5 Questions that will lead you to your true self
Leaders need
self-awareness. A lack of it is one of the major reasons for leader ship
failure. This is accepted wisdom.There are thousands of books on the subject
and hundreds of workshops, retreats and interventions promising increased
self-awareness. Self-awareness and understanding leads to increased
satisfaction and joy in our lives.But is it easy to build? How do we understand
ourselves better?
Learning about the self is tricky and difficult. Some of the ways we can initiate that understanding is through psychometric tools, feedback from friends and colleagues, 360degree feedback and so on. However, chances are that we might be only understanding a shield that we have created -a false persona -instead of really experiencing and knowing our core self.
Learning about the self is tricky and difficult. Some of the ways we can initiate that understanding is through psychometric tools, feedback from friends and colleagues, 360degree feedback and so on. However, chances are that we might be only understanding a shield that we have created -a false persona -instead of really experiencing and knowing our core self.
Many a times we create
layers of protection around our real self and create a false persona and this
makes it even more difficult to understand and accept who we really are. Many
of us form such an identity because of our early life experiences and how we
were treated and labelled. Then we might hold on to this false identity
throughout our life without challenging and examining it.
As you start an inner
journey , which will happen only if you are a serious seeker and reflective
thinker, you might first encounter these layers of false persona, subconscious
layers of deception and avoidance. “Until you make the unconscious conscious,
it will direct your life and you will call it fate,“ wrote psychoanalyst Carl
Jung. While we think we know our self, we might be hidden beneath defences and
resistance. We might say that we are open to self-discovery but we might be
hiding behind apologies, justifications and intellectualisations.
Someone serious about
self-discovery might say, “I always thought I was a calm guy , a thoughtful,
caring and considerate person. I never got angry and was always polite and
gentle. But when I started exploring who I was, I discovered underneath that
`niceness' there were feelings of jealousy , rage, fear; things that were
unacceptable to me. But behind that fear, rage and jealousy I also found my
capacity for love, joy and fulfilment.“
Our social conditioning, defense
mechanisms and false sense of identity might hide our true self. So, what are
some of the things we could do to build greater self-awareness?
Here are some tips that will help you to reflect and explore your true self.
Here are some tips that will help you to reflect and explore your true self.
Look at activities and
experiences that gave joy and meaning for you personally in the past. Why were
those activities and experiences meaningful for you?
What are some of your natural strengths and gifts?
What are your core values? What is truly important for you? What do you value most?
What irritates you?
What are some of your natural strengths and gifts?
What are your core values? What is truly important for you? What do you value most?
What irritates you?
“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to
an under standing of ourselves,“ wrote Carl Jung.
What is your life purpose?
If everything around you could support you what would you do? What is the
legacy you want to leave behind?
Reflect of on these five questions not with the mindset of finding quick answers but with the mindset of deep inquiry . This will give you a sense of your true self.
Reflect of on these five questions not with the mindset of finding quick answers but with the mindset of deep inquiry . This will give you a sense of your true self.
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TOI 26APR16
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