Episode #4 Transcript: Four Career Guideposts
From The Still Space Podcast
Weâve all learned career and leadership advice. These four guideposts are not ones youâve likely seen before. They are what I notice transforms careers for my executive coaching clients and what transformed my own career from welfare to CEO of organizations worth up to $31 million organization.
Most of you know that I have journeyed from welfare to CEO but what I share with you here are a few guideposts that I found to be crucial in my transformation. Famous author Malcom Gladwell said that to master anything you must do it 10,000 hours. The only problem with that is that if you are doing something that doesnât work â youâve just become proficient at being stuck.
Guidepost #1: Seek Your Childhood Innocence.
If we go through our lives expecting one challenge after another, thatâs what shows up â life becomes a problem to solve instead of being fun like when you were a child and could play outside all night long, catching fireflies and naming stars. We start to adopt messages from experience as truth when they are nothing but interpretations. Soon life is merely solving one challenging interpretation after another. I know this well because I mastered it with what seemed like 10,000 hours.
I was a stay-at-home mother with four children under seven-years-old living what looked on the outside to be the country club life when on the inside I was in an unpalatable situation. So, I filed for divorce as a leap of faith and was not at all prepared for the avalanche that befell us.
Within six months the children and I had lost our home to sheriffâs sale, they had to change schools midyear and were on free lunch, we were on welfare, food stamps and medical assistance, and without an automobile. We were homeless and destitute.
I kept waiting for the âfair policeâ to show up. They never came. I watched my children wear each otherâs shoes and began to doubt my faith. I started to wonder if I had done something to deserve despair but was absolutely certain my children had not. And from them I began to observe the adaptability of innocence and revisited the value of my own. They never complained that their clothes came from Goodwill. They understood if I couldnât be at every basketball game though I missed few.
My son was the only boy in the Girl Scout Troop and never thought anything of it because I was the leader and he had 23 girls fawning all over him. They adapted. It was hard. But in all of this, they never lost the sweetness of innocent curiosity. Donât lose yours either. Childlike curiosity s=will steward you down the path to discovery.
To this day, all in their 20s, my children and I still sprinkle reindeer food in the yard on Christmas Eve and play Bingo with Grammie as if there is a skill to winning.
No one said life is fair. Thatâs like expecting the lion not to eat you because you didnât eat him. We had each other. It wasnât everything. But it was enough to keep our hearts open and to not turn cold with judgment.
I remember as children my brother and I used to jump off small cliffs in a local park, imagining we could fly. Yes, we skinned a few knees in those days but for one split second, we flew. Thatâs the freedom of innocence.
Guidepost #2: Donât Replay the Past or Fast Forward to the Future. The magic is in the moment.
Truth is present in every second of your day. It is fear that falsely hijacks your courage and pilots you to follow the past and anticipate the future.
In this space doubt clouds truth when it is merely a mask for sad. And when we live in the fog of disappointment we start telling ourselves stories to avoid the discomfort of sad, stories that we interpret with negative outcomes that make us angry. Sad is healthier than angry because it is a truth we can move on from and not an interpretation we need to armor up against.
I used to fast forward my life to where my children would never go to college and Iâd never find love. The truth was I was running from the fear of being alone, struggling so hard to be both mom and dad when all I really needed to be was me.
I got a strong dose of living in the moment when I reached out to a local social service agency where I went one morning for a professional assessment of my skills. I remember asking the director, âWhat do I needed to do?â to which she reminded me, âKeep doing exactly what you are doing right now.â And so I kept moving forward one moment at a time.
Guidepost #3: Risks for Purpose. Nothing is Personal.
I had to become a success quickly because I had four mouths hanging open in front of me like baby birds. I didnât have time to go back to school or work my way to the top. So I assessed my values and strengths, and volunteered in areas where I needed experience. When I applied for my first full time role since the children were born it was as a hospital foundation CEO. I didnât have a clue as to the logistics of that job. But I thought, âWell, theyâre not asking me to do surgery so I can figure this out.â And I went right from the interview to the bookstore and bought âFundraising for Dummies.â
Within 18 months I was offered a bigger position at a larger hospital where I raised $10.4 million on the heels of the largest hospital bankruptcy in US history. And from there recruiters were calling me. Iâd have never had the moxie to apply for that position or the one I have now where I run a $24 million organization if Iâd hadnât had my eyes on what mattered. And, of course your family matters but if you are going to work at a career 40+ hours a week it better have purpose or you wonât take the risks that matter.
