CloNece 11-06-062 |
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Necessary Endings The
Employees, Businesses, and Relationships that All of Us Have to Give Up in
Order to Move Forward Dr.
Henry Cloud Harper
Business, 2010, 238 pp. ISBN 978-0-06-177712-7 |
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Cloud is a leadership coach
to business executives and a clinical psychologist. He is well known for other books, including
Boundaries. In this book he argues that our personal
and professional lives can only improve to the degree we can end some things as
a step to something better. Well
executed endings correct the bad and make room for personal and professional
growth. Preface "In your business and
perhaps your life, the tomorrow that you desire and envision may never come
to pass if you do not end some things you are doing today." (Preface) 1. Endings: The Good Cannot Begin Until the Bad Ends When the world and the
market are changing, improving what you are already doing will not bring a
bright future. It will require some
difficult decisions. Some things die
and some need to be killed. The good
cannot begin until the bad ends. There
is a season for things. Although
endings are crucial they are often difficult and we do not do them well. Crises often bring to the fore longstanding
problems that have not been addressed.
Leaders get stuck in the past because of false hope or they are simply
unable to make difficult endings. If
we fail to end things well, we repeat the mistakes that hold us back. 2. Pruning: Growth Depends on Getting Rid of the
Unwanted or the Superfluous Gardeners prune the buds or
branches that show less promise, those that are sick, and those that are
dead. Pruning is cutting away the
superfluous parts and this is a central metaphor for necessary endings. "The areas of your business and life
that require your limited resources--your time, energy, talent, emotions,
money--but are not achieving the vision you have for them should be
pruned." (18) "There is a big
difference between hurt and harm.
We all hurt sometimes in facing hard truths, but it makes us
grow. Harm is when you damage
someone. Facing reality is usually not
a damaging experience, even though it can hurt." (21) "Positive is
doing what is best and right for the business and for the people."
(22) "Reality sometimes makes us
face things that hurt, and that can be a very good thing." (23) Pruning has to do with
focus, mission, purpose, structure, and strategic execution. Just cutting back resources to do the same
activities will yield less, not more.
Prune in three categories: things that are suboptimal, not working
well, or dead. 3. Normalizing Necessary Endings: Welcome the
Seasons of Life into Your Worldview Endings are a normal part
of business and life. If you are
uncomfortable with endings, it will be more difficult to see what needs to be
done and you will recoil and resist.
Embrace endings as a good thing.
When it becomes clear that more effort will not bring about a
different result, recognize reality and take action. It is easier when you believe endings are
normal. Align with reality." Am I hanging on to an activity, product,
strategy, or relationship whose season has passed?" (45)
4. When Stuck Is the New Normal: The Difference
Between Pain with a Purpose and Pain for No Good Reason End misery that is going
nowhere. Pain is a signal that
something is wrong: action is required.
Often we do not end something because of factors inside us. We're stuck. Our internal maps tell us we can't do
anything about it. [5 mental models
are described.] Examine and change your mental model. Assume there is opportunity somewhere. Focus on what you can do. Write down the things you can't control and
the ones you can change. Take action
on the latter. "There is a difference between helping someone who is disabled,
incapable, or otherwise infirm versus helping someone who is resisting
growing up and taking care of what every adult…has to be responsible for:
herself or himself." (67) Nonprofits often extend misplaced and
excessive loyalty to such people. 5. Getting to the Pruning Moment: Realistic,
Hopeless, and Motivated Successful leaders are in
touch with reality. They recognize
when something is hopeless: it isn't working and it isn't going to get
better. "Nothing mobilizes us
like a firm dose of reality. … only reality gets us
to do difficult things." (74) We
must confront the brutal facts to get to the pruning moment. Living in denial, unable to face reality,
leads to failure. When you make a
wrong turn and are driving down a wrong road, you turn around when you
clearly see it's a dead end. To get
where you want you must make a change.
You must choose reality over comfort.
Delusional attitudes keep the old, inaccurate sense of reality in
place. A positive hopelessness can
give us courage to stop doing what isn't going to work. How is your eyesight regarding reality? "Hope … sometimes
creates problems if we are not in touch with reality. … In a false reality,
hope is the worst quality you can have!"
(85) "Just as hope can conquer
all, false hope can ruin
everything…." (86) We must
distinguish between wishing and hoping.
