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| Building Blocks |
January, 2005
Volume 8, Number 1
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Help! I Can’t See My Blind Spot!
I’m on the 17th floor of a
hotel in San Jose, CA tonight, watching an endless river of headlights on the
freeway. I’m reminded that life
moves on at it’s own pace, whether we see it or not.
We all have blind spots.
Maybe we’re resisting something, or maybe we’re in complete denial
about something. It’s really hard
to know, because we can’t see it. Hence
the term, “blind spot.” Others
may see the issue as clear as day, even point it out to us, but somehow we are
stuck in our personal lens.
Coaching can help to bring light to blind
spots. Because the coach has no
agenda but the client’s (as opposed to a partner, manager, friend, or
colleague, who maybe can’t help but have an agenda), the blind spots more
easily spotted. And once visible, a
blind spot can be addressed, and in fact often screams to be addressed. Executive coaching is particularly valuable in this regard,
as an executive often is not challenged on his or her blind spots.
Setting goals, creating vision statements,
and designing action plans are some of the foundational steps in coaching.
Blind spots are one of the more subtle aspects of the art of coaching,
yet can yield enormous transformational growth.
This is because blind spots are what may have kept us stuck for years,
wondering why we couldn’t seem to change things.
Is it important to be aware of your blind
spots? Absolutely!
Why? Because effective
action and communication can only be taken from a place of clarity; clarity can
only be obtained by seeing the whole picture; and blind spots obscure the whole
picture, or give a false picture. Further,
we tend to blame or are frustrated with other people when we have a blind spot,
not realizing that it may be our own resistance or denial that is triggering
their behavior toward us.
Consider:
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John is frustrated with his team at work.
He feels others are not “pulling their weight,” which is leaving
him feeling like he is the only one truly committed, and he’s losing his
motivation, feeling like a victim, and running around with a very short fuse
at the office.
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Donna is at her wits’ end with her husband.
She tries to communicate with him, has asked that they go to
counseling and tries to be supportive of his needs.
He is unresponsive to all of her efforts, and she is getting angrier
and angrier.
Both of the clients in these examples had
blind spots that, when identified, shifted the situations forward dramatically.
In the first example, John had a personal standard around what “pulling
your weight” looked like. For
John, that meant being focused on his tasks while at work, keeping socializing
to a minimum, meeting deadlines and staying at the office until 6:30 every
night. It turned out that for
John’s team members, “pulling your weight” meant contributing innovative
ideas, being part of a supportive culture (which included an element of
socializing at the office), and working on tasks as a team.
John’s blind spot was that his team members actually viewed John as the
one not pulling his weight, and resented his constant irritability and blaming. John was playing by different rules, and expecting his
colleagues to not only know his rules, but to abandon the group’s rules, and
play by his instead.
This was a game which was both
unwinnable and unhappy. Once John
saw his role in the unhappiness, he was able to make a choice about joining the
game that was available, or leaving his position to find a job where the game
being played by the team was more compatible with his natural style.
Recognizing that he was at choice created a level of acceptance that was
not previously possible, and he was able to find a way to be part of his
existing team.
In the second example, Zelda could not
understand why all her sincere efforts at improving her relationship with her
husband were being ignored. Her
blind spot was that she came from the perspective that of course her husband
valued their relationship as much as she did, and that of course he would want
to make it as wonderful as it could be. What
she hadn’t heard was that he had moved past the place of dissatisfaction with
the marriage to a place of not wanting the marriage.
He had told Zelda this, and was expecting them to be getting the process
of divorce going.
Zelda’s resistance/denial of this message
kept her in a place of blaming her husband for not doing something he’d
already told her he wasn’t going to do, as well as setting herself up for
constant hurt and disappointment by continuing to show up to play a game without
anyone to play with. When she saw
that her blind spot of not hearing her husband saying the marriage was over was
actually a source of her husband’s cold front, Zelda found that her acceptance
opened up their communication again as they confronted what the next steps for
them would be.
How do you know if you’re in a blind
spot? Feelings of
self-righteousness or justification are often running rampant, as are blame and
feeling misunderstood. You might
feel helpless, as you’ve tried everything to improve a situation, and others
Just Don’t Get It.
Here are some steps toward bringing light
to a blind spot:
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Notice when you’re angry or frustrated.
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Ask yourself what you’re resisting or denying about
that situation (avoid wondering what someone ELSE is resisting or denying
– keep the focus on yourself)
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What might your resistance be triggering in other people?
Does that take you back to the first step of anger or frustration on
your part?
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If you shifted from resistance to acceptance, would the
original situation that made you angry still have the same sting?
When a blind spot comes to light, it
can be an incredibly humbling feeling. Be
gentle with yourself, as we all have blind spots, all the time. Growth as a human being is about learning from them, moving
past the current ones, and using that learning to deepen our relationships and
our ability to be effective in the world. Having
an outside perspective and partner such as a coach makes this endeavor flow more
easily, and can help shift the perspective to one of discovery.
© Copyright Magellan Enterprises, all rights reserved
Reach Me: Telephone: (970) 259-4847; Fax: (970) 259-4874
E-mail: ginger@magellangj.com
Web: www.magellangj.com
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