Energy At Work  continued


The present-day corporate world creates untold barriers to block you from reaching the flow type of energy at work.  Most of the decision makers in corporate America do not know about flow and the enormous benefits they could reap by supporting employees' desires to work in this type of energy.  According to a friend of mine who once worked at Apple Computer, there are only about ten creative engineers at Apple.  Only they and maybe their managers know who they are.
These ten keep all 14,800 employees paid salaries by their creative efforts.  Think what Apple could accomplish if it had 50 engineers creating in flow.
So you'd like to spend some of your workday in flow?  How?
From observation I'd say the barriers to flow at work are fear and misuse of emotions.
Fear is not available for feeling if you are in intellectual or flow.  So move to flow with your state of excellence and stay as long as you'd like.  This should take care of fear.
Correcting the misuse of emotional energy needs a few other strategies.

Handling Emotions in Business
   Dampening down, resisting, ignoring your emotions will stop you from gathering the extra energy you need for extraordinary mental states. Blocked emotions block energy. Emotions are the life force and can be handled in a way that allows you to express them-and keep your job.
You must be appropriate in business and displaying unrestrained emotions is frowned upon in most U. S. corporations today. However, unrestrained emotions will pay off handsomely in personal energy. So how do you let your emotions out and yet stay within the corporate and business set of expectations?
In this chapter are some ideas, gathered in my forty years in the business paradigm. First, a story:
Recently I taught a seminar at a manufacturing site to mid-level managers at IBM. A one-third cutback in personnel at this site had not been announced, but was expected soon. Rumors were flying like buzzards over the situation. All the participants had been warned about losing their jobs. This fear had brought them to the three day seminar. Some came to improve their counseling skills, some to fulfill their training requirement days for the year. As I taught them the new strategies for interpersonal skills, they repeatedly responded, "But we've been taught to be neutral when an employee is upset. We've been taught to be neutral, period."
   I had been teaching them to match an angry or frustrated voice tone to establish rapport before beginning to seek solutions to an employee's problem. You may use neutral words, but the nonverbals which match the other person's are more effective in gaining rapport. We did role-plays and asked the participants how they felt. They agreed that rapport occurred once the matching occurred. They were very surprised and kept muttering, "We've been taught neutral." If you match a loud, strident voice, you are not neutral. By the end of three days they were ready to test this new strategy outside the classroom, but giving up being "neutral" was hard. Corporate policy about handling emotions is not always the best solution.  Rapport is more important than being "neutral."

The Myth of Objectivity in Decision Making
Most business people believe that being professional means being neutral. If you are in business you, too, probably believe this. This whole concept is based on the myth of the cool, logical, analytical decision-maker who makes the best decision based on the facts, not emotions. Did I write "myth?" Yes, I did. If you read accounts of how executives make decisions, you will become aware of how much subjectivity there is in weighing the facts. Even Harold Geneen, the head of ITT in its momentarily successful period, who began in accounting and focused on the bottom line, admits there is a subjective piece in business decisions. For a human being to make a business decision uncolored by emotions, he would have to shut down a large part of his brain, and this is not possible.
     
How to be Professional and Emotional
The first step is to recognize the emotion which is pushing to be experienced.
The second step is to find an appropriate way to express the emotion inside the business world. Can you talk it out with your secretary or a colleague? Can you take a walk and kick garbage cans? And if there is not a way to be appropriate in business, where and when can you express this energy?  Hitting a punching bag, a big pillow, jogging, yelling in your office if it's sound-proof are all possibilities. Please don't kick your dog. Some people do this. I've seen it but I don't think it actually works. Don't kick your spouse either. They retaliate.
The third step is to decide whether you can express it now or wait until later. If your boss is blowing his stack, it may be a good time to wait. Only wait the length of time absolutely necessary. "The sooner the better" is the guideline with emotions.  Even if you calm down before you deal with the emotion, still deal with it. It's still in there-waiting for action.

The Payoff, or What Happens to an Emotion Once Expressed?
The great thing about an expressed emotion is-
                     it CHANGES
into something else. Our fear is that we will be angry, sad, hurt, frustrated, whatever, and get stuck there. In most cases this is an unfounded fear. If you do get stuck, there are ways out. See Chapter 15.
Emotions are energy, and once they are expressed, they move on. Energy becomes another emotion.
One caution
If you have repressed emotions for many years or denied strong emotions for a short time, you may find that the first go-around of acting them out will take more time than usual. A small amount of frustration can turn into a large amount, once moved to the conscious level.  What's happening is that old, repressed emotions are tumbling out along with present emotions. But once the old emotions are out, expressed, you will probably find relief in a short time. Shorter than you think.
Emotions are the life force in action. And if you notice, life is constantly changing. So will your emotions. Even emotional pain will diminish once you acknowledge it, live it, breathe it, and let it go.

