Showing posts with label personal voice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label personal voice. Show all posts

Friday, November 1, 2013

On patience, judgement and expectations

by Nick Charney RSS / cpsrenewalFacebook / cpsrenewalLinkedIn / Nick Charneytwitter / nickcharneygovloop / nickcharneyGoogle+ / nickcharney

This year has been incredibly humbling for me.

I had surgery, was immobilized for 12 weeks and had to learn to walk, run and play hockey again.

My folks are in the middle of a terrible separation. My mother moved into my home and I haven't spoken to my father in months.

I sought counselling  with my wife  through the employee assistance program to try to ensure that my home remained a happy and healthy place for us and our children.

In short, my world turned upside down and I learned a lot about patience, judgement and expectations

Patience is about being able to stay motivated over the long haul, to welcome and enjoy the fact that life moves slowly, to put your phone away and focus on the person in front of you because in that moment nothing is more important.

Judgement is often the opposite of patience. It comes quickly, focuses on a narrow slice of a bigger picture, is congruent with your cognitive biases and reinforces your current world view. It's a dangerous double-edged sword, a closed loop that you hold over others and that others hold over you, and yet we wield it so readily, so clumsily.

Expectations are rooted in our judgement. We project them onto others but they almost always fail to live up to them because our expectations aren't always their expectations. Often what we define as a lack of progress is defined by others as leaps and bounds; this is just a part of what it means to be human. What matters most isn't how you view others but rather how you view yourself. Can you reconcile with confidence the different views of yourself that others deem contradictory?

In other words, don't ever confuse who someone is with who you think they are. Being impatient with others often leads you to judge them by your own expectations and nothing can be more detrimental to your relationship with them than this.

Friday, July 30, 2010

What Matters

If you follow me on Twitter you probably already know that we had a scare with our daughter Larkyn this week. Long story short, she fell off a play structure at day camp (about 6 ft) and fractured her radius quite badly as well as her elbow. After about 7 hours at CHEO we were home trying to figure out how to adjust to the new reality. We will know in one week's time whether or not she will require surgery to correct the elbow or not.

I just wanted to thank everyone at CHEO for their work and everyone who responded to my panic stricken tweets throughout the process, it is great to see the outpour of support from people all over the globe (Larkyn had a book dropped off by a local author, has a stuffed animal in the mail from a friend in Edmonton, and is expecting postcards from overseas from another).

Clearly I didn't have time to write anything this week, I was taking care of what matters most. The whole experience left me drained, and truthfully frustrated when I popped into work to take care of some things before being off for week that was originally reserved for some quiet time for my wife and I. Quiet time, which will now dedicated to the joint care of our daughter.

This was the first real emergency we have ever had with our children and the immediacy of the situation made me question what really matters in life.

Thanks for reading, and thanks for your continued support, we appreciate it.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Column: A Personal Story of Renewal

Below you will find the audio/slide capture of a presentation I did in Vancouver at the Governexx Conference and again in Ottawa at PWGSC's National Youth Network Annual Forum. First I want to thank both groups for the invitation, it is always a pleasure to meet other public servants.

The presentation below is just over twenty (20) minutes and chronicles my personal story of renewal, explaining the challenges I faced when I entered, how I almost left the public service after one year, my decision to get more involved in my organization and in public service renewal more generally, and finally my call to action directed at others (leveraging that personal story), because "we" can do so much more than "me" ever could.

Feel free to watch the embedded video below, or grab it at the source. My apologies about the poor quality of the audio/video, but it is the best I have.

Warning: Viewer discretion is advised.



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