12 de noviembre de 2009
La Voz perdida
Conversing openly with other people can take enormous courage!
Think about the number of times you have withheld how you feel to a loved one
because your long-held beliefs were in conflict or you chose not to speak up
during a staff meeting to reveal your ideas out of concern of being ostracized
or even fired. Our relationships are defined by the conversations we have (or
do not have) with the people in our lives.
Courage comes from the medieval Old French word corage,
meaning “heart and spirit.” When you speak from your heart and spirit you are
being true to yourself. Simply using the word “courage” to describe an action
and outcome activates your voice and sets a context for positive action.
One of my corporate coaching clients said, “I am so used to
‘filtering’ myself I almost forget I am doing it. My test of courage has been
being able to share openly my deepest dreams and fears and true thoughts. With
one exception in my life I have always kept a certain core totally to myself.
Yet, when I was able to let go and candidly share this core, I felt enormously
liberated.” This sixty-one year old client yearns to speak from her heart. Once
she attains this level of self-realization (and eventually self-fulfillment)
she is able to demonstrate her authenticity. Then, when her time comes to pass
on, she will not be filled with regret or resentment.
Authentic means “genuine; real.” When you combine the original
meaning of courage (“heart and spirit”) with authenticity, you get the true
you! If you long to alter the context of your life, to break through and
achieve your noblest aspirations, then speaking the language of courage is the
right tool.
You can determine the quality of your relationships by analyzing your
conversations. For example, do you stay resentful toward your boss or partner telling
others of his/her faults or do you take a stand in courage and make a
declaration to speak to him/her? Ask yourself these few questions:
·
Am I using courage to declare my
feelings?
·
How do I create my conversations
with others?
·
Do I blame my boss/mate instead of
generating a new context for listening?
·
Do I take responsibility to speak up
to reveal the truth?
The action of conversing with courage makes something new happen.
Below are three examples of how you can converse using the language of courage:
·
Become a detached “observer” of
yourself. When you notice you hesitate to share something that you have
determined “should” be shared, start with this phrase: “I want you to know that
it takes courage to share…” This sentence sets the stage for a different kind
of listening and helps you to be authentic.
·
Begin to notice when you feel
regret(s) about not speaking up. An editor of a newspaper wrote an article
about long-held regret called “Learning to Speak Up.” She still lives with a
regret that took place twenty years ago in a high school gym. Painfully, Angela
wrote that she still kicks herself for not speaking up about the horrible gym
incident she witnessed. She wrote, “I should have offered her some compassion.
I guess I didn’t want to make a bad situation worse…I failed my schoolmate that
day, and I’m sorry. But I’m also grateful to her, because the incident she
endured taught me to never be silent again.”
·
Watch for this
phrase: “I wanted to say…” One evening, sitting in a restaurant with my friend
Daniel, he excused himself to go to the men’s room. Two women were sitting
kitty corner from our table talking about an incident at work. Based on my
observation, they seemed to be in well-established positions, but that doesn’t
really matter. One woman leaned her shoulders over the table’s edge and said to
her friend, “You know, I really wanted to say…you have an issue with…” Her
friend said, “But you didn’t.” Her friend’s response was correct. The other
woman chose to withhold her true opinions. Women have a tendency to swallow
their words of wisdom. They are reluctant to speak up with contrary or during “against
the odds” situations. Why? They may lose their jobs/image/esteem/friend
(whatever!).
It takes conscious choice and effective action to dive into your
heart and spirit to claim who you really are. Conversing with courage means you
are unwilling to let anyone else design your life. Then you are not filled with
regret.
Moral of the story: Design your life with the courage to converse. Listen to
your heart and choose to transform yourself through language. Don’t simply
visit this world.
Share some of your stepping up moments at
work. E-mail me at
and enter “courage” in the subject line. swalston@walstoncourage.com
Etiquetas:
conversar,
coraje,
mujeres y coraje,
sandra walston
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