Hope is based on real, objective reasons. "While hope is a great virtue, hope in
unreality is not." (90) 6. Hoping
Versus Wishing: The Difference Between What's Worth Fixing and What Should
End The past is the best
predictor. Project the past into the
future. Unless something changes, that is what you can expect. To see whether there is hope for change
consider the character of the
person. "The person's makeup, is the
future." (98) Look at the reality of the person: are they
capable? Look at the character, the
gifts, and the experience or the person.
People do wake up and change.
Look for objective reasons to hope for change. Look in these categories: verified
involvement in a change process, a structured path for change, monitoring systems
to keep track, new experiences and skills, self-driven motivation for change,
admission of need for change, external support for change, skilled help, and
evidence of some success. You can have
objective hope if you are bringing some new knowledge, wisdom, or know-how to
the situation plus some new energy for driving change. 7. The Wise, the Foolish, and the Evil: Identifying
Which Kinds of People Deserve Your Trust
[When to keep trying with
someone] The most accurate
predictions come from accurate diagnoses of character. There are wise people, foolish people, and
evil people. Respond to people
according to their behaviors. Wise
people welcome feedback and make adjustments to align with truth and
reality. Talking is helpful. Foolish people try to
adjust the truth so they don't have to change. They rarely see themselves as wrong. They minimize, rationalize, make excuses,
get emotional, and have little awareness of the ramifications of their
behaviors. They lack ownership of
issues. Instead of talking, establish
limits (to protect from their damage) and consequences (to cause them to feel
the pain). You must recognize and
bring an end to the effects of their refusal of responsibility. You must protect yourself
from evil people with "lawyers, guns (police), and money." They actually want to bring you down. 8. Creating Urgency: Stay Motivated and Energized
for Change Endings
are hard. "You have heard it said
that people resist change. That is not
always true. It is more
true that people resist change that they feel no real need to
make." (150) To create endings
and get those around you to do so, you need to capitalize on the fear of the
negative and the draw of the positive.
Because we get comfortable with our misery we need to visualize the
threat in the future as real in our minds as it will be in reality. Reality moves people. Seeing the world as it is, its dangers and
opportunities is motivating. So play
the movie of the future in your mind.
Make yourself see and feel it. Is this what you really want? Playing the movie of the future you desire
is motivating as well. See, smell, and
feel your vision. Create
alliances of influential people committed to change. Surround yourself with those who create
energy for change. Who are your change
agents for the endings you need to make?
They have to have enough fire to put an end to the old. "Human brains are designed to create
what they see in the future. Our internal
resources begin to align with that internal reality and create it."
(161) "When people see it, they
can create it. If it is communicated
strongly enough and often enough, they almost cannot not create it!" (162)
"So make it real. Write it
down. Talk about it and create
reminders in your personal life and your organization." (162)
Set deadlines, with consequences.
Create structures of time, plans, critical paths, milestones,
etc. Keep the misery alive in your
mind. Measure progress and
evaluate. 9. Resistance: How to Tackle Internal and External
Barriers Internal resistance arises
from powerful wishes that are mutually exclusive. You have to let go of something to get the
other. You must decide. If you are attached to nothing more than
doing the right thing, you have power.
10. No More Mr. Bad Guy: The Magic of Self-Selection People stall because they
don't want to be the "bad guy," rejecting someone. So set a standard for what you want,
clarify the standard, and let the individual "self-select." The standard creates the ending. This is
similar to colleges setting admission standards. 11. Having
the Conversation: Strategies for Ending Things Well 12. Embrace
the Grief: The Importance of Metabolizing Necessary Endings Look at the past experience:
break it a part, consider the good and the bad in the relationships, the
learning, the skills you gained, new knowledge and strengths. Consider the negatives, the things you will
want to eliminate in the future. Take
the wisdom out of it, learn from it.
Consciously leave behind the pain, bitterness, feelings of failure,
loss and grief and resentment. 13.
Sustainability: Taking Inventory of What Is Depleting Your Resources Sustainability means
resources are not depleted or permanently damaged. An ending is vital and urgent if you are
depleting or damaging your resources.
Areas of life that might be on an unsustainable path include your
emotions, physical state, relationships, professional state, spiritual state,
financial state, energy, or your strengths.
In what ways are you overextended?
This does not mean sacrifice or proactive decisions to go forward when
it costs. This is an important
requirement for maturity. "What I
am talking about is a passive and negative state that you find yourself in
over time, a state with no benefits and nothing but diminishing returns. That is not sustainable." (226) Conclusion: It's All About the Future 1. Do the very best you can
at every step in your life. 2. When it is time, have
the courage to take the next step. 3. Pour yourself into the
new situation and make it all that it can be. |
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