Others have expectations of us. Sometimes they are explicit and agreed upon, but — more often than not — they are unstated, not agreed upon, and wreaking havoc on our relationships, our collaborations, and our wellbeing, whether it is the mother-in-law who expects every holiday to be celebrated at their home or the colleague who expects same-day turnaround on every request. Join Kari Granger and Paul Adams as they look at the game-changing strategy that allows us to powerfully navigate the expectations minefield in our work and our lives, improving workability, performance, and trust.
In This Episode:
00:54 – Introducing today’s topic: How to deal with others’ expectations of you
02:19 – Paul shares an experience he had of dealing with others’ implicit expectations of him
06:25 – The problem with our current relationship to expectations
07:48 – A different way to relate to expectations
09:00 – The standard for what we include as ‘our word’– not fairness but workability
11:28 – Paul’s realizations of how he could have navigated some implicit expectations of him
15:53 – How we relate to our implicit expectations of others
17:06 – What is fair and worthwhile about this new way of dealing with others’ expectations
18:26 – The common response to others’ implicit expectations of us
20:03 – Paul’s example of how this mindset of workability also applies to marriage
22:08 – Applying the formula, “Mess up, Fess up, Level up,” to dealing with implicit expectations
Quotes:
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Links:
The Mission Control Productivity and Accomplishment Course
Paul’s Other Podcast: Your Business Your Wealth
LEADERSHIP IMPACT PODCAST
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Acknowledgements:
Our work is mosaic art. We read, study, and practice many philosophies, methodologies, and modalities of human performance, to ensure that our approach best serves our clients. We would like to acknowledge all of the thought leaders and organizations, whose ground-breaking work has influenced the Granger Network approach – especially Fernando Flores, Jim Selman, Michael C. Jensen, Julio Olalla, Pluralistic Networks, The Newfield Network, and the Strozzi Institute.
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