From: "Michael Hall" <meta@acsol.net>
To: <neurons@neurosemanticsegroups.com>
Subject:
[Neurons] 2018 Neurons #30 NON-THREATENING COLLABORATION
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From: L. Michael Hall
2018 Neurons
#30
July 16,
2018
NON-THREATENING
COLLABORATION
Here's
a fact that I simple did not considered when I co-wrote the
book,
Collaborative Leadership with Ian McDermott. I did not even think that
for
most people, and especially most leaders, that collaboration could
be
threatening. That idea just never crossed my mind. Being focused on all
of
the positive benefits of collaboration and being the natural
collaborator,
the idea that collaboration could be threatening just did not
come up. Nor
did it come up in the literature or in our
modeling.
It was only recently when I was talking with some
leaders did I became aware
of this. That's when it suddenly dawned on me,
"They find collaboration
threatening!" Afterwards I decided to test the
hypothesis by asking various
people: "What do you think. Do you find the
idea of collaborating with
others threatening?" The response was immediate,
"Oh yes, of course." I
think that what amazed me even more than their answer
was that the two
persons I was talking with said it so matter-of-factly.
They said it with a
tone of incredulity, "How could you even ask such a
question, of course
there are threats to collaborating!"
At
that point I needed more information. So trying to show no shock
or
surprise, I calmly asked, "What would you say are the threatening
elements
to collaboration?" "Lots of things," one of them said. Then over
the next
twenty minutes, both of them detailed many of their
fears:
Loss of status, loss of control, loss of reputation, loss
my
distinctiveness, the risk of taking a chance on the other person not
coming
through on his responsibilities, the risk of failure, the risk of
being
judged on the basis of the other's incompetence. The list went on and
on
from there.
Eventually I got it. That's when I also
connected it to a point that we
made in the book, namely, To collaborate, you
have to get your ego out of
the way. The "ego" in the sense of our pride in
ourselves, wanting things
our way, and even demanding that we maintain
complete control of a project-
the ego in that sense can and does absolutely
prevent good healthy
collaboration. That's why people who have not completed
the human
development tasks, and are still immature and still overly focused
on
themselves, are not truly able to enter into a collaborative
partnership.
>From the Neuro-Semantic perspective, this is
the place where we distinguish
self-esteem from self-confidence. Your
confidence in what you do is about
your actions, behaviors, and performance.
It is not about your value as a
person. It is not about you having worth.
It is about skills and
competence. It is the person who confuses his sense
of value and worth with
what he does who gets his "ego" in the way. It is
that confusion that
causes him to be afraid - afraid that he will lose his
value, his position,
his esteem, etc.
Significantly, when you
separate who you are as a person, your being from
your doing, then there's no
threat in collaborating with others. You are
not living in a zero-sum game
world where the other's "value" takes anything
away from you. In fact,
healthy collaborating results in the very opposite.
With your person and
being a given and unconditional- you are free to
collaborate and every
success of your partners adds to you and enriches
you.
Unlike competition, collaboration does not involve
pitting one person
against another. Instead in collaboration you add your
uniqueness to the
others. In doing so, everyone is enriched. Everyone wins.
It is in this
way that collaboration, as a win-win arrangement, supports
everyone as a
partner in the enterprise.
Is collaboration
threatening? Is it dangerous? Yes to the insecure, the
distrusting, and to
the overly-competitive. Can that threat be ameliorated?
Yes. How? By
becoming secure in yourself with unconditional self-esteem
and by completing
your developmental tasks. Do that and you will be
increasingly able to
collaborate in healthy and productive
ways.
For the
book--- The Collaborative Leader --- click
http://www.neurosemantics.com/products/the-collaborative-leader/
For Executive Thinking ---
http://www.neurosemantics.com/products/executive-thinking/
L.
Michael Hall, Ph.D., Executive Director
Neuro-Semantics
P.O. Box
8
Clifton, CO. 81520 USA
1 970-523-7877
Dr. Hall's
email:
<mailto:meta@acsol.net\hich\af31506\dbch\af31505\loch\f31506>
meta@acsol.net
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