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Mastery Mondays

Personal Development

Taking Responsibility

At this point in history, I am working on teaching my seven year old daughter to take responsibility for her own actions. Granted, this is a skill that most of us as adults need to work on and refine; however, it’s important to learn it at a young age as well.

I know that all kids (and all adults) are different, but my oldest daughter has a real knack for blaming everyone else for what happens to her. It’s not a very becoming quality.

Many years ago I went to a communication seminar where the speaker talked extensively about taking responsibility for your own actions. So often we choose to blame others, blame our circumstances, blame the environment for the things that go on in our lives. The truth is that there are many things we cannot control, but what we can control is how we respond to what is going on around us. That includes taking responsibility for our actions, decisions, and attitudes. 

I’m working hard to teach my children this from a young age because I believe that taking responsibility for our actions can make or break a life.

Too many people spend their life as victims to what is happening to them instead of taking charge of things and adjusting their sails to go where they want to go, despite where the winds are blowing. 

Think about someone you know who plays a victim to a particular circumstance. You can probably pinpoint some areas about their life where they could make some shifts and be in a completely different place. It’s easy to see this about someone else’s circumstances. That’s why I think it is so fundamentally important to learn to take responsibility for your actions - because then you can make those shifts and turn everything around for the better.

Recommended Book

Get Out of Your Own Way

Mar 10, 2020
ISBN: 9781400215430

Interesting Fact #1

When things feel outside of our control, we look for a scapegoat in a natural desire to identify the “source” of our challenge. Yet, by doing so, we can fall into an unconscious victim position that perpetuates the feelings of overwhelm and drama. Blame is fueled by the addiction to criticism, and we are frequently unconscious about blaming ourselves, life circumstances, or those around us for why we aren’t getting what we really want.

SOURCE

Interesting Fact #2

It is not easy to cognitively restructure the brain and shift away from the default position of blame. Yet if you want to stop feeling overwhelmed as a victim of circumstance, you need to step back and ask yourself, how am I creating these experiences that I am having? You might be tempted to think, “I didn’t create these experiences, they just happened to me.” And this response in itself is a clue to some hidden attitude or belief. Choosing to take 100% responsibility can open a whole new perspective. Are you willing to accept that you create everything that occurs in your experience and face any unconscious commitments holding you back from what you want?

SOURCE

Interesting Fact #3

Blame spreads quickly because it triggers the perception that one’s self image is under assault and must be protected. Merely observing someone publicly blame an individual in an organization for a problem, even when the target is innocent, greatly increases the odds that a practice of blaming others will spread with equal tenacity

SOURCE

Quote of the day

“Most people do not really want freedom, because freedom involves responsibility, and most people are frightened of responsibility.” ― Sigmund Freud

Article of the day - Why Taking Honest Responsibility Can Make You Happy

Key points

  • When we're criticized, it can be hard to take responsibility for our actions.
  • Criticizing someone else can be a way of avoiding our own responsibility.
  • Taking legitimate responsibility can make you feel more competent, powerful, and in charge of yourself.

“I don’t understand,” Matt* said. “I love that woman to death, and she knows it. Why does she want a separation? We have a really good thing going—one of the better relationships among all of our friends.”

I wasn’t sure if Matt really wanted an answer to his question but based on our work together over the past year, I had an idea about it, and I thought it might be helpful for him to hear it. “I know you love her,” I said, “but are you sure she does?”

“What?” he said. “You think she doesn’t know I love her?”

“Well, most of the time in therapy you talk about the things you wish she would change,” I said. “You get upset about things she says to you, want her to be more empathic to your needs, want to have sex more often, wish she had a better-paying job, and that she was better at housekeeping. You also tell me that she’s overweight and that you don’t like her clothes. Is it possible that you’ve communicated some of those things to her?”

Matt was basically a good guy who really did love his wife. The truth was, he was as hard on himself as he was on her, pushing himself at work and criticizing himself for even small mistakes. But he had some of the same problems at work that he did at home. When his manager criticized him, for example, he quickly felt hurt and then furious. In those moments, he was unable to take responsibility for his own actions.

Emily May, marketing director for the Niagara Institute, writes that taking responsibility means acknowledging that “you play a part in every situation or experience and therefore, have some degree of” accountability for what has happened. Yet in our reward-driven culture, being accountable for a mistake can feel dangerous or frightening or even shameful. You may worry about being blamed for the entirety of a problem—especially when other people are not admitting to their own part in the situation.

Yet when we don’t take our own legitimate share of responsibility, we run the danger of losing a sense of our own power or sense of control over our own actions. This sense of control over what we do and don’t do is called “a sense of agency” or, as psychologist James W. Moore has described it, a “feeling of being in the driving seat when it comes to our actions.”

Research has shown that a sense of agency provides us with a greater sense of competence, even when it involves taking responsibility for mistakes or negative behaviors.

After our session, Matt went back to his wife and told her that he was aware that he had made some big mistakes in their relationship. “I don’t tell you how much I love you,” he said, “or how proud of you I am. I’m really sorry.” He asked her if she would consider staying together while he worked on this issue, saying that he was really sad that he had made her feel so bad about herself and about him. But, he added, if she needed to separate while he worked on it, he would accept that. He just hoped that she would give him a chance to repair things with her.

To his relief, she agreed to stay with him in what she called a “trial unification.” Matt told me that he was amazed that he felt not just relieved that she had agreed to stay, but also stronger. “I feel more in control of myself and my life than I have in years,” he said. He and his wife agreed that there would be mistakes made on both sides, but that if they each took responsibility for their own part, things might be much better than they were before.

It's an important lesson to keep in mind. Taking responsibility does not mean never making a mistake. We humans are imperfect by definition, so we will always make mistakes. But taking responsibility for our actions, even when they are accidents, means that we can change our behavior going forward. And knowing that we can make changes gives us a sense of agency, a feeling of power over what we do and don’t do, and a sense of competence. And that sense of competence can increase self-esteem, improve our work, and mend our relationships.

*Names changed to protect privacy.

Copyright @fdbarth2022.

Question of the day - What is an area of your life where you need to take responsibility?

Personal Development

What is an area of your life where you need to take responsibility?