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Name of author Rick Baker, P.Eng.

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Had it with Negativity?

by Rick Baker
On May 15, 2015

If you've had it with Negativity - Step Away from it & Step Up to a better place.

Negativity - yours and your tolerance for others - it's your choice.

Yes - we all have bad days and, from time to time, most of us take our bad-day frustrations out on other people. We all find ourselves in bad moods. Most of us, from time to time, feel the need to complain about everything from the weather to our next-door neighbour. These things happen because we have developed the habit of wanting things 'our way' and the habit of being discontented when things don't happen 'our way'.

Most of us want control...control of situations, control of other people, and self-control.

Isn’t it interesting that, often, we crave the ability to control others while, at the same time, we set aside increasing our self-control?

It seems to me improving self-control does more to expand our ability to influence other people positively than any other strategy.

Yes, we cry out for help...

by Rick Baker
On May 6, 2015

When Emotional work gets too heavy, we cry out for help.

Using the Transactional Analysis “Parent-Adult-Child Model”…and some facts-of-life thinking:

  • when we are first born, we are helpless yet we have a built-in talent for crying out for help,
  • we use that talent from the start…we cry out for help,
  • we learn – crying out for help works…it’s a successful way to get attention,
  • we learn more – crying out for help actually brings the help we desire…food, comfort, other essentials,
  • we develop a habit…crying out for help,
  • when we are toddlers we notice something very surprising…we notice the word “No” and all the body language that comes with the word “No”,
  • we do not like that word “No”…it goes against our natural desires: food, comfort, curiosity, etc.,
  • we resist the word “No”,
  • we learn resistance can be futile, and
  • we learn – all of us, to carrying degrees learn – how to adapt new behaviours that help us get around the word “No”.

A small sampling of the behaviours we use to get around the word “No”:

  • we scream and scream until finally those No-sayers realize their best choice is giving in…when we grow up we may learn ‘Transactional Analysis’ people call that behaving like a child…and others call it crying out for help
  • we learn what is known as ‘Adult Behaviour’…i.e., socially-recommended stuff…this includes concepts like compromise, patience, and empathy, all of which tend to delay our near-term gratification.

Most people cry out for help [at least, every once in a while].

Some people cry out for help frequently.

Some people cry out for help at work.

Some people, on their own, have little ability to control their crying out for help.

They need help.

Using the Child from transactional analysis…

When a Child meets another Child, the response to a cry out for help is a cry for help.

We see this in our workplaces…cries for help are exchanged and cries for help escalate.

These cry-for-help versus cry-for-help interactions:

  • eat up energy…they are heavy Emotion work for all involved &
  • provide little, if any, value to anyone…either in the immediate-term or the long-term.

So, cry-for-help versus cry-for-help interactions are Problems.

There are many strategies for getting around these cry-for-help versus cry-for-help problems.

One of the best strategies is – Plan & Apply Rules. 

Rules, when set, communicated and applied properly, place limits on Emotional work. With a little knowledge and practice, Rules can significantly reduce Emotional work. When this happens, self-confidence grows. In this way, Rules are conduits for self-confidence growth.

Using the transactional analysis words, Rules help the Child to develop into an Adult.

Rules send signals that express the boundaries around rewards...be they good or be they bad. That's how Rules encourage us to perform Good Habits and help us explore New Things in order to change our Bad Habits into Good Habits.

Rules help us know when to march and when to fight. That was a lesson I learned [over time] from one of my early bosses. He said, on a number of occasions, “There is a time to march and a time to fight.” He recognized I was far too busy fighting to be marching…on a clear path let alone in time with a drummer. He knew I would fight myself out of a job.

So, he regularly reminded me there are times when marching is the best thing to do. This helped me keep my job and gain an appreciation of rules. [And, it planted the seeds that allowed me to adjust my approach, removing Bad Habits and replacing them with Good Habits…I view it as a life-long process….one worth working at continuously.]

At Spirited Leaders, marching rules have evolved into “Master Rules”. Leaders have a right to set “Master Rules”; however, we recognize some folks may really object to using those two words.

I never objected to the fact we need rules and order.

That isn’t to say I did not break the rules regularly and dispute the intelligence of certain rules. [I did that regularly, actually more often than my co-workers.] While I have resisted certain rules and cried for help in reaction to some rules and some people who delivered rules poorly, I have been comfortable with the fact rules exist and the fact rules serve a purpose.

Why all these personal comments about rules?

Because:

  1. Rules are often seen as "No"...just like the "No" we heard when we were infants,
  2. "No" messages can trigger emotions and emotions consume brain energy...and that's work, Emotional work,
  3. Emotional work is personal and each of us has to do some self-examination if we want to feel better and succeed more when we deal with other people, and
  4. if we see cry-for-help problems, and we will see them at our workplace, we need plan how to communicate more openly about them...and then, when the dust isn't swirling, we need to do that communication.

People are different; people are amazingly unique.

