Personal Impact

Pause For Thought

I used to take lots of photographs of dragonflies. There is a knack to it. Patience is rather important and so is stillness.

The dragonflies whiz about all over the place. They zip off and do what they need to do. Maybe they are hunting, or competing with a rival, or looking for a mate, but they've got stuff to do! They get the job done and usually come back to the same perch. And so your patience and stillness are rewarded.

Dragonflies are fast, agile, high-energy creatures. I imagine if they behaved like that all the time they would soon burn out. But they don’t. They zip off, do what they have to do, zip back, and then they perch. And here’s my question. Do you take the time to perch?

In most jobs the work doesn't stop. There is always something else to do. Leaving the office and going home is just a time-out. The whistle goes and you are right back in the game. So we need to force ourselves to perch from time to time. Stop, take stock, survey what’s going on around you. It’s hard to be strategic when you are rushing from one task to the next.

One idea is to plan your perch time. Book a meeting with yourself in your calendar. Try one hour a week of protected time with yourself to reflect and plan.

Pause every now and then and stay as sharp as a dragonfly.


Does the photo stimulate your thinking in a different way? Do you have ways to help you pause for thought? 

How Do People Know You're Good If You Don't Tell Them?

This rack of neatly stacked and colour-coded lengths of metal really impressed me. Of course it's highly photogenic (these are the genuine colours, unphotoshopped), but aside from that I felt that the person that created it really knew what they were doing. Everything has its colour, everything is in the right place. Now imagine it without the colour coding. Would everything still be in the right place? No doubt. These guys know their stuff. They might be more likely to make a mistake, but generally things would be fine. But what would I think when I saw it? I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be as impressed. To find out if they had done a great job I would have to investigate. And frankly, I don't have the time. 

In the workplace we have to find ways of letting people know we've done a good job, otherwise how are they going to know? If they are deeply embroiled in our project then yes they will probably know. But there are lots of situations that are not like that. Now nobody likes a showoff, and many of us feel very uncomfortable about blowing our own trumpet, so where can we find some balance?

Delivering a presentation? Why not talk about the problems you overcame and how you did it rather than just presenting the results? Handing over a report? How about including a little note with it praising the support you got from another department or recognising the various sources of your data - something that shows the breadth of your work or the skillful liaising that was done to get it completed? There are lots of non-chest-thumping things you can do that might gain you a little of the recognition you deserve. Put a bit of paint on it so that people can see what you did. Otherwise they might make the mistake of thinking it was nothing at all.


Does the photo stimulate your thinking in a different way? Do you feel getting recognised is important?