1 min readTake Time To Understand
by Guy Gage | January 20, 2013 | Business
Others do it to you and you do it to them. You see, you only have one filter to interpret what people say and do—your own. So you observe their behavior and ask yourself, “What would I have to be thinking and feeling to do or say that?” Your answer reveals the intent you would have, so you impose it on them. Much of the time, you are dead wrong. But that doesn’t stop you from doing so.
Think of those you work with. Staff, colleagues, partners, clients, referral sources—you name it—all misinterpret you and you them. You think, “if they only knew my intentions, they would understand my behavior.” Sometimes that’s true; sometimes not. But regardless, the misunderstanding continues.
Instead of being like everyone else, why don’t you take the time to understand others from their point of view rather than imposing motive based on yours?
>When people are short with you, they don’t intend to disrespect you. They are stressed and time-constrained.
>When others are silent in a discussion, they aren’t bored or clueless. They are framing up their response about what they actually think about the issue.
>When people won’t give you feedback, it isn’t because they are ignoring you or don’t care about you. They have something difficult to tell you and haven’t found the right time or words, or they have nothing to say.
This week, go the extra mile and seek to understand the real intent and motives of those around you. Give them the benefit of the doubt, allowing them to have intentions and motives that are different from yours, even though the behavior may look the same.
Read Related Blogs:
Empowering Your CPA Team: Ditch the Whip for True Ownership
Picture this: It's tax season crunch time. Your senior associate, Sarah, spots a subtle mismatch in a client's depreciation schedule that could trigger an audit flag. In the old days, she'd flag it for review and wait for your sign-off - classic accountability mode,...
It’s Not Fragility. It’s a Skills Gap – And You Can Fix It
Young professionals are entering firms in a markedly different mental and emotional state than previous generations. They’ve grown up amid economic instability, political and social division, and ongoing global conflict. At the same time, many were raised by highly...
Scale Your Expectations to Match the Season, Not the Ideal
Every season is unique and asks something different of you. Some chapters feel spacious and steady; others tighten the margins and demand more time, focus, or energy bandwidth than you’d prefer. When life intensifies, the instinct is often to cling to your ideal...

