PRICE OF
PUTDOWNS
I was so glad when
my state’s elections were over last week. In all my
years (and there have been plenty of them) I’ve never
experienced an election where, with few exceptions,
mud-slinging was the mode and name-calling was the norm.
My 83-year-old Uncle Wilbur'S take on it was, “I didn’t
go vote for any of them. From listening to commercials,
I found out they were all bad.”
I was impressed with an analogy a talk radio caller
gave. Imagine that you are going to apply for a job.
You’re sitting in the waiting room with the other
applicants. Finally, it’s your turn to go in and meet
the CEO. You begin negative talk – ad nauseum – about
the other candidates you’ve just met. The interview
time is over, and you haven’t told the prospective boss
about your qualifications and what you can do for the
company. Think you’d
get the job?
I can’t help believing that these political candidates
take this approach because they believe it works – which
is a sad commentary on the type of behavior our society
has come to tolerate and accept. Unfortunately, I see
this pattern played out every day in the workplaces with
whom I consult.
LOOK IN THE MIRROR
Just before I become too sanctimonious about all of
this, I have to examine my own habits. I invite you to
do the same.
Are there ways in which we replicate these negative
political tactics in our own lives? How often do we use
put-downs to feed our own egos?
Shall we take this eight-item quiz to take a candid look
in the mirror?
1) Do you pass along gossip with the hidden agenda of
making others look bad and yourself better by
contrast?
2) When you’re in a discussion about a conflict, do
you try to “score points” to make the other person
“lose”
(shoulder more blame), while your actions are
justified?
3) How often do you engage in ego and turf battles?
4) When was the last time you played to power game of
withholding information or assistance when you
secretly wanted to sabotage someone?
5) Have you ever used negative innuendo to call into
question someone’s character and fuel speculation and
rumor?
6) Do you use sarcasm to make others feel stupid?
7) Do you use your voice tone and body language as
secret weapons to devalue a person’s ideas or
credibility?
8) Do your feel threatened when someone else
succeeds, somehow feeling that this makes you “less
than?”
At the end of this election day, we had the results
and, no doubt, some of the mudslinging was rewarded with
votes. Pity.
It’s also a pity that in our lives, we sometimes feel
reinforced for negative interpersonal methods – a
momentary adrenalin rush, a burst of self righteousness,
a fiendish feeling of satisfactions, or a “prize” won
unjustly. But in the end, we lose. We lose
relationships. Real, heart-felt success eludes us. We
sacrifice the ability to look ourselves in the mirror
with genuine self respect.
Yogi Berra said, “When you come to a fork, in the road,
take it.”
Taking the high road – politically and personally - gets
my vote.
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Bev@MagneticWorkplaces.com or 601-264-0890