I remember one day I was frustrated with a work issue one afternoon and was eying an adorable Shih-Tzu Beenie Baby in the hospital gift shop. On my way out the door an older gentleman handed the stuffed doggie to me in a bag and said, âIâm having surgery tomorrow and donât know how it will go. You should have this. I can see how much you liked it.â
My connection with that gentleman in that moment put it all in perspective for me. My purpose is to help people who are facing some of the biggest challenges of their lives. I can make a far greater difference leading my team to fill in the gaps with hope for people who are ill and suffering at the hospital or helping my clients be high performers and get better jobs to support their families, than fast forwarding to my own interpretation of a non-lived possible failure.
I learned early on that hearing âNoâ isnât the worst thing that can happen to us. It isnât personal. It often just means ânot now.â Being rejected doesnât mean we are abandoned. Itâs not personal. It just means that this specific person or situation isnât a good fit.
Guidepost #4: Done is better than perfect.
When I was in elementary school I remember the girls being praised for having more self-control â being labeled âgoodâ and âsmart.â While the boys I remember being praised for just âsitting stillâ and âpaying attention.â The interpretation here? Girls âbe perfect and smart.â Boys âstay on point and try harder.â What is the better life skill?
In my leadership coaching practice I watch my male clients courageously apply for jobs they donât have the credentials for yet are sure they can do. While often women on the other hand wonât even apply.
Women need to be aware of our grooming for perfection, put down the guard and allow for truth. The truth is Iâve never been qualified on paper for any of the CEO positions Iâve held. Early in my career I used to think I needed to lead more like men to be taken seriously. The truth is we are who we are with all our qualities, imperfections and uniqueness. Play to our strengths and we will be high performers. Play to someone else strengths and we will be mediocre at best.
As have spent more than 10,000 hours juggling many issues at once. We explore multiple resolutions not zero in on only one. We value the journey as much or more than the outcome. We are willing to re-interpret the goal in lieu of the consequences. Our teams are diverse and our solutions are sustainable. Weâre not perfect. Weâre who we are. And weâre awesome.
In closing I will tell you that courage is not the absence of fear â it is the ability to move beyond it â an acquired ability and it takes practice. So, make lots of mistakes in your life â just not the same one twice. Be able to sit quietly with sadness before anger overtakes it and strangles your innocence. Observe your thoughts without interpretation so that you may be grateful for the magic of the moment.
And love like nobodyâs watching because the payoff is the appreciation of freedom. Find a career that gives you that fire in the belly of when you were a child. Get out all the things you hold dear and start using them now not tomorrow. Wear the great outfit. Use your good dishes. Buy yourself flowers. Take the vacation. Laugh until it hurts.
And donât ever, ever, ever forget, you have everything you need inside of you right now to be everything you dreamed. So, go out and leap like you can fly. The world needs your wings.
Mindful Leadership Impact Coach Mary Lee Gannon, ACC, CAE is an award-winning speaker, author and president of Mary Lee Gannon.com â a coaching and consulting firm that helps busy executives take their career and life to the next level. Mary Lee has a unique perspective with 19+ years as a CEO and currently leads a $31 million organization within a 95,000 employee organization as well as coaches executives on how mindful practice and a mindset shift lead to playing big in the corner office and life. Swap overwhelmed for freedom.
Mary Leeâs personal turnaround came as a stay-at-home mother with four children under seven-years-old whose divorce that took her and her children from the country club life to public assistance and homelessness from where she re-invented her life to support her family.
Mary Lee is a Certified Coach by the International Coach Federation (ACC) - the most respected coaching association in the world, a Certified Professional Coach by Duquesne University, a Certified Association Executive (CAE), an alumnus of the UCLA Mindful Awareness Practices Program and the Harvard Medical School and McLean Hospital Coaching in Medicine & Leadership Conference, and author or two books: Reinvent You and Starting Over. Mary Lee was awarded the Honorary Woman of Courage Award by PA Women Work, Lifetime Achievement Award by Pittsburgh Society of Association Executives and the Women of Integrity Award by Pittsburgh Professional Women and Leading Lady by Oakland Catholic. Mary Lee is the "Mindful Leadership" columnist for Smart Business Magazine. Sheâs been featured in Money Magazine, ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, Yahoo.com, U.S. News and World Report, msn.com, Forbes.com, CareerBuilder.com and Monster.com