Are you in costume everyday of your life?
At work…at home… are you who you really are, or are you role playing all the time? Have you lost track of who you really are?
Are you really you when you are working with your clients and customers?
The point of this question is to ask “do you assume a role”?
How do you show up to work with clients, customers, or when you are out networking?
In addition, do you have MVS syndrome?
This stands for Multiple Value Systems. There is the value system you ask your family to live by. The one you live by in your place of worship. Then there is the value system you utilize at work and with your employees, your clients and your customers. Maybe you cut corners. Maybe you do not treat all of your employees as real people with a real life outside of the workplace.
These are questions meant to have you reflect on yourself for a few moments.
Let’s take a quick timeout.
In case the calendar has slipped your mind, this is the end of October! Which means it is time to conduct a few activities for next year. A few of these might include:
- Strategy for next year.
- Goals for next year.
- Monthly plan for next year.
- Events you are attending/hosting next year.
- Vacations you are taking next year.
Where you are able to, add in dates, timelines and due dates and put these in place as well.
People can feel someone who is not authentic a mile away.
When you wear a costume you are not being authentic.
Why not just be yourself? Be honest about who you are and what you value and care about the most. People can sense a mile away when you’re not being yourself, so why bother putting on some pretend outfit just to be somebody else?
Why does anyone even go there?
More often than not, you might imagine the answer is fear. There is a fear of failure. By acting as someone else, there is a feeling that you will not be the failure it will belong to this ‘other’ person and not you.
This is not the only answer or reason. It is one possibility. Another is a lack of confidence.
When you lack confidence you may not want to show your “true self” to others.
Again by ‘playing’ another role it is like putting on the Superman outfit.
My suggestion is to be yourself all the time.
If wearing the Superman outfit makes you feel better fine. Wear it all the time then!
Mitch Tublin is an entrepreneur and founder of Wenkroy International LLC, a boutique consulting company with a main focus of adding value to people. Through speaking, training and coaching clarity is achieved and distractions are reduced. People now focus on what matters most. My passion is to take people to the next level in their life and in their career and business.