Accountability isn’t about blame

fullsizerender-30

All too often we confuse things in life and the word ‘accountability’ is often synonymous with blame and losing your job, especially in the corporate world.

Once someone utters the word ‘accountability’ everyone runs for cover. When we get to ourselves too, the thought of being accountable sends shivers down our spine, we can no longer blame others.

Accountability is not about blaming others or blaming ourselves, it is not about blame in any way.

It is about realising that we are responsible for our outcomes in life.

Realising responsibility removes the opportunity to hide behind excuses, so this, in turn, facilitates learning, learning if applied leads to better outcomes and thus accountability is the catalyst for better outcomes.

From the moment we are born to the moment we die, we are the only common factor in every single thing that goes on in our life that matters. We can not control what others do, or the weather or any other common excuses. We can control what we do and in order to improve how we control ourselves, we have to learn, and learning can only begin once we accept that we were responsible for the outcome. Not to blame, but to be responsible, there is a huge difference.

Blame creates victims and blocks progress. Responsibility creates an understanding that we created the outcome, so therefore, we can learn, improve and create better outcomes.

Don’t look for blame, look for learning and take account of what we do. It is the route to better outcomes and a happier life.

Repeating patterns

fullsizerender-28

There are many repeating patterns in life.

Some are good, but more often they are patterns that keep us stuck.

We choose to do the same behaviours and then are amazingly surprised that we get the same outcomes, often sighting bad luck to excuse the same or worse result.

Every year people rush to gym’s in January, only to have given up by February as the gruelling exercise regime they have set themselves is unsustainable.

We have the misery of the Christmas credit card bills caused by the annual consumption fest of buying more ‘stuff’ than anyone needs.

Change comes from small, marginal, regular sustainable steps taken daily not from setting huge revolutions in our routines that no one can keep to.

Repeat good behaviours regularly, do not keep repeating the same bad behaviours leading to the same repeating bad outcomes.

Knowledge is power only if you apply it.