Once upon a time there lived an
innocent, hardworking manager.
One
day he dared to wander from the safety
of his open-concept office to speak
out at a team meeting.
He was
immediately challenged, nay attacked,
by another team member and his senior
manager, embarrassing him in front of
his peers.
Plagued by downsizing,
this noble manager feared for his
job. A senior human resource
professional saved the day through
mediation.
From that day forward, the
manager carried that scar and never
trusted anyone enough to speak out
again.
I am a management consultant and
corporate coach. When it comes to
fundamentals, my work is in creating
spaces for people to make meaning, and
move forward.
We do not check our
souls at the door to the workplace.
Many of us are encountering a
relentless speeding-up of life, an
absence of thoughtfulness, fracturing
relationships, and polarized issues.
If we fail to prepare ourselves with
appropriate skills, we face the risk
of being weakened by pressure, stress,
and overwhelm at a time when our help
and our leadership are needed most.
I
offer some simple steps for making
meaning and thriving if conflict rears
its head.
1. Honor others’ choices
There are times when try as we might,
we just can’t understand other
people’s choices.
I believe that not
allowing others their choices plays a
part in conflicted or violent
situations.
I realize that for some
people limits and legislated behavior
seems to be the only thing that works,
and I do not condone violent
behavior.
And yet, if we are here to
express the uniqueness of our soul,
then at some level we are all free or
none of us are free.
And so, if you
like being able to choose the things
that you like to choose...then it
might be all right with you that
others choose the things they want to
choose.
2. Hold your colleagues in your
thoughts with deliberate intention.
Clients experiencing conflict at work
find themselves moving into worry
about the future and what is going to
happen or might happen.
Often
concerned that fears might consume or
paralyze them. Fear is often the
catalyst for some of our most positive
change.
The only way to relax and stay
relaxed is acceptance. You don't have
to agree, or follow, or condone, but
acceptance means you begin any
interaction with a serenity that
invites others to engage with you.
3. Practice Extreme Self-Care
When you travel on an airplane the
instructions are when traveling with a
child or infirm person, PUT YOUR OWN
OXYGEN MASK ON FIRST!
Scientists and physicists believe that
thoughts are not just words in your
head; they actually become units of
energy that radiate out from you and
affect your environment.
Your thoughts
largely influence your physiology,
attitudes, actions, and entire
experience of life.
Thoughts also
attract circumstances that resonate
with their own energies. In times of
stress we often forget our inherent
playfulness.
Remember your natural state your
connection to the stream of wellbeing.
Appreciate more criticize less often
Relax and become curious and playful
Fix less Savor more
4. Embracing vulnerability
I do not claim to have answers to
workplace conflict.
In my work in
leadership in Canada, Siberia, U.S.,
and Jamaica, we invite leaders to put
aside the stress of having all the
answers or pretending to have all the
answers.
Transformational leaders do
not give us the answers; they help
gather us together so that together we
can discover the answers.
By changing the way we see the world,
by noticing what we are thinking about
the world, by becoming aware of when
we are judging, of when we are
criticizing, of any time we are coming
from anything other than love, and
learning to shift that immediately, we
are bringing the world one step closer
to peace.
Early societies were built upon the
wisdom that emerged from the shared
leadership of councils.
Our future may
depend on our ability to draw that
collective wisdom into the modern
age.