Dealing With Disappointment At Work

DisappointmentThe last week was not a good week for me professionally.  It started by with some bad news about something I had hoped to achieve at work.  The details are confidential but needless to say, I was very disappointed.  I felt betrayed and alone, as though other people should have been there for me, should have warned me that this was happening.  I also felt angry, I felt like I didn’t get the support I needed so it wasn’t fair to criticize me now and hold me back from what I wanted.

I wanted to sulk and blame the world.  Actually, I wanted to run away and quit my job.  Luckily, I have a bit more common sense than that, plus a very intelligent wife who listened to my issues and presented me with some great advice.  Ultimately, I went and talked to my boss about this whole thing, although I did take some time to formulate my thoughts before I marched in there.

What I realized was my career is my responsibility.  As I’ve defined it before, responsibility is the willingness and the ability to take action and I’m the only who has both of those things when it comes to my work.  Should other people have helped me along the way?  Sure, and they would have if I had asked.  Should other people have supported me?  Sure, and they would have if I told them I needed it.

Ultimately, it seems like I made a few mistakes:

  • I tried to do everything myself – This is fine when you’re an individual contributor but not when you’re a manager.  A manager has to rely on his people to do the work and I didn’t do that.  If a problem arose, I went and solved it, instead of teaching my employees how to solve them.
  • I didn’t look far enough into the future – An employee needs to be concerned with executing immediate actions.  A manager needs to be concerned with formulating plans for the future and then letting his employees execute them in the present.  I was too backwards focused.  I was reacting to what had happened before instead of planning for what was going to happen.
  • I was too reluctant to ask for help – Instead of asking for help, I waited for it to be offered.  I didn’t even tell people I needed help but instead assumed they could see it for themselves.
  • I didn’t communicate well – Because I am the product expert, I entered many conversations with the mind set of “I’m right and you’re wrong.”  Even worse, when I would get into arguments I would try to “win” the argument instead of figuring out how it could be resolved.  I didn’t take the time to say “ok, how can we resolve this?  What data would help us figure this out?” because I was too busy arguing.

Do As I Say, Not As I Do

I was really disappointed with myself after this realization.  Here I am preaching all these lessons about good communication, planning and asking for help and I myself had completely ignored them, much to my detriment.  The truth is that we can all be less than objective when it comes to our own lives.  It’s easy to take a look at someone else and say “they’re being too argumentative” but it’s not so easy to do the same when looking in the mirror.  Luckily for me, my boss was more objective than I and pointed out some of these issues to me.

I say lucky and I really do mean that.  There are a few possible outcomes here:

  • My boss doesn’t pick up on this, promotes me and I fail miserably
  • My boss picks up on all this and fires me without telling me why
  • My boss picks up on all this and tells me about it

Choice number 3 is the best of all worlds and it is indeed what happened.  Through this choice I can now improve my manner of work.  I’m also lucky in that my boss is someone who gives second chances.  That is, if I truly improve, I’ll get everything I want and then some.  As I said, this is probably the best of all outcomes.  Am I disappointed?  Yes, but I do believe that this is for the best.  Now I just need to prove that I can change, and that I already know how to do.

Mentors

What this shows me is the value of mentors and coaches.  Everyone has a coach, even olympic players who are considered the best in their game.  Why?  Because the presence of an objective observer is an excellent way to improve.  We just have to be willing to take their advice and not get too defensive.   Our first instinct is going to be “you don’t know what you’re talking about.  I’m already doing this and you’re missing out on some facts”, but by carefully listening to what they’re saying and then digging deep to see what they actually mean by their words, we can gain some incredible insights into ourselves.

I’m glad to be working for someone like that and I’m grateful for the learning opportunity.

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And no, he doesn’t read this blog :)

6 Things To Do After Being Dumped

breakup (10/365)It seemed fitting for me to write a post about getting dumped right after getting married. My wife would appreciate the humor (I think) and besides, what better topic than separation could there be for someone who’s just back from his honeymoon? :)

So, let’s talk breakups. Specifically, let’s talk about what to do after one of those soul rending break ups where you truly loved someone and then they dumped you. And yes, I speak from experience here. I loved my first wife very much and the day when she walked into our living room and told me “it’s over, we need to end our marriage” was the worst day of my life. It was a surprise to me and I’ve never been so hurt.

[Read more...]

