When You’re Stuck, Call Your Truth Council 📞


Hey Reader -

Artist Day Schildkret at Morning Altars hit the wall. Not on Friday, mind you. By Monday mid-day. Can you relate?

In many ways, it was an ordinary day. He visited his mom in memory care and touched base with friends. Work often provided a positive distraction. But on this day, his emotional gas tank edged toward empty.

So, his next step was reaching out to his “emergency people.” Interestingly, no one pushed the rise-and-grind narrative. Instead, everyone had a version of the same sentiment: “No work today. It’s a sick day. Get outside. Connect with what brings you life.” Day spent a barefoot afternoon in the sun recharging.

Find Encouraging, Supportive Truth Tellers

In the February series, Relationship Threshold Questions, we’re discussing how to use soft skills to reshape and improve relationships. Last week, we talked about aligning connections with values. Day’s story demonstrates topic #2, the power of creating a trustworthy circle.

As you think through family, friends, and colleagues, do you know someone who cuts to the heart of the matter? A person whose calm insights re-center you? And who has a knack for the kind of truth-telling that is direct but also diplomatic? Then ask the relationship threshold question, “Should I add this person to my Truth Council?”

To be clear, people who are part of your Truth Council aren’t there to co-sign every feeling or action. Instead, they have ninja-level emotional intelligence and communication skills. They’re capable of seeing your emotional blind spots, but they’re also committed to coaching you through them.

How Your Truth Council Shows Up

Movie director Ryan Coogler is flying high right now with 16 Oscar nominations for his phenomenal picture, Sinners. But even someone who has directed multi-million dollar grossing films like Creed can face self-doubt. Black Panther was one of those times. Luckily, Chadwick Boseman came to the rescue.

Coogler remembers, “When I would be stressed on Panther, I would say, 'Man, I gotta hurry up and do this or I'm gonna get fired.' And he would say, 'Hey, man, stop saying that. I'm not letting nobody fire you, bro, [so] please stop saying that. Relax, man. Do your work, enjoy it.'"

Have you had tough times like the case study, where emotional blind spots like overexplaining, being impulsive, or making assumptions about someone else’s intent almost got the best of you? That’s the time to call in your Truth Council. Trusted advisors help in the clutch because you get the benefit of their incredible people skills. (And by the way, you can return the favor or pay it forward by being on someone else’s Truth Council.)

As you have the courage to be vulnerable, your Truth Council will give guidance like:

Emotional blind spots happen to everyone, but they don’t need to pull you out of character. Course correct them by reaching out to your Truth Council.

All the best,

Michelle Mains

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