Unsure of what to do to make it right, ...I took a deep breath, humbly apologized, and asked them how I could make it right as forgiveness without restitution is still arrogance.
They extended grace – and did so, forgiving me in a way that had me feeling relieved.
And I've created a process so this doesn't happen again.
~ Please forgive me.
~ I’m genuinely sorry. How can I make it right?
~ Thank you for extending grace.
These phrases are what make leaders great.
They foster connection and the realness of being a perfectly imperfect human in the world. Because in being humble, you open the doors of your heart.
These phrases are the difference between being confident and self-aware, and prideful and self-important.
And they allow room for mistakes to be made with accountability and personal responsibility.
ACTION: The Upside Challenge for the week is to review moments when you failed. Did you use these phrases (or some variation)?
What if you had?
And when you encounter moments today and tomorrow when you don't get it right, practice these phrases:
~ Please forgive me.
~ I’m genuinely sorry. How can I make it right?
~ Thank you for extending grace.
Notice what happens in you and with the other person.
Go shine your light.