Unexpressed Emotions
This is especially important in business, because unexpressed emotions diminish your energy, and you need all the energy possible to be successful. Being neutral when you do not feel neutral is hard on your body, hard on your energy, and hard on your relationships.
This concept is probably a paradigm shift for you, and hard to take. Try it out in small ways first, then notice what happens. Do not believe what you read in books until you test it for yourself. Even hard-cover books. 
In the IBM seminar mentioned earlier we role-played an employee coming to his manager with demanding questions about the criteria being used to determine which third of the people would be laid off. The manager immediately became "neutral," also defensive and climbed on his high horse. "I'm your next level, and don't you forget it." The employee became more agitated as the manager became more "neutral." I interceded and asked the manager to play back his voice tone in his memory. He did, then he looked sheepish and asked, "I sure don't have rapport do I?"
The person role-playing the employee replied "No "
The manager then answered the employee in these words, "I'm worried about my job, too. I feel just as concerned as you. I don't know the criteria for the layoffs, but as soon as I do, I'll tell all of you." By expressing his real feelings, the manager reduced the tension and both people felt better. The situation had not changed but their response to the situation had changed, for the better. They talked a little more, but with rapport. The job concerns did not disappear, but the emotions changed from fear and frustration to wait and see. "Wait and see" on the manufacturing floor is preferable to anger, as far as continuing the work which needs to be done.  One of the most difficult jobs a manager has is to keep people working while waiting for layoffs. 

Emotions of a Subordinate in Business
We have all felt the frustration of not being able to respond as we wish to a directive from above us on the corporate or institutional ladder. Let's examine some strategies for this situation.
In Stair-Step "Military" Organizations
Traditionally, your job as a subordinate is to make your boss look good to his boss. This may mean waiting to express your own emotions until later. Still it is important for your health and well-being that you do express them. The ideal situation is to have a boss who can handle your true response to his suggestions, but most business situations are not ideal.
You may find, as mentioned before, as you begin to stay with your emotions until they change, that old emotional memories tumble out of the refrigerator as well. Good! Congratulations!  This is an ideal way to clean out that musty refrigerator. Emotions once expressed go away, disappear, evaporate. They may leave a slight residue, but even this eventually will be erased if you continue to recognize the emotion, feel it, look at it, listen to it, and notice it changing.

In Double-Talk Organizations
These are the institutions and corporations mentioned above which are trying out Network Management, sometimes labeled participative management, and walking the talk has not yet happened. You listened to the new talk and you thought they meant it-that your opinions were valued, then you found this was not the case.
What do you do then? You watch and listen so you will know when a single message is being sent; not two contradictory messages. Until the time you get a single message from your boss, and people usually change slowly, you go back to the behavior suggested for military-type hierarchies. C. Y. A. is the acronym for this strategy.
You make your boss look good and wait to express your emotions until lunch off-site, or after work that same day. One thing about double messages from above is that the stress is about double as well. Things are different from what they seem and you are constantly torn between saying what you really mean, responding with integrity, and keeping your job. Not an enviable position for anyone. My best opinion is, when job survival is at stake, play it safe, but keep an open mind about another job. Integrity serves one well in the eight or more hours a day at work.  Dissembling takes a toll on your psyche, your energy, your health. 

Straight Talk-Quality Teams
If you are the lucky businessperson in a situation where you can express your emotions candidly, wonderful. You will be able to contribute to the success of the organization with your entire brain, not just the parts that analyze and cover up. This situation is much sought after in the Quality teams that are successful. Bottom line results are only one of the rewards of straight talk and straight emotions. Even conflicts take on positive energy in this atmosphere of "We're in this together, each of us is a contributor, and we'll reach consensus through communication and respect for each other's viewpoints." Or we won't. We'll shake hands and move on, agreeing to disagree. (See Continental Airlines, Chapter 14.)

Handling Emotions When You Are the Boss
When you are directing your subordinates, you have power over their emotions.  One way you can be even more effective in your job is to express your emotions without blaming the other(s). You are a role model for those under you, and by your honesty of expression you can encourage honest responses on their part. 
If you have always striven to be neutral, as a synonym for professional, this change will be difficult at first. However, the rewards for you and your reports will be considerable.
Any time you try something new, you must be aware of the risk. That means you are learning. Start small and you may be surprised at how much energy you have at 5 p.m. once you are handling your emotions by expressing them.

