I hit a game-changer
this weekend. I had a significant ‘Ah-ha’ moment that shook my paradigm and I
want to share it with you. I was MCing an event this past weekend for a group
of professionals. It was well organized, all the speakers were on time with
their material, and it flowed rather well. During the afternoon break a couple
of people came up and complimented me on how I was doing. I smiled and thanked
them, but the problem was that inside I was dying quietly. I did not really
think that it was going that well, I did not feel I was connecting with the
audience. All in all I was rather dissatisfied with my performance. I relayed
this to a friend of mine later that night. He threw a quote back at me that
blew me away. He said ‘Just keep doing You. You doing You…Rocks!’
That was it. End of
discussion. I did not have to try harder, up my game, fake it on the stage. He
had seen me MC before, knew I had the skills and ability. All I had to do was
get out there and do what I already did; openly, without shame or reservation.
When can you be
you? It is easy to be self critical and say ‘well if people saw the real me
they would hate it’. Instead we put up walls to stop people connecting in case
they get to close. We shy away from taking up positions of responsibility
because we feel unready for them, because we are not perfect. At the other extreme
we know we are not perfect so we fake it, and we fake it so much that we forget
who we really are and live a life that is a series of lies with no call to accountability.
I am not suddenly
saying there is no room for personal growth. I could have done a better job
MCing, there are a couple of points that I need to fix next time in presenting.
That part of growth will always be there. However, I can have the confidence to
step out, as me, with my personality, my way of doing things and have a
significant impact. So how can I continue to be the best ‘Me’, how can you be
the best ‘You’?
One of the big hindrances
to stepping out where we are now is our past. Our fear of previous failures and
thoughts of what people may think of ‘the boy from the rural areas’ hinder us
from doing our best work. Embrace your backstory and move forward from it. Your
backstory, the bit in your life about where you came from, can be the most
powerful storytelling tool you have. You cannot live in your past, but you can
use it to propel long lasting and meaningful change. Not only that, it makes a
great story; one that inspires others. The story of the CEO who used to walk to
work in the founding days of him company resonates with us. Being comfortable
with your past, being open about how it has helped you become who you are today
is part of being comfortable with ‘You’. Many people, when they look at their
lives, find something to be passionate about rooted deep within an experience in
their past.
You have to be
passionate about what you do. If you are not passionate about your business and
the transformation it is making in it and through it I doubt that you will be
either happy or successful. People can tell when you do not have a passion for
something and will fail to connect. Millennials; people born 1980 to the mid 2000’s,
don’t just want a competitive salary, they want to be connected to something
bigger than themselves. This applies to them as both as employees and as
clients. Being you means allowing that passion to the forefront of your life.
Tied to passion is
motive. What drives you? Making money or making a difference? Great motives are
not self-serving. Donald Trump is steamrolling ahead in the US Republican
primaries because he is coming across as motivated about people. Regardless of
your personal opinion about him, his ‘Make America Great Again’ campaign has gained
appeal among voters because the message it brings is looking to build up citizens to positions of
success; the perceived motive is less about him attaining presidency (he already has success and money) and more
about what the people stand to gain.
The motive that keeps you going when under
pressure is one that is less about you and more about others. A personal motive
is easy to give up on because the only person it affects is you. When you have
set a motives about changing the lives of others you are less likely to quit
because the success of others rests on your success. If my motive when on stage
is about me looking good as an MC then I will fail to deliver, if it is about
the crowd having a great interactive experience that connects them to the
material then it changes the way I behave.
Under times of
pressure it is easy to let passions be stifled or to twist motives to the most
basic and self-serving. I am encouraging you today to begin the task of
recalibrating. Rekindle that which you are passionate about and see where you
can bring it to bear in the position you are in-especially if you have taken on
a job just because it is something to bring an income and not something that
excites you.
Each day we pass
up opportunities to do our best work because of fear. Do not let that happen
today. Unleash your A-game into your work and life wholeheartedly and
completely. Remember just keep doing You. Because you doing You…Rocks!
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