Reasons Personal Accountability is Challenging
Jessica Tietjen
?CEO & Founder |??NeuroPerformance Partner |HR/Ops Leader |??Author |???Speaker & Podcast Host | Leadership Coach | We expand ??human capacity by evolving work practices w/ neuroscience to create exceptional results
Last week, I had an interesting experience that served as a reminder that no matter how trained we are in personal accountability, it is a lifelong skill we must cultivate. I asked one of my co-workers to review a document we were about to send to a customer. It was late on Friday; I’d worked on it all day trying to get it perfect. I was also exhausted from juggling work and three small kids while my husband was out of town all week. She responded over chat with a question about the length of the document. I perceived her question and unconsciously chose to interpret it as critical feedback.
What happened next?
My internal defense mechanisms were immediately triggered, and I went into a fight mode. I was hurt, angry, and had no interest in being criticized in that moment. I felt terrible. I had a great, productive day filled with wins and should have been ending the week proud of all I’d accomplished. Instead, I allowed all of that to be overshadowed by this one small incident. Multiple emotions and past experiences were triggered in that one small incident requiring me to engage in self-reflection and grow my self-awareness once again.
This week, as I was reviewing the list of reasons personal accountability is so hard, I noticed how many of them played out in this one small incident. I also recognized how the skills I’ve worked to cultivate around personal accountability came into play and ultimately led to a positive outcome.
Challenges with Personal Accountability:
Easier to Blame
Blaming Others Let’s Us Feel Better About Ourselves
Courage
Effort
Pride:
Defensiveness is Instinctive
领英推荐
Avoiding Shame
Taught to Blame
Denial
What happened next....
After experiencing my initial reaction, I fairly quickly shifted my mindset to having a conversation about her question. After asking her reasoning, I understood she was asking because she truly didn’t know. We ended in a good place, but I still had more work to do.
Hours later, after I’d had some time to self-reflect, I was able to admit to myself what really happened in that moment. I experienced many of the challenges we all face when faced with having to take personal accountability for our actions and reactions. My reaction to her question was not her fault it was 100% my responsibility. I get to choose how I respond rather than allowing my initial reaction to rule my actions.
What I hope this example highlights is how developing the skill of personal accountability is both important and takes intentional effort. We have many reasons not to demonstrate personal accountability that allow us to walk away feeling better. Instead, taking personal accountability requires us to admit our own shortcomings and failures which is much harder.
Teaching Personal Accountability to Children
I also want to address how we teach children to blame, make excuses, or lie. I observed this in my own children (six year old boy and twin three year old girls) at a very early age when they started making up stories rather than telling the truth. As a result, I made a rule that Mommy only ever gets really mad at two things: (1) Hurting other people and (2) lying. I would rather them admit their mistake or bad choice than learn to lie about or hide what they’ve done. When they admit their bad choice to me, it allows us the opportunity to have a conversation about it.
In my children’s book, Good Choice Bad Choice , it addresses the distinction between good and bad choices versus good or bad children. I teach my children they can never be a bad child. Instead, they are children who sometimes make bad choices. Then, when they do inevitably make bad choices (as all children do), we must learn to admit them and learn from them. I have found this lesson to be incredibly powerful for my children in helping them to take accountability even when they have made a bad choice. They may (and in many cases will) still face consequences for their bad choice but they also learn those are far better than if they lie or hide their choice.
Conclusion
Personal Accountability makes a huge difference in terms of the growth, development, engagement and performance of people. When we help people overcome the challenges with personal accountability, increase their self-awareness, and implement self-reflection, they can achieve much greater results in their roles and life! Those with a mindset of high personal accountability are more successful, happier, and live better lives!?I believe strongly every workplace must both incorporate training on personal accountability and implement practices that support a culture of personal accountability.
Non Profit Executive Consultant
1 年Thank you. This is a really powerful post.