Expressing Emotions as Team Members
Encouraging your team to speak up, speak out, and say what they think-not in "neutral" but in "fast forward," will improve the quality of your team decisions. You will find that people disagree. Of course, this is inevitable when deletion, distortion, generalization, and projection are determining our maps of reality. The team purpose is to expand each map until agreement is enthusiastic. This usually can be accomplished with a good facilitator and communication skills. If your group doesn't have these, get them. They are available. The energy resulting from the alignment of a team is well worth the educational effort.
Being able to express your emotions at the moment and to channel that energy made available by the expression will produce creative solutions on a level unheard of before this was allowed.

In a Family Business
There are more family owned businesses in the United States than you would think. Prudential Life Insurance, L. L. Bean, Benjamin Moor, Frank Purdue Chickens, Robert Mondavi, Mars Candy Bar, Carlsen Travel, Texwipe and Valducci's Gourmet Stores, for example. The emotional destruction of family solidarity, whether the emotions are expressed or repressed, is of mammoth proportions. Whatever business conflicts arise are compounded by sibling rivalry, the Oedipus complex, the father-son rivalry, and who knows what other cross-currents? Remember, most violence in the U. S. is among families. Our kinfolk evoke the strongest emotions. If you overlay this with the professional neutral business myth, you have all the elements for a Greek tragedy. Grace Valducci wanted to open her own store, using her own name.  The family said "No." She sued and lost. Think of the emotional conflicts in all this drama.
On the other hand, pretending emotions are not part of business decisions simply obscures the problems. If family members involved in the business will allow each other to be as open and honest as possible in expressing their emotions, then the business may survive-and the family, too.
If those emotions are not expressed, a waste of creativity, energy, and potential agreements occur.

IBM's Policy for Negative Emotions
IBM has an "open door" policy that is a good model for any business which wants to control and respond to destructive emotions. Each employee at IBM knows s/he can complain of mistreatment to the office of the CEO and there will be an investigation of the complaint. The problem people are interviewed within a short time, and a reply to the employee will ensue. Managers have found themselves transferred, reprimanded, or dismissed when the charges have held up under the investigation.
One of my trainers at IBM said, "If your boss complains about your performance, you have three months to correct your behaviors.  If your colleagues complain, you have two months.  If your direct reports complain and the investigation proves they are right, you have one hour to clean out your desk."  I don't know if I remember his time schedule exactly but his message was that a manager was much more vulnerable to those below than to those above.  This method of handling complaints may be why IBM is one of the world's most successful businesses and continues to make such strong comebacks to downturns.
Most businesses do not have this type of justice and many business people have to put up with destructive interactions with their bosses. In my view certain responses to a destructive manager are appropriate. Finding another job is high on the priority list, but if this is difficult, lying low and keeping your internal state of peace by whatever means (picturing the angry boss as a frantic rooster helps) is next on the list. You Are Not The Target by Laura Huxley is a good short essay to read to maintain your equilibrium. Laura, Aldus Huxley's wife, is a wise woman, for she points out that in an ongoing relationship there are usually some positive encounters.  By focusing on and magnifying the positive aspects of a relationship, you can survive with your own integrity intact.
When someone is angry with you, you are the same person as when they are pleased with you. The anger is their projection, their internal state, and has little to do with you. You are not the target of the anger or spite or resentment or whatever. The emotion is actually anger at themselves. You are not the target. The same holds true of fear, resentment, etc. The characteristics of others which really bother us are characteristics we do not like about ourselves. When we like ourselves, we can be generous with others' faults.
This is hard to remember when your boss is exploding in your face, but if you can recall this phrase, "I am not the target," you may be able to keep your cool, soothe your stomach, and survive the battle.

Boss or Client Angry at You
Here are some of the strategies you can use if your boss or client is angry and blaming you:
1. Take a deep breath and say to yourself, "I am not the target. The boss is angry about some facet of his own personality that he sees reflected in me."
2. Imagine a bird, an animal, a fish superimposed on the figure before you.      Try to find one that fits best the physiology and mannerisms of the real person. Do not smile or laugh, even though you find a good match. Keep your expression serious, even though you have an inside giggle. 
3. Match the other's voice tone and volume and say something to the effect of "You're right. If I were in your shoes, I'd feel the same way."  By the end of the statement you could alter your volume and tone to a reasonable level and manner. The other may follow your lead, maybe not. 
4. Remember a time when you did something extraordinarily well and recall that memory in great detail now. Keep breathing deeply.
5. Ask the other: "What can I do now to rectify this`?" The______________      (mistake, action, decision) was made in good faith, but I will change it/correct it if I can. Please direct me to what you want." And perhaps, "What will you see if I do a good job?" or "How will you know the situation has been corrected?"
6. Recall your competency again, using a positive experience from another time. Be specific on one actual time of competency. Recall in depth the details of that experience. You can miss a few heartbeats of your boss's tirade.

