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THE WEATHER WHERE YOU ARE
Dear MMC Readers:
My office is in the process of being renovated,
a topic on which I'm sure there will be one or more MMC messages to come.
In the meantime, I'm "recycling" a message from several years
ago. The topic of our "personal weather" was a good reminder for
me and I hope for you this week as well. Have a sunny, wonderful week!
Betty
What's the weather where you are? Not just in your city or neighborhood,
but in the 10-foot radius around you personally. In Charles Dickens' classic,
A Christmas Carol, Dickens describes Scrooge as someone who "carried
his own low temperature about with him, and he didn't thaw it one degree
at Christmas." In several coaching conversations this past week, I've
asked my clients what kind of personal climate they're spreading at work
or wherever they happen to be.
The subject has come up because they've been
distressed about "stormy" conditions in their work places. As
their coach, I've been the one to remind them that none of us controls the
entire climate where we live and work, but we can control the climate we
bring to life, work and situations we encounter.
How about you? What is your personal climactic
zone like? Do you bring sunshine and blue skies wherever you go? Or do you
leave behind clouds and rain with complaints, negativity and pessimism?
Do you bluster and blow with your opinions and high intensity emotions so
that people are knocked off balance by your presence? One of the hallmarks
of emotional intelligence is being able to monitor our emotions as well
as our emotional impact on others, and moderate them to achieve positive
results.
You may be wondering how you can create a positive
personal climate when others around you are being negative, pessimistic
or spreading gloom? How can you stay sunny and relatively cloud-free when
it feels like you're in the midst of a storm at sea?
There are two ways (I'm sure many others as well)
that will allow you to spread more sunshine than rain: The first and perhaps
most important is to CHOOSE how you want to think, feel and react to the
circumstances around you. Ask yourself whether the thoughts you're thinking
and the emotional baggage you're carrying around are improving your circumstances
or making them worse. If you're around someone who is spreading showers
of doom and gloom, either change the subject or, if necessary, remove yourself
from the situation. If you find yourself regularly in the company such folks,
it's time to set some boundaries so they don't continue to rain on your
parade. A boundary may be as simple as asking a question: "How is this
helping our situation here?", or assertively requesting that the person
not use you as their dumping ground.
The second key to spreading sunshine instead
of gloom is to remind yourself to focus your thoughts and energy ONLY on
those things you have control over. Griping and complaining about someone
or something is the equivalent of spinning your wheels when you're stuck
in the mud. What you focus on tends to expand, so stay focused on that which
you can control or at least positively influence.
Remember: you control your own personal weather
zone. And the more consistently you speak and act in ways that spread sunshine
instead of rain, the more you become an influence that can positively affect
the larger climate of your family, your workplace and even your community.
This week, pay particular attention to the weather where you are, and if
it's not warm and sunny, start making the minute-by-minute mood and attitude
choices that will change your personal weather conditions.
Abraham Lincoln said it well: "Most folks are about as happy as they
make up their minds to be." How about you?
Quote of the Week:
"A study found that negative employees can scare off every customer
they speak with — for good."
~~From "How Full is Your Bucket?" by Tom Rath and Donald
O. Clifton
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