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There’s a elegant, simple way to do this and there’s the other way. The other way is to employ a variety of passive, aggressive or passive-aggressive techniques to get others to behave differently. Not only is this excruciating for everyone involved, it doesn’t work. It does give us a way to occupy our days, and something to complain about in the break room. Perhaps this explains its timeless appeal.
Or, you could use the approach that drops you right into the slipstream: Change your behavior.
Oh, no, no, you say – I’m right and they are wrong, wrong, wrong. They need to change, not me. I deserve better.
Exactly. I’m not arguing with you. I’m telling you how.
But Liz, they are the ones who need to change. I’m not changing for them – why should I? It’s just not possible – I can’t do it, it’s not who I am. Besides, it’s so hard.
And yet you expect them to change. You aren’t willing or able to change, but you expect them to?
A mother brought her overweight son to Ghandi so he could tell the son to stop eating sweets. Ghandi said “Come back next week.” When they returned, Ghandi told the son to stop eating sweets. When the mother asked about the intervening week, Ghandi said “I had to see if I could do it before I could ask someone else to.”
Leadership is going first.
Be a leader. Go first.