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      Feedback to See How Others See Me 
        By Jim Clemmer 
         
        "Hearing 'reflective back talk' from friends, colleagues, 
        spouses, and significant others allows us to "true" ourselves 
        in relation to their perceptions. With this input we can integrate our 
        internal conversations with data from the external world to enrich the 
        process of knowing ourselves better." — Warren Bennis and Joan 
        Goldsmith, Learning to Lead 
         
        An elderly gentleman went to the doctor and with a complaint 
        about a gas problem. "But," he told the doctor, "it really 
        doesn't bother me too much. When I pass gas they never smell and are always 
        silent. As a matter of fact, I've passed gas at least 10 times since I've 
        been here in your office. You didn't know I was doing it because they 
        don't smell and are silent." 
         
        "I see," the doctor replied as he examined him. When he was 
        finished, he wrote a prescription and handed it to his patient. Take these 
        pills three times a day and come back to see me next week," he instructed. 
         
        The next week the gentleman was back. "Doctor," he exclaimed, 
        "I don't know what medication you gave me, but now my gas... although 
        still silent... stinks terribly!" 
         
        The doctor retorted, "Good! Now that we've cleared up your sinuses, 
        let's work on your hearing." 
         
        An extremely useful step in our leadership development is seeing myself 
        as others see me. So I need to understand their perceptions of my behavior. 
        My effectiveness in leading, relating to, or working with others is highly 
        dependent on their perceptions of me. I may not agree with what they see, 
        but their perception is our reality. Those around me have an opinion of 
        who they think the real me is. Their perceived "truth" becomes 
        the way they treat me. Their perception forms their part of the reality 
        of our relationship. 
         
        The discussion of perceptions is often a thorny one as we work with individuals, 
        teams, and organizations to improve their effectiveness. For example, 
        we tend to define levels of service or quality through our own eyes and 
        values. That may not be the way our customers or partners define it. There 
        is no objective definition. There is only the reality that I see, you 
        see, he sees, or she sees. Our personal perception is our personal reality. 
        There's no accounting for taste. Everyone forms his or her own opinion 
        no matter how wrong we may think it is. If we're going to improve the 
        service or quality delivered, we need to first understand how those we're 
        serving, or producing for, perceive service or quality. 
         
        Like beauty, service, quality, honesty, or integrity, leadership is in 
        the eye of the beholder. I judge myself by my intentions. Others judge 
        me by my actions. My intentions and the actions that others see may be 
        miles apart. Unless I know that, I am unlikely to change my actions or 
        try to get others to see me differently. I can become trapped in their 
        reality and get very frustrated when they don't respond to me as I'd like. 
         
        Getting feedback from others on our personal behavior is tough. It often 
        hurts. The truth may set me free, but it will likely make me miserable 
        first. When we get feedback, we nod our head to the positive and supportive 
        statements that agree with our own views. However, when it comes to our 
        weaknesses or improvement areas we take those to heart and sometimes dwell 
        far too heavily on them. We can get ten rave reviews for work we've done 
        and one critical comment. That one comment hurts. If we're not careful, 
        it can fester into doubts and a loss of confidence. As a result, the truth 
        that may set us free of our less productive habits becomes the truth we 
        prefer not to hear. That's human nature. What stunts our personal growth 
        and gets us stuck in a rut is when we refuse to hear any more of it. As 
        a parent, boss, or appointed leader of some type, it's too easy to hide 
        behind our position and avoid feedback. 
         
        The wider the gap between our own perceptions of areas to improve and 
        the feedback we're getting the more we may experience the "SARAH 
        process." This approach comes from grief counseling. The first letter 
        of each stage spell "SARAH." The stages are Shock, Anger, Resentment, 
        Acceptance, and Help. When I get open and honest feedback on how others 
        perceive me, I may be shocked, angry, and resentful. But unless I accept 
        that as their perceptions of the real me (their reality of me), I'll never 
        progress to the final stage of self-help or seeking help from others in 
        taking action on the feedback and making the changes called for. 
         
        Human nature seems to endow us with the ability to size up everybody but 
        ourselves. As painful as it may be, feedback is a big contributor to our 
        leadership development. Feedback is often a key element in personal learning 
        and improvement. It helps us to size up and see ourselves as others see 
        us. We may not agree with the perceptions of others, but unless we know 
        how we're perceived, we stand little chance of improving our relationships 
        and effectiveness with them. Feedback also gives us another opportunity 
        to reflect on our behavior from the view point of others. It provides 
        outside perspectives on the exploration of our inner space. 
         
        Not all feedback is valid and helpful. Ultimately I have to decide what 
        fits and what doesn't. I have to choose the feedback that rings true to 
        me. According to an ancient story, a man once approached Buddha and began 
        to call him ugly names, Buddha listened quietly until the man ran out 
        of insults and had to pause for breath. "If you offer something to 
        a person and that person refuses it, to whom does it belong?" asked 
        Buddha. "It belongs, I suppose, to the one who offered it," 
        the man said. Then Buddha said, "The abuse and vile names you offer 
        me, I refuse to accept." The man turned and walked away. 
      
      
         
      
         
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             Excerpted from Jim's fourth bestseller, Growing 
              the Distance: Timeless Principles for Personal, Career, and Family 
              Success. View the book's unique format and content, Introduction 
              and Chapter One, and feedback showing why nearly 100,000 copies 
              are now in print at www.growingthedistance.com. 
              Jim's new companion book to Growing the Distance is The 
              Leader's Digest: Timeless Principles for Team and Organization Success. 
              Jim Clemmer is an internationally acclaimed keynote speaker, workshop/retreat 
              leader, and management team developer on leadership, change, customer 
              focus, culture, teams, and personal growth. His web site is www.clemmer.net. 
               
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