Yet - most people understand the need for rules. Anarchists do not. Fortunately, anarchists are few in number. We must not confuse normal human reactions with acts of anarchy. Most people resist rules - that's normal - a part of human nature. Rules remove, reduce, delay, or change rewards. That's why we resist rules. We are more prone to resist the rules that connect with our personal desires. We have an easier time accepting rules that do not conflict with our near-term desires.

Most people know we need rules. 

Most people know, at the very least, workplace rules create order by defining boundaries. When they are at work, people gain comfort when they understand the boundaries. They gain most comfort when they buy into the rules. That may not happen instantaneously...it may be a process over time.

When people understand workplace boundaries they understand why, from time to time, they will hear and see “No”.

When people understand they will hear and see “No”, they will have choices around how they are going to react to “No”. When people know they have choices, they have time to plan those choices.

People can plan how they want to react to hearing “No” at work:

  • they can respond with a cry for help [like the Child does], or
  • they can respond with making demands [like a Parent does], or
  • they can respond with Good Workplace Habits [like an Adult does], and
  • they can develop a set of responses, customized Good Workplace Habits [like a Leader must do and a Leader must help others do].

Straightforward plans & guidance, mentoring, and coaching will help people build a set of responses in the Adult Zone.

When Egoic Wings Flap Out of Control

by Rick Baker
On Apr 1, 2015

My work is more important than everyone else's.

With elevated mind I attack my business with lightning-quickness. My superior insight-gifts enable me to juggle priorities as they arrive, in a flurry, faster than real time. My superior intuition-gifts manifest themselves as canny discernments of opportunities and uncanny strategies for delivering solutions.

My talents are singular; my talents are superlative; my talents are most-worthy.

Therefore, I will not plan my work in advance.

Rather, I will recognize the perfect way to do my work the very instant it arrives.

At the instant my work arrives you better be ready to grab onto my wake and keep pace with me as I launch myself onward and upward with the greatest gusto, gusto befitting the irrepressible nature of my business. And, shame and scorn on you if you are not ready or willing or able to hang on tight as I go about my work.

Accept the fact you face no choice shy of supporting my efforts with full energy and pristine accuracy, passing my supreme-muster-tests.

So, do not question me.

So, do not argue with me.

So, do not feel you will ever be able to grasp my important ways.

Simply, do what I say as I say it.

And hang on for dear life.

Always.

Tags:

Emotions & Feelings @ Work | Humour

Personal Strength is the Heart of personal Drive

by Rick Baker
On Mar 30, 2015

Dan Pink wrote about 3 Drives:

  1. Biological Drive
  2. Reward and Punishment Drive
  3. To direct our own lives, to extend and expand our capabilities, and to make contributions

Apparently, scientific evidence shows that 3rd Drive is the most important Drive.

In a zone similar to that 3rd drive - but far more eloquent and provocative - Nietzsche wrote, “Physiologists should think again before postulating the drive to self-preservation as the cardinal drive in an organic being. A living thing desires above all to vent its strength - life as such is will to power -: self-preservation is only one of the indirect and most frequent consequences of it.”

I think the 3 most important human attributes are:

  • Intelligence
  • Self-Control
  • Drive

Every human being possesses the seeds of intelligence, self-control, and drive at birth. To a certain degree, and the degree varies from person to person, we develop these three abilities over time. The amount of intelligence and self-control we develop determines the extent we are able to express our strengths. Drive is all about putting energy to productive use...drive is innate...intelligence and self-control protect drive from negative influences [...both intrinsic and extrinsic influences].

And, no question, Nietzsche's view resonates in my mind.

A Little Argument Against Being Negative

by Rick Baker
On Mar 2, 2015

When you focus on the negatives, you snuff out other peoples candles. What's worse, you smother your own candle...giving it no chance to burn brightly. And, while you are under the power of negative thinking, even when you believe you are going the extra mile and burning your candles at both ends you will never have the chance to shine brightly.

***

Many, if not most, if not all, people have this tendency to skip over the positives and dwell on the negatives. This is part of the human condition.

For some, if not many, people 'the negatives' become the cornerstones of their character. These people are harsh on themselves and more-harsh on other people. These people concentrate on and agonize over everything from petty mistakes to style differences to weather to...etc.

Embedded in each of us there is a spark. We use our sparks to keep our motivation candles lit. We use our sparks to keep our attitudes bright. We use our sparks to generate value for ourselves and for other people.

Unfortunately, some people out there are oblivious to these sparks. Unfortunately, some people carelessly snuff out their own candles and use up their sparks trying to relight their candles, which become increasingly immune to flame. Then, under increased negativity, their candles burn ever and ever dimmer and they are compelled to go after other people's candles. 

Our energy is limited and our sparks are precious. 

Negativity is wasted energy and spark-endangering.


Inactions are as important as actions!

by Rick Baker
On Jan 29, 2015

Actions are guided more by emotions than by logic.

That is more or less common wisdom, accepted and taught by motivational gurus.

What isn't emphasized, and it should be, inactions are guided more by emotions than by logic.

Inactions are as important as actions!

Tags:

Emotions & Feelings @ Work

Copyright © 2012. W.F.C (Rick) Baker. All Rights Reserved.