I was wrong

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Society has developed this attitude to ‘my rights’ and ‘never admit liability’ in an accident. We seem unable to accept we may have been wrong, it is seen as a weakness, it is seen as giving in and not being this ‘strong’ person that we are all meant to be.

Admitting you was wrong means accepting vulnerability, it means that you are self-aware and willing to learn.

It is a strength.

It requires bravery.

It requires accountability.

Blame is a waste of time, including blaming yourself. Perhaps it could be seen more as, not being wrong, but more a willingness to compromise, a willingness to change future outcomes, by learning what didn’t happen as anticipated.

We allow our limbic ‘chimp’ brains to over-power us sometimes, and this is where the black and white, win at all cost mentality suffocates compromise, suffocates accountability and ultimate suffocates learning.

It does not mean that we have to abandon what we believe in, but in order to inspires others, rather than coerce, we need to be able to compromise, empathise and understand where we can be better.

So more than being wrong, it’s being able to compromise, learn and modify going forward.

The endless pursuit of right or wrong, someone to blame, is an excuse to avoid being accountable and developing ourselves.

What did I apply?

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Learning is essential as a person in all aspects of life. Learning comes from creating experiences, from the act of doing something and producing an outcome.

It also comes from reading, observing, from all sorts of different sources. Although the best learning comes from doing things ourselves.

However, learning in itself is not enough. Simply learning does not ensure that you will not repeat an outcome.

What ensures that you will not repeat an outcome, that you were not happy with, is to apply the learning.

Yesterday I asked ‘what did you learn today?’, well now today the question to ask is, what did you apply?

If we do not apply learning, then learning has little real value.