
As a leader, your conversations become relationships. Taking responsibility for your thoughts, emotions, and for the message you need to deliver will allow you to speak with clarity, conviction, and compassion. How people feel after a conversation with you will determine if they will want to develop a relationship with you or not. It also affects the trust that develops. When relationships are on the line, there are no trivial comments.
Excuses
I often hear all kinds of excuses for conversations gone wrong. Most of them have to do with how the other person was so. . .
- abrasive,
- annoying,
- challenging,
- in my face,
- nasty,
- insulting. . .
- you fill in the blank!
To cap it off, people say they “could not help” . . .
- yelling,
- losing control,
- escalating,
- stonewalling. . .
- you probably can fill in this blank too.
What you can do
The reality is that you can never influence what others say or do. But you can certainly take responsibility for your own thoughts, actions, and reactions.
The way you talk to yourself will make a big difference on how you communicate and behave. You can acknowledge that the recent merger is bringing uncertainty. But instead of thinking “nobody has control of anything anymore,” you can tell yourself that you can make a difference in how things are communicated.
In taking initiative, in reaching out to connect with the unknown, your words and behaviors will convey your willingness to contribute to the process and you might end up having more influence than you thought you could have.

Suggestions for taking responsibility
Here are some suggestions that can work both for Thanksgiving and in your business.
- Instead of shunning, or exchanging negative comments, ask questions that can bring out the best in others.
- Instead of reacting negatively when someone says something annoying, take things with humor and ask them to tell you something about themselves.
- Make a positive comment about them.
- Instead of taking things personally, chalk it up to their make up and give them a compliment instead of an angry retort.
Above all, don't let "the small stuff" ruin a time for connection. Take a positive attitude and initiate positive interactions. You will be amazed at the results!
In this age where leaders, employees, and family try to blame someone else for everything, it is refreshing when someone takes responsibility not only for their actions, but for the relationships.
Be the one to stand up and make a difference by taking responsibility.
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