Choice muscle

As you start to flex your ability to make choices, a powerful transformation will occur. Just like the growing strength of a muscle, the ability to make small choices leads to an enhanced capacity for bigger and bigger choices. So, as you enhance your desire and ability to lead yourself, this in turn enhances your ability to lead others. People will sense that you have a level of strength and discipline in your life and will look to you for support and guidance.

Just think about the people you turn to for advice and assistance. You probably picked them because you recognized intuitively that they have the ability to make choices when facing difficult circumstances. The more you choose to choose, the more, in turn, you'll be asked to help with the choices others have to make. The possibilities are endless. You'll make contact with more and more people who have the capacity to choose their choice and you'll help people transform their lives. The world you'll be operating in will be characterized by freedom, challenge and alternatives.

Other people don't give you the power of choice. The only choice they give you is one you gave them in the first place. So don't be thankful when your company says it's going to allow you more space to make decisions or that they are going to run an empowerment programme. This is a capability you already have, and your taking up their 'offer' is just an indication of how much personal choice and control you have traded away.

Choice is lost over time though gradual erosion. In childhood, we have the absolute beliefs that we have the freedom to make decisions we believe are right. As a child we want what we want, and we want it now and we'll scream the supermarket down if we don't get it.

Erosion starts when we have to adhere to the constraints and disciplines of other people, for example, parents and teachers looking for the most painless ways to manage their lives. As we start school and work we have to trade in our right to choose in order to ensure some level of success. Then, at some point, the choices we have traded away exceed the freedoms we are left with. The net result is that we are in the choice trap. We have given away our freedom to make choices and the only way to recover it is to give up the trappings of success we'd so eagerly pursued.

Corporate slavery

Corporations are great financial providers but they don't often enable people to realize their true (and hidden) potential. I frequently meet people who work for an organization that has effectively switched off. David Mamet suggests that we permit ourselves to be treated like commodities in the hope that we may one day be regarded as valuable commodities. It's this subordination to others' wishes that offers short-term gain but leads to long-term regret over failed personal potential.

Do you say I work 'for' or 'with'?

Quick test -- if someone asks what you do for a living, do you respond with 'I work for ... ' or 'I work with ... '? The importance of this statement can never be underestimated. By simple use of the phrase 'I work for ... ' you're indicating a sense of personal slavery in exchange for a living wage. Such a mindset helps neither the individual nor the company. For the individual, it's disempowering. For the organization, it results in disempowered, disinterested employees, determined to end the day as soon as possible so they can go home and do the things they really want to do. Vast amounts of money are spent on empowerment, motivational and inspiration programmes, but it's a bit like the alcoholic who goes out every morning to buy a bottle of scotch and then spends all afternoon in counselling. The support in the afternoon is all well and good, but the focus should be on not buying the drink in the first place. So when an organization spends their money on such personal development programmes, they are fighting a losing battle.

But there is a way to change this. Rather than saying you work 'for' someone, think, feel and behave in a way that suggests you work 'with' them as an emotional, if not trading, partner. Become a business within a business. This is the challenge for people who, in contrast to operating in an open market, operate in a political market -- working for someone else in a medium/large company.

 

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(c) Mick Cope