Let Me Tell You About The Time I Almost Died…

I found this document hidden away on my computer the other day.  It had been written to a professor in graduate school who asked me to tell “the story of me”.  This was only a few months after my divorce.

Here goes:

One month ago I stood on the fifth floor of a parking structure in San Jose and considered how easy it would be to just step forward into the air. It seemed so inviting, so perfect; an end to the pain and the suffering, a release from the pressure and the stress. Eventually I decided to turn back, to go downstairs and meet the person I was scheduled to have dinner with. I didn’t do it because I changed my mind, but because five stories seemed too low and I couldn’t live with the fear of living the rest of my life with the consequences of a failed attempt. [Read more...]

What Is Confidence?

ConfidenceConfidence, you either have it or you don’t. If you have it, you’re king (or queen) of the world. People do what you want them to do, your attraction and sex appeal level go way up, your friends look up to you as a leader and people want to be more like you. If you don’t have it, you’re at the bottom of the social pile. No one cares about your opinion (not even your mother!), no one listens to what you have to say and people find you “cute, but not that hot”. In fact, we all know that people with confidence kick all sorts of ass and get all the cool stuff. However, no one I asked could ever really define to me what confidence was.

So I’ve been thinking, if I want to confidence to be one of the primary aspects of my cult members, I better figure out what the heck it is, and quick! Which led me to thinking, what is it that makes confident people special? Why do we look up to them? Why do we follow them? What I ended up realizing is the true meaning of confidence, and also the false meaning, the one most people seem to believe in. [Read more...]

Maybe The Reason You’re Failing Is…. YOU!

flickr 'relationships' [aka 'bullshit detector']I have an acquaintance, we’ll call her “Sam”.  Sam has been trying to get a job for three years now, ever since she was laid off from her accounting job at the start of this recession.  Sam keeps complaining to me about why she can’t find a job.  Sometimes she complains that the job postings companies put out there are not real. Sometimes she complains about how the only people who get the jobs are the ones who are friends of the hiring manager.  Last week she complained to me about how all the good jobs are going overseas.  At this point I offered to sit with her and go over what she was doing and see if there was room for improvement.  She sent me her resume as a starting point and I spent about 30 seconds looking at this document before determining that Sam’s biggest problem was Sam.

Sam’s resume looked like something out of a resume nightmare.  It was poorly formatted, full of spelling errors, filled with massive run on sentences and overflowing with useless information.  It was 5 pages of utter nonsense which would make any would be hiring manager toss it into the garbage can as soon as they saw it.  When I further asked Sam about her job search, I found out she had done no networking and no research into the various companies she was trying to get hired at.  Think about that for a second.  Here’s a woman who had been looking for a job for THREE YEARS and she was utterly clueless. [Read more...]

A Marathon Failure, But Also A Success

marathon sacrificeI’m writing this from my hotel room in Kihei, Maui. The sun is setting behind the mountain outside my room over a perfect field of grass and palm trees swaying in the wind. It’s beautiful. The only bad part is the intense pain in my feet. Why the pain you ask? Because yesterday I finished the Maui marathon, a major accomplishment for me and one I’ve been dreaming about for a while now.

Oddly enough, the way I finished this marathon was not quite what I had in mind. My running partner blew out his knee at around mile 4 and could no longer run. The best he could do was a moderate speed walk. This was unfortunate because we had been making great time up until that point. In fact, we were ahead of schedule and feeling good about our running pace. When the injury occurred, I could see how disappointed my friend was, as was I. We had been training so hard for this and here we were, walking so slow that most of the race was passing us by. I suppose I could have run ahead, in fact, he told me I should do so, but there are some things in this life which are far more important than finishing a marathon in less than 4 hours.

Which is what brings me here today, to tell you that despite all the thought you put into your goals, sometimes life surprises you. Sometimes you find yourself accomplishing something else, equally or even more satisfying than your original goal. So if you’re out there and you’re reading this and you just had life throw you a curve ball, don’t give up. What you take to be a crushing moment can also be a wonderful opportunity. I may have lost a chance to accomplish my speed goal, but I gained a chance to strengthen a friendship.

Don’t give up when plans fail. Sometimes, that failed plan is an opportunity to achieve something even greater. Actually, I think my next door neighbor says it best, “when life gives you lemons, make lemonade!” Sometimes the old sayings are 100% correct.  :)

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Don’t worry, I’ll restart the series on changing your life when I come back from vacation next week.  Speaking of which, have you written down your goals and made a plan?