OH! Magazine - Australian Version February 2016 | Page 22
ACTION, WHEN INDECISIVE,
IS LIKE A BALD
MAN’S HAIR
GREG
SELLAR
Greg Sellar explains the
importance of decision making.
W
hen indecisive, action is a bit like
a bald man’s hair – it’s never
there!
Choice doesn’t always liberate, it can
sometimes debilitate. When you become
paralysed by possibility, work and life can
become a maze and if you suck at making
decisions, it gets twice as hard. The
decision to create change is the first step
towards action: after all, no decision, no
action.
Many individuals are unhappy with their
status quo but remain languishing in
mediocrity because the pain of their
current reality isn’t large enough. They’re
destined for more of the same because
the decision to start doing anything
differently is put off for some miracle
time when the stars align. We often say to
ourselves ‘our time will come’, but if you
don’t do anything, it ain’t gonna happen!
Making a decision is clearly an emotional
response as much as we’d like to think
we’re being rational when making them.
It’s about reward – are the rewards from
any change taking place big enough for it
to be worth the while? If we look at most
successful people, they don’t always
make the right decisions, but they make
decisions, and then make them right.
We’re always told to ‘ready, aim, fire’
when what we need is more ‘ready, fire,
aim.’
What torpedoes us from making tougher
decisions more easily? Why do we scare
ourselves into incapacity on the action
front? Whether you’re in business, in a
relationship, or an individual wanting
action, you won’t make it in your outer
world until your inner world is coherent.
22
FEBRUARY 2016 ( OH! MAGAZINE )
We have three states of ‘self’ that
combine to create our ‘self-concept’, or
how we think about ourselves. Brian
Tracy refers to it as ‘the command centre
that sits at the centre of performance and
productivity.’
Our ‘self-idea’ is the summary of what we
want to be in life – our hopes, dreams
and goals. For an individual, this can be
the desire to be more in the future. If you
have poor self-image, you won’t have
clarity about where you’re going and
therefore find safety in staying where you
are – regardless of how much you dislike
your current situation.
‘Will I fail, and if I do, what will people
think of me?’ The dreaded ‘self-image’
stops those of us who are less confident
dead in our tracks. How you think you, or
your company, are viewed by others is the
basis for self-image. How you perceive
your treatment on a day-to-day basis
provides you with the fictional evidence
to prove your point. ‘My boss doesn’t like
me’, or ‘My company get so much bad
press’ are lines spouted by those with
poor self-image. The easy and wrong
thing to tell people would be to ‘grow
some’, but we all know it goes deeper
than this. There’ll always be deeper subconscious values and beliefs of the
individual that give rise to these feelings.
Whatever they are, they result in blame
on ‘circumstances’ or things ‘outside of
our control’, but this is garbage. Our job
as leaders, employers or significant
others is to get to the root of those if
we’re ever going to see a move in the
positive direction. Don’t know how? Get a
coach.
The final one is the one we’re most
familiar with – ‘self-esteem’. People who
like themselves tend to set bigger goals,
have higher standards and are better
team players. It’s not a magic pill to all
your problems, but with over 80 per cent
of society suffering from some kind of
self-esteem issue, it’s important to
action. If you want to have creativity and
productivity at work, you have to go out of
your way to set-up high-esteem
environments, removing fear of failure
and rejection that inevitably inhibit
performance.
If you’re at home operating with low selfesteem, the biggest mistakes you can
make are comparing yourself to others
and not celebrating the small stuff. We
lose perspective on what we have, what
unique skills we offer, and how we
contribute when we spend all our time
wondering why others have more than we
do. We are capable, we have had success
– we just need to remember those
instances and how they felt.
Decisions need to be made in all aspects
of work and life. There is no movement
without making them, so getting good at
decision-making is a skill within itself,
and something that can be practiced.
History proves that you’re right more
often than not in your decisions, and
even when you’re not, you can fix most of
the poor ones. Action, results and the
positive changes you create as a result of
your improved position creates lasting
change that benefits everyone.
For a full list of workplace training and
lifestyle programs that can help you
enhance your decision making skills,
contact [email protected]
www.teamlifehack.com
(Performance Coaching)