How to Use Your If’s Responsibly
Sharí Alexander
Helping Founders & Executives with Presence-Forward Marketing | Maximize ROI from In-Person & Online Speaking Opportunities | Messaging, Executive Communication Coaching, & Agency Services
This time of year, we all become time travelers. Faster than the speed of light, one’s mind can bounce to what was, and then jump to what could be. It’s an emotional mixed bag. Remembering, savoring, regretting, grieving, celebrating.
Looking back helps us learn from challenges we weren’t prepared for.
And looking forward helps us prepare for the challenges we’re excited to take on.
Of course, if we’ve learned anything from Time Cop, Looper, Star Trek, and Doctor Who, it’s that?time travel is a tricky business.
A great responsibility rests on your shoulders, Time Cadet.
As you bravely bounce through your timeline, beware. Your travels give you an opportunity to discover a fulfilling future, and while also running the risk of getting stuck in your past.
One of the easiest ways to time travel is with the word “if” – specifically in two phrases:
To safely trek through your personal dimensions of time and space,?use your “if’s” wisely.
LOOKING AHEAD
“What if…” is inherently imaginative.
When you ask “What if…?,” you’re considering possibilities. Exploring new, innovative, and maybe even crazy ideas. You’re imagining.
“What if…” is a phrase for thinking about the future. “What if…” helps you consider ideas beyond current realities and resources. You can get to those later. “What if…”?helps you color outside the lines.
Enjoy your “What if…” explorations! Take a long walk with “What if” before you bounce back to the here and now.
And if you feel yourself being pulled back to the present too soon on your journey, just reply with a smile, “Yeah, but?what if…?”
LOOKING BACK
Any exploration comes with its own risks. And “if’s” can get dangerous when traveling to the past. Especially when you say, “If only…”
“If only’s” can spin you in circles and set you up for an Inception-esque ending.
领英推荐
“If only?this?happened instead of?that,?then things would be different (better).”?
That’s a recipe for heartache.
We are only observers of our past. No longer participants.
Our brains are too primal for us to become mini-gods when considering past events. You can never know which circumstances would have lead to which outcomes.?There are too many variables. Too many unknowns.
Doing a hindsight-ed “Choose Your Own Adventure” just isn’t in the cards.
If circumstances were different, you don’t know what the results might have been. You don’t know what you might have adapted to, sacrificed, resented, or lost. You can’t predict your personal butterfly effect.
As Michael Jordan once said, you’ll never see the flipside of ifSAFE TIME TRAVELS
Time travel is a scary business. The future holds hope and worry. The past holds grievances and lessons.
During this time of time travel, use your if’s wisely. When you do,?your reflections of your past can clarify your visions for the future.
Stay safe in your timeline. Things can get a bit wibbly-wobbly in the timey-whimey.
Good journey, my friend.
Happy Influencing!
Sharí Alexander | Influence Speaker & Coach
?P.S.?Here are a few other ways I can help you increase your influence, whenever you’re ready.
1.?I’m putting out a lot of great tips on?LinkedIn ?and?Instagram . Follow me?for influential insights that help you in business and life!
2.?Grab a?FREE?copy of my Mindreader Blueprint. ?It’s the step by step guide for finding your influential message. Use this workbook to make your next pitch or presentation more persuasive!
3. Booking speakers for virtual events or post-COVID live events??Your audience will LOVE learning how to be more persuasive in business and in life. Looking for a keynote speaker who jam-packs a speech with practical, how-to content that actually helps professionals be better leaders??You can find out more,?here. ?
WPC Fidelity Investments
2 年Thanks for this. Quite pertinent for me currently.