TRY THIS: Choose one of the moments you identified as a low point on your timeline. Write about this event for at least twelve minutes. Just write, without editing or overthinking. Afterward, read what you wrote. What do you learn? How might these insights positively influence your life?
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TRY THIS: Take six minutes to write a letter to yourself, as if from the perspective of someone who knows you well, understands you, and wants the best for you. What would he or she say about the challenges and opportunities you are facing?
TRY THIS: To help shed some light on alignment, write for seven minutes on this topic: In what ways are my work and life aligned with what is most important to me? In what ways am I not in alignment? What actions might I take to be more aligned?
TRY THIS: Write about your own feelings of belonging and not belonging.
What groups do you belong to?
When do you feel as though you donāt belong?
What undercuts your feelings of belonging?
What supports your feelings of belonging?
Two, take the time to listen before you do anything else. You will set the tone; it will be very difficult to reset it. If you start off by imposing your views on people, youāre not going to have what you most need when you most need it - namely, the commitment of the people you need to get the work done. Even if youāre right and you end up in exactly the same place as you thought you were going to end up, the experience of stopping and doing nothing but being a very good listener for as long as you can stand it is the most important thing to do. The whole act of talking to the top people is the first step towards gaining their commitment and understanding, which you must have if you donāt get it the first time. Until you get a consensus, that everyone agrees on - these are our priorities, and hereās whoās going to work on them, and hereās how our midcourse correction is going to be if weāre not right, and here are the things we canāt put off - take as long as you can stand to get that front end clear, committed, understood, communicated, massaged, and changed.ā - Henry Schacht
Thereās one more thing that happens as I listen to life stories. I realize Iām not just listening to other peopleās stories; Iām helping them create their stories. Very few of us sit down one day and write out the story of our lives and then go out and recite it when somebody asks. For most of us itās only when somebody asks us to tell a story about ourselves that we have to step back and organize the events and turn them into a coherent narrative. When you ask somebody to tell part of their story, youāre giving them an occasion to take that step back. Youāre giving them an opportunity to construct an account of themselves and maybe see themselves in a new way. None of us can have an identity unless it is affirmed and acknowledged by others. So as you are telling me your story, youāre seeing the ways I affirm you and the ways I do not. Youāre sensing the parts of the story that work and those that do not. If you feed me empty slogans about yourself, I withdraw. But if you stand more transparently before me, showing both your warts and your gifts, you feel my respectful and friendly gaze upon you, and that brings forth growth. In every life there is a pattern, a story line running through it all. We find that story when somebody gives an opportunity to tell it.