To KEEP THE PEACE, I’d AVOID addressing what needed to be addressed.
And so THE ELEPHANT sat there.
Just starin’ at me.
Until I would craft a plan to ATTACK IT when it was sleeping.
This meant NOT COMMUNICATING with the people I loved most.
Ah, the silent treatment.
I knew how to execute it well...FAILING TO DEAL with issues so they got so big they actually hindered my own growth.
My mind was set thinking, "Not gonna go ‘there!’"
When you grow up in a household with domestic violence, FEAR becomes the norm.
You're constantly anticipating what will happen next.
Walkin' on eggshells.
Living in that environment, you may BECOME ANGRY, lashing out with reckless abandon,
- or -
operate as a PEACEMAKER and PEOPLE PLEASER. Or SHUT DOWN, or any number of survival techniques
I had learned to act in anger and then in other moments would try desperately to make peace.
I could TEAR YOU DOWN with my words and actions – and/or avoid dealing with the situation altogether, pretending nothing happened.
Perhaps also because when my family gathered, they had one volume... and the LOUDEST person won the argument.
In my smaller family unit, the one who HIT THE HARDEST won.
Ooooh-eeee, and forgiveness was never in the equation.
After watching my own Angry/Peacemaker show up enough times – and discover I wasn’t any happier when she did,
Over time and many years of inner work, I figured out the absence of conflict isn’t what creates life-giving relationships.
LOVING OTHERS for who they are, not who you want them to be, does.
I had to look at WHO I NEEDED TO BE in order to do that which, at the time, felt impossible.
~ How to engage in the conflicts that would inevitably arise... and choose to MOVE FORWARD in a way that didn’t elicit harm to myself or others.
I first became aware of the shift in my life when my cousin came to visit and said to me, “You and Jim talk to each other.”
When I asked what he meant, he said we didn’t yell or scream when we didn't agree with each other.
Wow.
My mind was blown. I'd come a long way.
Then a friend commented on my finesse in dealing with a challenging situation... and how I diffused the conflict while standing my ground.
I can admit that never could have happened years ago.
And the topic of being STRONG and VULNERABLE now more frequently shows up in messages...with friends commenting on how I live my life.
A while back my friend Jeramie Hicks wrote to me saying that I have a “softish, yet don’t-f@#&-with-me attitude.” His observation makes me laugh with appreciation.
What makes me pleased, is in recognizing the work I've done on myself, is what I've emulated--seen and aspired to-- in the best leaders that I've studied for decades. You see, leadership is an INSIDE JOB.
The BEST LEADERS - not the ones who just have a title like Founder, or CEO, or EVP - get who they are and how they live each moment matters most...
SO...
Get rid of the "junk in your own trunk" -- do that inside work-- in order to make better decisions
~ in your business
~ in your career
~ in your relationships
~ in your LIFE.
Today, I am not a peacemaker, nor am I a people pleaser, or an angry person.
I'm strong, opinionated, and outspoken, and work as a brilliance-catalyst.
I catalyze the brilliance in others because I've started with myself.
See, conflict doesn’t mean you have to fight against something and tear it apart.
Conflict can mean you’re FIGHTING FOR SOMETHING -- to make it better and stronger.
As you examine your own LEADERSHIP STYLE and reflect on where you’ve been vs. where you are today... take a close look at who you need to be to get what you want -- and where you want to move forward... because what got you HERE won't get you THERE.
Not sure how to take this leadership journey? Send me a message and let's talk.
ACTION: The Upside Challenge for the week is to:
1) identify your natural gifts and strengths, and how you make your best impact.
2) Where do you want to be as a leader?
3) What do you need, and who do you need to be in order to be that leader?