HARNESS YOUR POWER BY PLAYING TO YOUR STRENGTHS

By Dr. Connie S. Newsome

*Leaders, live a life of impact through greater self-awareness. 

**When you ask yourself a question requiring great transparency, be ready for the answer.

On November 03, 2021, I reached the age of 50 years old, one-half of a century! That was HUGE for me! I was excited, grateful, expectant…and curious. “Hmmm, what are some steps I can take to empower myself and have my remaining years be both enjoyable and impactful?”  Then I said, “Self, what is the one, initial step you can take?”  Myself answered, “Become more self-aware.”  Alrighty then, here we go!

SOME WIDELY APPLICABLE OBSERVATIONS

I want to play to my strengths:

I am tired of focusing on what I cannot do or my weaknesses. I want to put my best foot forward, daily. Well guess what, beloved? Performance of tasks for which there is neither talent nor skill breeds ineffectiveness. Generally, as leaders, we have too much time and responsibilities on our plates to waste time being ineffective. In my early years of learning and observing leadership lessons, I saw the principle of playing to your strengths with a former manager. She, by nature, was not what you would think of as a “cuddly” person, though she loved people, and she enjoyed being in leadership. She had a growing team and she wanted them to feel appreciated. She asked, among the team, who would like to be responsible for remembering and recognizing birthdays, pulling together appropriate socials, etc. Of course, there was one jovial lovie who was willing to be that team member (it was not me). I learned then that there are numerous ways to let your team members so shine their light without dimming yours one bit. Usually, it is work related but sometimes, it is not. It can, however, be equally important if the difference one makes impacts morale, which impacts efficiency, productivity, attendance, and so on. I also learned early on that it is absolutely OK to empower others on my team. There can be more than one winner.

I must demonstrate patience:  

As leaders, we tend to be impatient, for we want our team members, comrades, whomever, to move as fast as we are moving to implement our vision, get trained and productive, and etc. I learned from Dr. John C. Maxwell that if we are impatient with our team members, we may grow to resent them instead of encouraging them to come along with us on our journey. That, my friends, makes us ineffective leaders. Obviously, we want to limit our instances of ineffectiveness.

I have to extend grace:

“You got 15 minutes.” 

I have an uncle who did not want to be in management, but his skill and work ethic placed him there…. for decades. 😜👏  He recently shared the system he developed for team members who wanted to be defiant or argumentative. He would tell them, “You’ve got 15 minutes to decide whether you want to go home without pay or do the job you have been asked to do. Think about it and let me know.”  It was an honest window and an allowed time of reflection and decision. It gave them both the space they needed to breathe. Most of the time, the team member chose to resume working. I love it! Thanks for sharing, Uncle Gary!

I can still “win” while supporting/mentoring:  

We want to win (finish a project successfully, implement a money or time-saving process, or etc.) but we should always want to win with our team by our side, not sitting on the sidelines feeling forgotten or unimportant. Remember, on our journey to our mountaintop, we reach down and pull others up to succeed with us.

I keep in mind the truths about engagement, as shared by Patrick Lencioni:

Empower yourself and your team members by avoiding the three signs of a miserable job:  Anonymity, Irrelevance, and Immeasurability. Ensure your team members feel known. Ensure they understand the importance of the work they do and how it fits into the larger picture of the organization. Ensure they know how the organization measures of quantifies their work.

Intentional growth:

Be about intentional growth and intentional about learning. Rick Warren, author of The Purpose Driven Life, shares that “The moment you stop learning is the moment you stop leading.”

In closing, I will share some of my takeaways after introspection and becoming more self-aware:

  • I love myself and other people. We are all beloveds!
  • I am more fulfilled when I focus less on my weaknesses (opportunities for improvement) and focus more on my strengths and how I can use them to be effective.
  • Aging is not to be looked upon unfavorably. It is simply the number of years the world has been enjoying my existence.
  • It is important to keep laughing, especially for those of us who are serious minded.
  • It would be to my benefit to work out more consistently (I know, I know).
  • I love encouraging and exhorting others. I could read and study more so I would have a plethora of material to benefit whoever I speak to, but while I am growing in that space, I remain confident that exhortation is a strength, and I should not discount it.

Thomas J. Watson wrote:  Nothing so conclusively proves a man’s ability to lead others as what he does from day to day to lead himself.” https://libquotes.com/thomas-j-watson/quote/lbu9p7k

Beloveds, I hope that you give yourselves grace to genuinely love who you are as leaders, space to grow, and breadth to embrace others during your progress. Do take good, diligent care.

Forgive and Show Strength

“The weak can never forgive.  Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong.” – Mahatma Gandhi

No matter who was at fault, be the bigger, stronger person and forgive.

#forgive

God Will Wait on You 

From Pastor Rick Warren’s Daily Devotional 
Jesus waited until the disciples got concerned before He did anything in the situation. 

Maybe you’re having a problem in your marriage or your finances. God sees the problem and He recognizes it. But He waits on you to get concerned and accept responsibility for it before He does anything about it.  

 Like the disciples, there are three common reactions that people have toward problems:

We procrastinate — “By this time it was late in the day.” (verse 35) The disciples put off the problem until the end of the day. They did nothing and Jesus waited on them.  

We pass the buck — “Send the people away.” (verse 36) Basically the disciples were saying, “It’s not our problem. If they’re hungry, let them go find their own food.” 

We worry about it — “Lord, if we did that it’d cost eight months of a man’s wages. Are we going to go spend that much on bread and give it to them to eat?” (verse 38) The disciples’ anxiety went into overdrive and they started worrying. 

Worrying is the opposite of faith. It never solves anything. It only makes problems worse. 

I know this to be true but still, I was a worrier…definitely fell into that category.  Thank God for continual growth and the opportunity to change.  Sometimes challenges are allowed so we can grow and it’s only after the fact that we find an appreciation for what we’ve gone through.  Just as in the situation with the two loaves and five fishes to feed a whole bunch of folk, God ensures the need is met once we expose the need to Him.  The resolution is not always in our preferred timing but it is timely.  Go God!
Relevant scripture:

“And when the day was now far spent, his disciples came unto him, and said, The place is desert, and the day is now far spent; send them away, that they may go into the country and villages round about, and buy themselves somewhat to eat.  But he answered and said unto them, Give ye them to eat. And they say unto him, Shall we go and buy two hundred shillings’ worth of bread, and give them to eat? And he saith unto them, How many loaves have ye? go and see. And when they knew, they say, Five, and two fishes. And he commanded them that all should sit down by companies upon the green grass. And they sat down in ranks, by hundreds, and by fifties. And he took the five loaves and the two fishes, and looking up to heaven, he blessed, and brake the loaves; and he gave to the disciples to set before them; and the two fishes divided he among them all. And they all ate, and were filled. And they took up broken pieces, twelve basketfuls, and also of the fishes. And they that ate the loaves were five thousand men.”

Mark 6:35-36 ASV

http://bible.com/12/mrk.6.35-36.asv
Mark 6:37-44 ASV
http://bible.com/12/mrk.6.37-44.asv

Father’s Day – 2016

“Fathers”

The unspoken and often, unsung, heroes that anchor us. They are providers of tough love, encouragement, and the challenges that shape us and strengthen us.

Fathers are our coaches.

Fathers provide examples of what a princess should expect and what a man should be.

Fathers teach us when it’s ok to cry and when we must suck it up and press onward, when to accept defeat and when to fight for victory.

Fathers love us unconditionally.

Fathers are strength personified and love on legs.

To good fathers everywhere, thank you for giving us our first glimpse of God.