Tag Archives: making decisions

Perspective Switch

One of the techniques I use in coaching is shifting perspective. We develop a point of view, and we reinforce it with beliefs and ideas. Pretty soon it’s not only the “right” way, but the “only” way. When a client gets stuck, it’s often a perspective issue. See if any of these sentences are ones you’ve said:

“That woman [man] hates me. I can’t do anything about it.”
“My boss [mother, mother-in-law, spouse, child, teacher] is out to get me. They are always criticizing me.”
“I can’t meet all your demands, it’s just too much.”
“I won’t ever be able to do that. I’m not up to it.”

All of those are perspectives. Your beliefs are certainly true for you at this moment. It’s your reality. But as my recent drawing classes have shown, if you move, even slightly, you will get a different view. And that viewpoint might shift your beliefs. If you see things differently, you can have a fresh look at them, maybe see something you didn’t see before.

Shifting your perspective is an exercise that asks the client to step into a different viewpoint. It’s not always easy, but it’s always enlightening. I’ll ask a client to pretend they are the other party, or to pretend they are in another part of their lives. Sometimes I even ask them to shift to a different position while they are talking to me. That is often enough to get them away from being stuck.

houseIn the picture on the left, you can see an older house. You can see it has agaves growing in front of it, a grated door, and a typical desert front yard. You could draw all sorts of conclusions looking at the picture. If you are from the lush, green East, you could think the people are poor and have a dirt yard.

Now look at the photo below. The only change is that I took three steps backwards to take the photo. Exactly the same spot, just a different perspective. Now you can see the stucco and block fence that runs outside the house. You might think the person is closed off, maybe hates outsiders. You could add this to the idea that the person is poor, and you have a fairly unflattering picture of the owner.

Until you add the information that the house is in the desert Southwest, where almost every housestucco fence is surrounded by a fence like this. Originally the fences kept out the wandering javelinas (wild pigs) that rooted up the gardens and attacked pets. Now, because most houses in this area are build close to each other to save resources, the fences provide boundaries and assure privacy. The landscape style suits the desert climate. It’s called xeriscaping, using only native desert plants and using sand and rocks as ground cover. Grass requires a lot of water, which isn’t plentiful in the Sonoran desert.

To get a different perspective, I often think of taking a photograph of my opinion, writing down a few viewpoints. Then I mentally turn, step back, or put a different light on it and take another mental picture. Voila! a new perspective. It doesn’t always result in an Aha! moment, but it does add important information to my decision making process.

–Quinn McDonald is a writer and certified creativity coach. She also develops and leads seminars on communicating better with office colleagues and friends. Image: Quinn took the photos. (c) 2008 All rights reserved.

Coaching: Choosing Your Work

Whether you work for yourself, for others, or are contemplating a set of interviews to choose a new job, there are some important thoughts to get in line.

1. Any time you interview for a job, it’s a two-way street. You are interviewing to prove you will be an asset to the company, but you are also interviewing them to see if this company meets your values. As a coach, the problem I see most often is people taking a job that doesn’t honor their values and then wondering why they hate the job.

Values are what you like and hate in life. Here are examples: you like helping others; you dislike working with children; you like to work in the background, not calling attention to yourself; you want monetary recognition for your ideas.

confusing traffic sign2. Doubt is just doubt, not a sign from above. If you own your business, or if you are working for someone else, any time you make a direction decision, you immediately begin to doubt yourself about making the “best” decision. “Should I have really accepted that promotion?” “Should I have turned down that client for this client?” are both direction decisions.

3. A lot of decisions are set in stone. (Having a child, getting married, signing a contract). They eliminate other choices. Doors shut. That doesn’t mean it’s a bad thing. Go in one direction and explore it thoroughly. If it isn’t right, make a correction. But don’t dither back and forth.

4. Not every job is a lot of money at first. Not every job needs to supply you with a ton of money. You can live on less than you think.

5. Not everything that is money is worthwhile doing. If you are spending a lot of that income you wanted to much on retail therapy because you hate your job, rethink Item 4.

6. Know your motives. If you are going to do something for not a lot of money, know what you are getting from it–experience you don’t have, contacts, resume improvement.

7. Be honest about your needs. No matter how much “fun” something is, if there isn’t money in it, and the only thing you need is money, think it through before you commit a lot of your life to it. The opposite is also true. Do not take any job just because it pays well. If it doesn’t honor your values, it will sink you over time.

–Quinn McDonald is a certified creativity coach and a life coach. She’s a writer who owns QuinnCreative.com (c) 2007. All rights reserved.

Image: http://www.gluttonsess.com