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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
There are so many of us who appreciate, respect and benefit from your work - and your generosity with that work.
Keep focused on your own view of your reflection, but if the mirror fogs, just glance our way!
I particularly like your advice regarding "big ears". As an executive at a software company this is something I try to constantly focus on. While I have a clear vision of where we are going (the goals) and strong opinions regarding the tactics to employ I leave my ears, and eyes open. Those that I work with often have better ideas than I do about how to get the job done.
Thanks,
John
http://twitter.com/JohnFMoore
Thanks for the words today. They fit within my day's work in so many ways. I often tell my kids that they need to remember words can hurt people, and I truly hope no one did that to you today. However, you are out there so often there are bound to be those who disagree with you, and that's what makes our country great. As you said, though, we shouldn't take it personally...which is often easier said than done. Thank you for being one of those who make us all think.
Maybe if you are always true to yourself, with compassion, you find the balance.
This teaching grounds compassion in self, and then radiates out to all others.
A relaxing into who you are so deep that no criticism pertains.
An awareness that allows you and not-you simultaneously.
Now I'm even happier I picked up "Self-Esteem" today on your advice. Funny, I'm on the other end of the spectrum, being a boomer marketing consultant rushing quickly to acquire social media value and skills to add to my practice. My point is, having to unlearn everything one knows will mess with a guy's self-esteem too. You were the first guru I was referred to, and subscribed to. I'm glad. Nice job laying it out there.
At first I didn't pick up on it right away and so I let it affect me. Till one day a great friend of mine through a series of talks pointed it all out to me (my mood, my lack of focus, etc). We talked about how I was letting this things affect me.
I started to regain focus. I stopped listening to the negative stuff. I acknowledged the constructive criticisms; those are always welcome. And once I did, man was I making moves and pushing forward with a stack of confidence that couldn't deter me.
We'll always have critics. That's how it goes. We can't please everyone all the time. And that's ok. If you listen to the constructive criticisms, and weed out all the negative stuff, it's so much easier to move forward. There's no sense in taking in (taking to heart) the negative things that detractors have to say.
Just thought I'd share my thought/experience...
I try to remember what I saw somewhere - they read your post and it drove them to action ... so you at least moved them to write. That's something, anyway... :-)
When anyone says anything about what I am doing or who they think me to be, I always ask myself if that person has any characteristics of who I aspire to be, or if that person is in a position or place in their life that I want to be in, if not then I try although not always succeeding to take it with a grain of salt.
I think that it is extremely important that we trust ourselves, as I know I am my own worst enemy. I even see how much we question ourselves in my daughter when she has an idea for a play or her science project and wants to ignore her idea since it was not written as a previous thought-out option, or was not popular - I always tell her to trust herself.
This was a great post about self image and self trust.
I am reading Self-Esteem on an earlier recommendation you made. It's a great book. I like that they haven't tried to systematize everything - just lots of interesting and thoughtful info and exercises. It had never occurred to that our critic had a dual role.
Thanks for recommending it.
Tom @tomwgibson
Your blogs are inspiring and get me thinking be it that I agree with what you say or not they are thought provoking and I learn from them and that can only be good. I look forward to more and more. Thank you.
I agree with sticking to one's thoughts. Do not be a pushover and let people tell you otherwise. Take feedback and use the feedback as a learning experience.
Jane
Thanks for your help and encouragement.
Jealousy is simply and clearly the fear that you do not have value. Jealousy scans for evidence to prove the point - that others will be preferred and rewarded more than you. There is only one alternative - self-value. If you cannot love yourself, you will not believe that you are loved. You will always think it's a mistake or luck. Take your eyes off others and turn the scanner within. Find the seeds of your jealousy, clear the old voices and experiences. Put all the energy into building your personal and emotional security. Then you will be the one others envy, and you can remember the pain and reach out to them. ~Jennifer James
Great post Chris!!
I think it sometimes comes down to how much of one's life is being read about on a screen, also. My guess is that your RL colleagues are more respectful and treat you as more of a whole person than some folks may in print, where people can get busy taking apart just one aspect of Being Chris Brogan.
