Radical self-inquiry is how we learn to become more of ourselves, more like ourselves, more authentic. More human.
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I believe that better humans make better leaders. I further believe that the process of learning to lead well can help us become better humans. By growing to meet the demands of the call to leadership, we’re presented with the chance to finally, fully, grow up.
Looking back, I realize this time as the beginning of my own radical self-inquiry. My pain helped me realize that I was lost. My soul, no longer content to be ‘bruised and battered,’ took charge of my body and grabbed the attention of my conscious mind. The headaches, which continued even as the self-inquiry began, became a way for my body to say, in effect, ‘Wake the fuck up.’ For, if I didn’t wake up, my soul was going to drop me to my knees, writhing in pain.
Radical self-inquiry is the path to seeing habits and patterns. Questions that drive us toward that insight are endlessly helpful:
- ‘What parts of me are being projected onto the other person?’
- ‘How do I reclaim those parts of me?’
- ‘What do my reactions say about me?’
- ‘Why do I do what I do?’
- ‘Why do they do what they do?’
- ‘What need for love, safety, or belonging might they be trying to meet with their irrational behavior?
There’s only one way we can know if our disowned selves are calling the shots. We must take the radical step of inquiring into our selves, seeking to see ourselves with clarity, grace, compassion, and a fierce commitment to cut through our own bullshit. We open ourselves up to ways we’ve been complicit in creating the conditions we say we don’t want.
Here are your spades, questions to ask yourself so that you might reboot your leadership and move forward on your journey of growing up.
- How would I act were I to remember who I am?
- What choices would I make, what actions would I take, if I regularly said the things that needed to be said?
- Who would I become were I to be fully, completely, and wholly heard?
- What is it that I wish the people in my life understood about me?
- Who would I be without the myths I’ve told about myself; the stories that took hold when I was yearning to feel love, safety, and belonging?