Growing health and effectiveness

A blog centered around The Addington Method, leadership, culture, organizational clarity, faith issues, teams, Emotional Intelligence, personal growth, dysfunctional and healthy leaders, boards and governance, church boards, organizational and congregational cultures, staff alignment, intentional results and missions.
Showing posts with label self defined. Show all posts
Showing posts with label self defined. Show all posts

Sunday, September 14, 2025

How self definition can impact your leadership






A key component of healthy individuals is that they are self-defined. I define a self-defined individual as one who understands who they are, is comfortable with who they are, and can clearly articulate their own positions in a way that does not force others to agree and does not demonize those who disagree. 

It is the ability to say, "This is what I think (and why), now tell me how you see it." In doing this, you have made your position clear along with the rationale and have opened the door for honest conversation that can hopefully lead to a better or shared understanding. And if not, you have made your position clear, so there is no misunderstanding.

Because a self-defined individual is secure in their own skin, they can encourage dialogue even with those who might strenuously disagree with them. Some people are unable to do this. They can state their position, but cannot stay connected relationally with those who disagree with them - thus, the conversation is over without resolution.

The ability to have a position and stay connected with those who disagree is a key component of healthy relationships. It is usually in ongoing dialogue that one comes to mutually acceptable conclusions, as long as we are dealing with people who have a level of EQ health. Discussions with those who lack EQ often go nowhere. Thus, our ability to understand the EQ of those we are dealing with becomes a factor in how we deal with them.

Self definition requires leaders to think well before they state a position. But their flexibility and invitatin for dialoge also leaves the doow open for further discussion and in some cases a moification of their views. This is why a non-defensive attitude is so critical. For instance, if staff know that they can honestly push back without repercussions and know they will also be heard, it is often possible to come to a more refined position that works for everyone.

Self-definition is a powerful leadership tool because it goes to the values, convictions, attitudes, and actions that a leader has, and the more consistent these are, the more security those who work for them have. They know what to expect. They know that the principles and convictions are what drive you as a leader, and they know that these are not going to change.

The self-definition of a leader becomes a secure foundation for those who work for them. They know that the key values and principles will not change, giving them security to model the same. They also know that they will get the same version of the leader today as they did in the meeting yesterday. They don't need to wonder which version they will get.

Leaders who lack self-definition and are unpredictable are challenging to work for because there is no accurate compass for others to follow. This is the case with leaders whose idea of the day becomes their mantra until the next thought pops up. Unpredictable leaders are difficult, if not impossible, to follow. 

Being self-defined also means that we can separate ourselves from the issues of others and not fall into the trap of enmeshment or triangulation in relationships. We take responsibility for the problems we have with others and seek to help them resolve their issues, but we can separate ourselves from those problems and not become drawn into them.