I've seen it at my own blog. On a screen it's easier to be harsh, in other words, because folks don't have to face you, but also on a screen it's easier to be read as being harsh—because without body language and eye contact, some commentary that's perhaps meant to be constructive can be read as just another takedown. So perhaps the pile of negativity isn't quite as high as it seems. (I certainly hope not!)
Hugs the kids and take a long walk. The real mirror reflects a great guy.
Regards,
Kelly
I read somewhere, "The Person who says something is impossible should not interrupt the Person doing it." I believe this to be true on many levels, including those that offer negative opinions or hurtful words. I also believe that being able to take constructive criticism is also a skill that we need to harness as we mature.
Keep up the great work Chris, you have many more supporters than haters.
Temple
http://twitter.com/templer08
Oddly today, I remember exactly where I was [driving North on the Tollway] when I heard it the 1st time, and said "ah hah" to myself - It was just one line, w/ this follow up "It's true. What you think about me is none of my business - it's your business."
It's been a great one liner to pull when I find myself worrying about anything else but being the best I can be...which really is the ONLY thing I can control.
You obviously have that down to a science. Thx for a another great post.
@zaneology
You can understand people better if you look at the "no matter how old or impressive they may be" as if they are children. For most of us we never mature. We simply grow taller.
It is therefore important to look inwardly and accept who you are. Don't compare, you are valuable as yourself!
We all struggle with the Mirror Game, but as you said, the power is in learning from it and not taking it to heart! Easier said than done, I know. It is always reaffirming to know that gurus such as yourself contemplate on these types of topics.
Have an outstanding day!
I feel like I'm doing this when I read and implement your content. Can't wait to read somehting you write that I don't like just so I know I'm still living free. smile.
Thanks.
I would never tell another living soul what triggered each of mine (each has a trigger and it may not even be what the post is about), but it sure would make an interesting "blogger brain map."
I can relate from the perspective of also having an "inner critic".
For example, while attending your "Inbound Marketing Summit" in San Francisco recently, I began to feel "less than" the folks who I perceived to be the big names in social media. Inner conversations began to occur which were not to my benefit.
My response?
I took a time out and went for a walk in beautiful downtown San Francisco to my near-by office.
The outcome?
In the next several hours I was able to help someone younger and older than me about social media stuff, and quite frankly it felt good to feel good again about myself.
The next day at your summit I was approached by someone notable in our field and It was so cool to hear his appreciation for my enthusiastic and community building role in our space. It felt good to be seen.
The lesson learned like yours, beware of your inner critic too.
So I was curious if it was repeated criticism from being a bigger target or the source of some of it that prompted the thought process.
Thanks,
Joe
The internal mirror, like a magnifying mirror, shows us ourselves in great detail--but the image quickly distorts. Too close, and you see yourself as a sideshow freak; too far away, and you lose a sense of yourself entirely. It's easy to get fixated on what we like or don't like. The external mirror forgoes details for a broader picture, so it's easy to miss subtleties like the motivations for the feedback coming to you.
The trick is to keep our perspectives in balance, and to use each mirror to check what we see in the other.
Tamsen (@tamadear)
I find it ironic the most sensitive souls among us are often the most expressive,
thus inadvertently 'inviting' the very criticism and negative input from which they (we) recoil.
Sensitive individuals probably don't receive more any more criticism than anyone else, but
do have soft hearts where barbs and nasty comments can wound ever so deeply.
All I can really say about self-esteem is that some days are better than others. They just are. And for days when my self-esteem seems to be waning, I try to think of those better moments in my life.
I love the story about the teacher who asked class members to write down positive statements about each other - for each other - as a prelude to graduation. Many students carried those slips of papers with them throughout their lives to always remind themselves of their value and worth.
If I were you, I would consider this column and these comments your slips of paper. :-)
Thanks for being you - @jenajean
Being able to rise above it and stick to your guns allows you not only to be a better person but a happier person as well.
More eloquently put, "Haterz, man." ROFL ;)
Then I read "The Four Agreements" by Don Miguel Ruiz and it really helped. The part that really jumped out was that people's behavior (or words) really have nothing to do with you. It has to do with them, and their perception of the world. There is more to the book than I can summarize in a comment, but it really helped me.
It is a good train or bathtub read. :)
Knowing and trusting yourself is truly the only way. Otherwise your writing shrinks up as you try to dodge bullets and your muse runs away with the spoon.
Write on!