How to Reverse a Mistake in the Middle of It - Sun and Planets Spirituality AYINRIN
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Author:His Magnificence the Crown, Kabiesi Ebo Afin! Oloja Elejio Oba Olofin Pele Joshua Obasa De Medici Osangangan Broadaylight.
I was moving as fast as I could and not getting anywhere, a feeling I’m well acquainted with. This time, though, it was deliberate: I was on a stationary Spin bicycle.
When the towel draped over my handlebars fell to the ground, I tried to stop pedaling and get off. Tried
being the operative word. I couldn’t stop. There was simply too much
forward momentum. The pedals seemed to be moving by a force of their
own. It took me several moments of slowly backing off my speed before I
could coax the pedals to stand still.
Momentum is hard to resist.
For
example, 15 minutes into a political argument with a friend, I realized
I wasn’t sure I agreed with my own position. He was arguing so harshly
that I found myself taking the opposite side, vehemently supporting
ideas I didn’t know enough about. And it was hard to stop.
It’s
especially hard to stop when you’re invested in being right, when
you’ve spent time, energy, emotion, and sometimes money on your point of
view.
I
have several friends who got married and divorced within a year or two.
Every one of them told me they knew, at the time they were getting
married, that it wouldn’t work. But they had gone too far and they
didn’t know how to stop it. It’s the same story with people I know who
made some investments that seemed to be going south. They knew it wasn’t
working, but they had already invested so much it was hard to face the
mistake. In some cases they put more money in and lost it all.
Sometimes
it’s not so dramatic. It might be an argument about which resources to
put on which project. Or a decision about whether or not to continue to
pursue a particular opportunity.
When
you have the sense you’ve made a mistake but you’ve already pushed so
hard it would be embarrassing to back out, how do you backpedal?
I have two strategies that help me pull back my own momentum: Slow Down and Start Over.
Slow Down:
As I found on my Spin bike, it’s almost impossible to backpedal hard
enough to reverse direction on the spot. It helps to see it as a
process. First, just stop pedaling so hard. Then, as the momentum starts
to lose its force, gently begin to change direction.
In
a discussion in which you’ve been pushing hard and suspect you might be
wrong, begin to argue your point less and listen to the other side
more. Buy some time by saying something like: “That’s an interesting
point, I need to think about it some more.” Or, “tell me more about what
you mean.” Listening is the perfect antidote to momentum since it’s
non-committal to any point of view.
If it’s an investment, reduce it some, without taking it all out, so that literally you have less invested in being right.
Start Over:
This is a mental game I learned from a friend who’s a successful
investor. I was hesitant to sell an investment that was doing poorly. My
friend asked me the following question: If I was starting from scratch
at today’s price, would I purchase the investment? I sold it that day.
It’s
inevitable that our history impacts our current decisions. If I hired
someone and invested energy and money supporting his success, it would
be hard for me to admit he’s not working out. But, knowing what I know
now, would I hire him? If not, I should let him go. Same thing with a
project I’ve supported or a decision I’ve promoted. I imagine I’m a new
manager coming into the project. Would I continue it? Invest additional
resources? Or move on?
I’ve
seen people’s inability to admit they’re wrong destroy their marriages
and decimate their businesses and professional lives. In many cases they
tell me it’s because they didn’t want to appear weak. But it takes
great strength of character to admit you’re wrong or even to question
your own views. And others perceive this as strength too.
Great
leaders have enough confidence to look critically at their own
perspective and stay open to other people’s points of view, using the
technique of Slowing Down. Even when they know they’re right.
Allan Rosenfield,
past Dean of Columbia’s School of Public Health, was one such leader.
He died last year after spending more than four decades helping to shape
the public health agenda, making a particularly huge impact on the
lives of women and people with HIV. Columbia named its School of Public
Health building in his honor.
I
remember watching Allan in a conversation about whether children should
be vaccinated, a public health issue about which he felt strongly and
was clearly an expert. One of his friends, we’ll call him Jack, was
arguing against vaccinations. Allan offered statistics on the millions
of hospitalizations and deaths that have been averted in the last forty
years because of vaccines for polio, mumps, measles, etc.
Jack
then cited some research from an unnamed source on the Internet
claiming that vaccines were doing more harm than good. Allan, one of the
greatest public health experts of all time, would have been justified
if he’d laughed. If he’d told Jack to get his information from more
reliable, credible sources. If he’d repeated his arguments about the
good that vaccines had done. But Allan didn’t do any of that.
He
simply looked at Jack, slowed down, and replied: “I haven’t read that
research. Send it to me. I’ll look at it and let you know what I think.”
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Follow The SUN (AYINRIN), Follow the light. Be bless. I am His Magnificence, The Crown, Kabiesi Ebo Afin!Ebo Afin Kabiesi! His Magnificence Oloja Elejio Oba Olofin Pele Joshua Obasa De Medici Osangangan broad-daylight natural blood line 100% Royalty The God, LLB Hons, BL, Warlord, Bonafide King of Ile Ife kingdom and Bonafide King of Ijero Kingdom, Number 1 Sun worshiper in the Whole World.I'm His Magnificence the Crown. Follow the light.
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