Week 4 Notes
It seems even as children we have a desire to hold back the truth. We saw this demonstrated well in Joeseph Grenny’s short videography his son produced. Seriously, how do you tell a friend his “dead” grandmas brownies are awful.
Maybe if we were taught how to handle our emotions at an early age, it wouldn’t be such a challenge when we become an adult. Let’s look at some of the takeaways from our discussion this week.
– The “Greatest Myth” – Tell the truth or keep a friend? Why is this a choice? Why do we think that by telling the truth it means were going to lose something of value to us? Which leads us to the feeling that certain things are “undiscussable”.
– We know the risks of confronting something; added stress or losing job security.
– Some common undiscussables are; The hard headed boss, hygene, or gender issues.
– We learned our first discipline is to honesty, then focus on positivity when seeking a solution.
– Go into it as a partner. Demonstrate we have a mutual purpose.
– Go into it with a level of respect for what the other brings to the group. As we approach this, purify your thoughts don’t perform them.
– Don’t allow your emotions to sidetrack you from achieving results. Stay focused on facts, not feelings.
– What topics do you shy away from when on the clock? How many undiscussables do you have at work? When leading remember these 4 focus points:
1. Model
2. Teach
3. Coach
4. Measure
With effort and dedication, maybe, just maybe, we can be at a meeting and safely say with respect – “These brownies SUCK!”……. and not get fired.
