Three ways to be more self-aware at
work
The more self-aware you are, the more effective you can be.
We like to think of the workplace as strictly for business. Though
most CEOs wouldn’t admit it, companies can sometimes feel like playgrounds,
with emotion dictating the way employees interact with colleagues, managers,
and clients.
Emotions come in when we get stressed about a deadline, and when
we get excited about an area we’re passionate about. They play a part when we
bond with our team, and when we feel someone has broken our trust.
We all have triggers: a phrase, an assumption, or a behavior that
makes us absolutely crazy. Generally, triggers tap deep into our core,
revealing our insecurities and frustrations all at once. The reality is that
we’re all human, which means we’re all feeling emotions at work–at least until
the robots arrive.
It’s good to feel a broad spectrum of emotions, even the
uncomfortable ones. But this can get in the way of work. So if the workday is
filled with emotions but no one really talks about them, how do we strike a
balance and continue to get the job done?
The key is building self-awareness of what sets you off. Here are
three steps to take to build self-awareness of how you’re feeling, and what’s
tapping those emotions on the job.
KNOW WHAT
TRIGGERS YOU
What makes you irrationally defensive? What gets you out of your
rational thinking brain and into your gut and heart? It’s important to
understand what triggers an emotional response so that you can be intentional
about how you want to respond.
For me, hearing gendered feedback (critical subjective
feedback that relies on vague, negative words typically reserved to describe
women, such as “abrasive,” “too strong,” or “emotional”) really gets my goat.
For others, it’s hearing they’ve been passed up for a promotion, or a phrase from their boss that suggests they don’t trust them to get the job done. Often, such a slight is unintentional, but the outcome is the same. We let our emotional response run the show.
For others, it’s hearing they’ve been passed up for a promotion, or a phrase from their boss that suggests they don’t trust them to get the job done. Often, such a slight is unintentional, but the outcome is the same. We let our emotional response run the show.
To tackle this head on, think back to your most tense moments at
work: What made your blood boil? When have you regretted how you’ve behaved or
let emotions get the best of you? Was it something someone did or said? Call
upon the feeling and see if you can unpack its root cause.
SLOW DOWN TO
CHOOSE YOUR RESPONSE
If you can begin to recognize your triggers, you can choose your
response to them, as opposed to simply reacting. To do this, you need to slow
your system down. Take deep breaths, remind yourself this is not a true
fight-or-flight scenario, and break eye contact if you need to. Go for a walk
if you can, and if you can’t, then look out the window. Even if you’re in the
middle of a meeting, there’s no harm in taking a quick bathroom break to calm
yourself down.
COMMUNICATE
WHAT’S HAPPENING TO OTHERS
Remember my trigger of hearing potentially gendered feedback? When
I hear it, I can feel steam coming out of my ears. I get frustrated by what
feels to me to be lazy language, and I get angry on behalf of all the women in
the workplace who’ve ever had to deal with it. Especially early in my career,
it was really hard for me to hear feedback of this kind. My pulse would
quicken, my inner monologue would race, and I couldn’t hear anything the
feedback giver was saying anymore.
Now that I know this about myself, I can recognize it when it
happens and then choose how I want to respond. This doesn’t mean that these
words no longer affect me; they still make my pulse quicken, and I still
dislike gendered feedback with the fire of 1,000 suns. But now I can be honest
about what’s happening and clue the other person in to my experience so they’re
not surprised by my response.
For me, that means pausing and saying, “That language is actually
triggering to me and I’m afraid it’s taking me somewhere else. Can we take a
break and come back to this? I want our discussion to be productive, and I’m
not able to do that at the moment. Mind if we return to this tomorrow, when
I’ve had a little more time to process?”
With practice, you’ll be able to recognize your
triggers, begin to take ownership of them, and have a constructive
conversation that allows you to get your work done effectively and
professionally.
BY XIMENA
VENGOECHEA
https://www.fastcompany.com/90265756/three-ways-to-be-more-self-aware-at-work?utm_source=postup&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Fast%20Company%20Daily&position=3&partner=newsletter&campaign_date=11192018
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