When
you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however
improbable,
must be the truth
– Sherlock
Holmes. Holmes
never wavered from his rule, no matter how bizarre the outcome
appeared. No speculation; no projecting an easier path; no
daydreaming or fantasy about what would have or could have been.
I
recall as a kid, pounding the pocket into a new ball glove (they were made flat back then) and
daydreaming that I would be playing like Mickey
Mantle, Jackie
Robinson, or Ted
Williams. Reality set in with the very first play on the field,
new glove on my hand – it would take more practice (much, much
more) to get there - there's no shortcut for pounding in the pocket.
Sometimes
a leader, manager, or collaborator fixates on a vision or desired
outcome instead of addressing an issue head on.
Do
you know of an incidence where a problem was ignored while the
trivial and mundane were given priority? Or the 'let's wait and see'
procedure was invoked? How did it turn out – did the problem
self-correct or fester, getting worse?
Individuals
rarely follow the Ostrich Model of head-in-the-sand, knowingly.
However, they can be seduced by self-talk. This can be very
persuasive, sound logical – even innovative – and offer a more
desirable (and less painful) fantasy alternative to what's facing
them right now.
Ever
dread making a phone call or meeting – finding many ways to put it
off? Then, the result of the call or meeting is nowhere near the
disaster you had anticipated – in reality positive results happen
most of the time.
I
have found over and over that nothing is more effective than a direct
approach. And yet, we still seek to take an indirect path or delay
taking any action.
This
is human nature – BUT – it is not a positive
leadership trait. As with the boy and a new glove, or an adult facing
a complex problem, it's not too difficult to slip into a fantasy to
avoid reality.
To
return to reality, I find it helpful to say the thoughts and plans
out loud – to a trusted advisor. Not only will this help to better
focus the ideas, it also churns up new ideas as well from both
people's viewpoints. The outcome is more in tune with reality, since
it is quite difficult to enroll your external self and your advisor
in a fantasy. Perhaps that's why people say a good
conversation is 80% listening!
As we
wrestle with the gap between fantasy and reality, John Adams' words
are a useful guide:
Facts
are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our
inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the
state of facts and evidence.
John
Adams,'Argument
in Defense of the Soldiers in the Boston Massacre Trials,'
How do you see fantasy
and reality?
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I'm always better in the fantasy, and the reality lasts.
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