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Home > Wellbeing > Louise Thompson: Control the controllable

Louise Thompson: Control the controllable

Louise Thompson

Louise Thompson

Bite

28/8/2017
Louise Thompson: Control the controllable

Want to know how to stress out way less? Of course you do. Three words: control the controllable. Think right now about any area of life that’s currently causing worry or waking you up at night. Hold that in your mind and use that as your example to see where you can bring this technique to bear.

Thought of something? Good. Let’s go.

I’m going to use a recent situation as an example. I’ll call this lovely client Jonathan. He was stressed out because he had a change of line manager. He used to get on with his old manager like a house on fire, not so with the new one who had a really different style.

He also felt another colleague was gossiping about him behind his back to the new boss. His train of thought here was almost inevitable: “She doesn’t like me; she doesn’t rate my work; I’m sure this other woman is saying stuff behind my back which is making things worse; I feel really insecure; I wish she would brief me in a different way so I could do a better job” and so on.

His appraisal was looming. He was worried. We drew up a plan of action. “What do you want,” I asked? “What outcome are you after to make you feel happy and reduce your current stress level? What do you want from this meeting?”

Jonathan was very clear: “I want her to value me, I want her to respect me and my work, I want her and my colleague to stop talking about me, I would like her to say approving things and I want her to brief me better”. Okay. They are all good and obvious things to want.

The trouble is none of them are under your direct control. Her valuing you: You can’t actually control that, those are her thoughts and emotions so they sit with her. You can influence but you cannot control it. Your colleague to stop talking about you to her? Well you definitely can’t control that. Firstly you don’t know it’s happening for sure, it’s an assumption, and secondly, even if it is, you can’t control what is said to whom by whom or what is taken from it.

And thirdly, her saying approving things to you, you can’t control that either! It would be nice but you can’t make that happen. That’s up to the other person’s free will and personality and management style.

Essentially, all these very reasonable and desirable outcomes were out of his control. That’s a dangerous, stressful place to live. If your happiness rests solely on stuff you can’t control, you are at the mercy of other people’s reactions or decisions. That is inherently stressful.

We started to turn it around. What do you want that you can control? We came up with this list: I want to feel like I have represented myself well in the meeting. I want to make a suggestion to improve the briefing process that will mean more clarity for me and more efficiency for her. I demonstrate my experience and capability with a view to building the relationship between us.

Okay — well there you see — you are back in control of the outcomes. This meant preparing for the meeting in a very different way. It also meant showing up at the meeting with a different energy: the energy of empowerment rather than victim.

It meant showing up with a structured new briefing scale and worksheet to discuss. It meant having a brave conversation about how to give feedback in a way that worked. It meant turning up with a concise summary of previous projects and current status. It meant stripping the emotional victim energy out, and showing up with empowered, capable authoritative energy. It meant controlling the controllable.

That’s what WE think, what WE feel, and what WE say and do. THAT, my friends, WE are in control of. WE are not (dammit!) in control of what other people think, feel, say and do. It’s a radical move to release the uncontrollable, and to emphatically focus on controlling what is directly controllable by us.

It’s both a subtle shift and a significant one. Jonathan messaged me to say he had the most productive session he has ever had with his new boss, the structured preparation he had done was appreciated and the relationship was on a promising new footing.

That’s what happens when you shift your focus away from what you want the other person to think/feel/do/say and position it firmly on what you can think/feel/do/say. Happens every time. If there is something keeping you up at night I can almost guarantee you are trying to reduce your stress by attempting to (or wishing you could) control what is not under your control.

Flip your focus right now and control the controllable instead: Put yourself back in the driving seat and feel your stress dissipate. Does it make the tricky situation disappear? No, it does not. This client still had to step up and have a big, bold meeting, for which he had to muster his courage. However, the difference is you have a far greater chance of getting the outcome you want.

Through her online Happiness programme “Wellbeing Warriors”, life coach Louise Thompson helps people unlock their happiest and healthiest life. Sign up at louisethompson.com and find more from Louise at bite.co.nz/wellbeing  

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Dedicated to food and wellbeing, Be Well is The New Zealand Herald's weekly Monday magazine that celebrates your relationship with food. Be Well offers recipes and kitchen tips contributed by some of New Zealand's most talented cooks and chefs, reviews and insider knowledge on where to eat in New Zealand and abroad, gardening and fresh food tips as well as new trends to help you live well.
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