Fear
How do you deal with a boss or a colleague who is afraid of being wrong and refuses to act?  Or, even worse, a boss or colleague whose self-esteem is so low and fear of incompetence is so strong that s/he has to make you look bad so s/he will look good?
Fear of being wrong and fear of not being good enough create some interesting and destructive dynamics in the workplace.  If these fears are in a low-level new hire, they are not especially dangerous, except to the person who has them, but when they occur in upper levels-specifically, above you-they become real problems.
Strategy 1 is to recognize the dynamic in the behaviors of the other. If decisions are repeatedly avoided, especially if the delay is detrimental to the person, then fear is probably present.
Strategy 2 is to offer assistance. If you want to support the person, boss or colleague, and you have the time, you might offer to assist in outcome setting so that corporate (or institution), professional, and personal outcomes are part of the decision process. Once these three sets of outcomes are explicit (see Outcome Setting, Chapter 9) then priorities are usually obvious, and the next step in the decision process becomes clear.
The fearful person will not accept your help unless you have rapport.  Rapport, is based on competence for the specific task.  You can feel the presence or absence of rapport. Be sure to establish rapport before the offer of outcome setting.
If the offer is made in terms of a superior being counseling an inferior being (this is conveyed nonverbally, so watch your voice tone, facial expressions, and position in space), the offer will be rejected, and you will be suspect as an ambitious enemy. Be sure your eyes are at the same level.  If, on the other hand, you know your job and your day will go better once this decision is made, you will be communicating a win-win, and your offer will increase trust.  Two people in an organization that support one another have a great advantage over loners.
Strategy 3. Always protect yourself. In terms of the second behavior, when someone wants to make you look incompetent to improve their own competency image, you need another strategy. People with this destructive behavior- usually expose themselves, but you need to protect yourself in the meantime.
Strategy 4.  Find a high-level mentor, one even higher than your boss, if possible.  One strategy that works is to find a mentor at a higher level and lay out to him/her what's happening in this dynamic. The interactions with the fearful person, in which you were made to look incompetent, rash, whatever, must be documented in memos-dated, in a deep file (maybe locked)-separate memos containing your best guess about what is happening. Keep the information in the dated memos sensory based, what you saw, felt, and heard.  Be sure you record all important interactions, decisions and consequences.
Strategy 5: Build your boss's self esteem. An even better strategy is to take some time to examine the series of behaviors of the other and draw your own conclusions about the fear of incompetence. If you decide this fear is the root cause, you can begin to soothe the fear by letting him/her verbally know in what areas s/he is competent. Don't lie. Lies do not work. People know at some level when you depart from your true opinion. They neither like nor trust a liar. But there must be some area in which this person is competent. Let them know you have noticed this, take a moment to appreciate their competence.
This is often magical in its results. If it does not work, don't despair. Stay awake to other opportunities to make your boss look good and gradually his/her fear failure may subside.
If not, there are other strategies available. Try to adapt some of the other behaviors we are offering as antidotes to other problems. They may work on fear of failure as well.
Try asking the next level an open question, such as "What can I do to help you?" If you ask sincerely, you may be surprised at the answer. You will at least have tried one more strategy. Eventually one or another will work. Maybe.
One of the ways to nurture your personal energy so you can get to flow often is by setting up positive interactions with your fellow workers, clients, "superiors," and all those people who cross your path.  By being skillful at establishing rapport, you can depart from each personal interaction with more energy than you had when you began.  Energy positively exchanged is energy increased.

Here's a re-cap of five strategies.  With these as a starter package, you can discover others on your own.
1. Recognize fear as the operating cause of a destructive pattern
2. Offer to help the other
3. Protect your job and your reputation
4. Locate and gain acceptance from a mentor
5. Build you boss's self esteem

With these five options to try out when appropriate, you will find your work-days crowded with new perceptions and insights.  Use this new data to reduce the distance between work and play.  The next chapter has new ideas about this subject.
Back to Influencing with Integrity