Change Sounds Scary? Try an Experiment Instead.
“Let’s treat this as an experiment.” I say this to my coaching clients all the time when they feel stuck contemplating a big change —?everything from changing careers, to showing up as the kind of leader they feel a new role requires, to living a more balanced life.
One client told me they wanted to take better care of themselves, but they were overwhelmed figuring out where to start. So we devised an experiment: That new morning routine they’d been toying with? Try it for a week, and log the results each day. Then, we would talk about how it went, and what they learned.
“Literally log the results?”, they asked, laughing. In fact, my clients often laugh when I invite them to experiment — to commit to a bite-sized, short-term step in service of a larger shift they’re looking to make. To me, this laugh is a sign that we’ve unlocked something — and that the process of change, which so many of us dread, can actually be joyful.
“Let’s treat this as an experiment.” Instantly the temperature goes down. If someone was feeling stressed about making the “right” move, instead they can feel safe and even playful about trying something new. And they feel good that they’re taking action.
As the Buddha said, there are 84,000 doors to enlightenment, what matters is just to walk through one (thank you Aaron Bieber for teaching me this concept, which I’m liberally paraphrasing here). There are infinite ways to start making the change you want to make, but there’s no “correct” way. The only move is to start. Or as my own coach Sabrina Pratt liked to say to me, “You can’t steer a ship unless it’s moving.”
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Want to try it? Think of an area of your life where you want to make a change, or something that’s happening that you want to learn to respond to in a different way. Now, let’s experiment:?
Change is both necessary and scary, in work and in life. One of the biggest reasons we resist change is that we’re afraid of getting it wrong. When we shift our mindset to approach change as a series of experiments, rather than one grand decision, it’s liberating, because there’s no pressure to succeed; in fact, the very idea of “success” or “failure” becomes irrelevant, because an experiment cannot succeed or fail, all it can do is teach you something. That’s all it has to do.
And what can any of us ever do, really, other than try, and learn, and try again??
Good luck, my fellow scientists. I’d love to hear how your experiments are going. And if you’re a leader looking for support and accountability bringing more confidence and joy into your leadership, I’d love to help.
Strategic Planning + Implementation | Capacity-Building | Convening + Coaching for Nonprofit & Philanthropic Leaders
2 年I love the idea of "the biggest smallest step." Thank you!