The,Anatomy,Change,Dorothy,not DIY The Anatomy of a Change
Normal 0 false false false MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable{mso-style-name:"Table Normal";mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0;mso-tstyle-colband-size:0;mso-style-noshow:yes;mso-style-parent:"";mso-padding-alt:0in When starting a new work at home business it is very easy to become consumed by it. We spend so much time trying to get the business up and running that we may end up becoming burned out and lose our motivation. There is so much to learn and
Dorothy (not her real name) started coaching two months ago with a simple goal: to learn more about Emotional Intelligence.During the 8 weeks, shes talked about every facet of her life, and as shes talked, shes realized, in combination with her growing Emotional Intelligence, that things are not as they should be. In our last session she announced I dont know whats happened. Im not sleeping. Im crying all the time. I cant focus on my work.I asked her why. She named some clearly-related external events a chronic problem with a family member recently exacerbated, a business in crisis which was only slowly turning around, a new and difficult employee BUT But, she said, I know its more than that. Or less than that. Or something. I dont know. Im confused. Shes struggling. Shes too mature to say, Susan, youve made me miserable. I came to you for coaching and look at me now! but I suspect thats what shes feeling. What has happened?THIS IS TYPICAL WHEN WE CHANGE, WHEN WE START CREATING SYSTEMIC SOLUTIONS. Will it work instantly? asks Joe Flower, change guru. (It meaning the proposed solution.) No, he answers. Most good systemic solutions make the immediate symptoms of the problem worse at first.Why is this? Because we turn and face what isnt working along with the negative feelings this has engendered all along that we were stuffing down, coping with, denying, or choking on. (What a poor use of energy!) In other words, we quit pretending. Dorothy has been existing in a situation thats not sustainable. When it made her miserable, she redoubled her efforts to cope with it. She was determined to rise about the situation, to persevere, and to prove what shes made of, to use her own words. She had hoped Emotional Intelligence would teach her how to be happy while she continued doing things that prevent her from being happy. Not!HARD QUESTIONSThe coachs job is to ask the hard questions. Often as shes talked, Ive asked, Why would you ? and Why do you ? and Why are you X, when Y ? Each time she falls silent. Or laughs a nervous laugh. I guess you have a point, she says. When actually Ive said nothing. Ive made no point. Ive simply asked a question. The coaching client has their own answers.At times Ive thrown in Dr. Phils great question, And how has this been working for you? With each round of apologetic whining, denial, rationalization, and defense on her part, and hard questions on my part, she has come closer to the sort of self-awareness upon which Emotional Intelligence is built and through which change can occur.Why DO I do this? she asks me. Its making me sick. (Shes talking about recurring back pain and digestive problems.) Well, if the why is a question for therapy, in several months she might arrive at who knows what. Thats the province of therapy, and Im a coach. To me, her ready reply of Why DO I do that I must be crazy will do. Its for sure she isnt acting in her own best interest, and Im equally sure she can learn to. And because I neither affirm shes crazy, nor commiserate that its hopeless and shes helpless, nor offer premature solutions, Why DO I do this? becomes Why on earth AM I doing this? and shortly, How about if I stop doing this AND DO SOMETHING ELSE? I then supply strategy and tools. The client supplies the courage and the energy. ITS NOT THERAPYMotives, diagnoses, past experiences, childhood traumas, and psychodynamics dont really need to figure into the picture. Its just (just!) a matter of finding out what works and what doesnt, and replacing something that doesnt work with something that does. Coaches supply the how to the new things to try, the new ways of doing things. We clarify patterns. We listen and ask questions. We draw out the clients inner wisdom. We get them back in touch with their intuition (an EQ competency), our surest guide. The client must supply the misery that motivates. To do this, they need to be reintroduced to how what theyre doing is making them feel. Enter Emotional Intelligence.WHY EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE Our emotions are our guides. They tell us whats working and what isnt; what feels good and what doesnt; what we must address and what we can ignore; what we want more of and what we want less of. In order to learn their message, we must first pay attention to them, in an action-oriented sort of way. Instead of getting stuck in our misery, we use it to catapult out of the situation. Like many people who have strayed off course and are temporarily mired in misery, Dorothy had shut down. In order to function, she had become numb, driving herself onward with will power and determination. Not unlike beating the dead horse, the thinking brain was in charge of the program, when the emotional brain was also needed. Motivation is not a thinking word, its a feeling thing. As Dorothy learns solution-focused problem-solving instead of emotion-focused problem-solving, she begins to be able to see more clearly how she has arranged her life, and at the same time, starts feeling about it again. So theres discomfort. No pain, no gain. PERSONAL POWERGood systemic solutions make the symptoms of the problem worse at first, and thats where Dorothy is right now. Its a transition. In order to make the changes, she has to feel the discomfort. If she didnt, wheres the motivation? If she didnt, wheres the Personal Power(an EQ competency)? In order to change, we have to believe we can make changes and handle our life. Its the opposite of the victim stance, which is hopeless and helpless. If we dont own our responsibility for where we are, we cant claim the power it will take to change it.The transitional period is inherently uncomfortable, and cause for celebration. Thats why, I tell her, people dont want to change. Theyre not willing to go through that period of dis-ease. NO QUICK FIXESQuick fixes dont work in coaching. Systemic solutions do, and thats where Emotional Intelligence comes in. Asking the client each time how theyre feeling physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually gets them grounded and centered. Even if the answer is terrible in any category, it is still grounding. Whats chaotic is not to know. What we dont know has great power over us. Knowing good or bad allows us to make changes. And knowing means having the words to describe it. Emotional Intelligence supplies this vocabulary.SKILL SETSAdministering an EQ assessment such as the EQ-Map® can identify the competencies that need bolstering. Emotional Intelligence is a set of competencies that can be learned. TAKE HOME POINTDeveloping your Emotional Intelligence will take you light years ahead in your ability to make the changes youll need to be making over and over again in your life. It gives you the ultimate tool. How about giving it a try? Take the EQ-Map® and find out whats going on. Then take The EQ Foundation Course© on the Internet, and combine it with EQ coaching and putting your new skills into practice. Most clients report immediate positive results in their lives.
The,Anatomy,Change,Dorothy,not