| It's not for everyone, it may not be for you! Before you begin reading, I want to warn you that this article may be dangerous to your peace of mind. If you continue reading, you may find yourself squirming in your seating, questioning yourself, and beginning to feel uncomfortable with what you’ve done with your life so far. That’s my goal here because that elicits what coaching is truly about. If you’re not in a place where you don’t want or need to be shakened up, have your equilibrium disturbed, or being challenged about your untapped potentials, then quit reading now. If you’re still reading, then let’s plummet into the heart of coaching and see if you’re up to the challenge. Today the coaching revolution which is spreading around the world at lightning speed has become the second fastest industry after IT. Why is that? What’s going on?
If coaching differs from counseling and therapy, and it does, then a person has to be psychologically sound to even begin coaching. That’s because of what coaching is and because of how coaching works. And because coaching involves a tough challenge for those who are courageous enough to look at their performance and possibilities, to stretch to higher goals, and to reach within and demand the best of themselves. So what in the world is Coaching? Coaching is a methodology and process designed to do the following: 2) Mobilize resources for becoming more, feeling more, thinking better, experiencing more, having more, and contributing more, 3) Challenge a person to create new and more expansive description of a bold and compelling outcome that sets forth an exciting direction, 4) Facilitate the actualization of that new game into actual behavior to take performance to a new level of achievement in actual behavior and new habits. 5) Unleash new potentials, unique talents and aptitudes, and incredible possibilities. In a word, coaching is all about self-actualizing. It is about enabling us to more fully express all that lies within so that we are more fully true to ourselves and our potentials. Coaching is about using our ego-strength to stretch forward, optimize talents into marketable skills, translate great dreams and visions into pragmatic actions and organizations, and embrace the chaotic and ambiguous nature of the future to leave a great legacy. Now, isn’t that a great adventure? Prerequisites for the Coaching Adventure 1) Sufficient and robust ego-strength. Coaching, by contrast, assumes that a person has sufficient ego-strength, not to just become “okay,” but to fully actualize one’s talents and aptitudes. Coaching assumes that a person has “dealt with the past” and is already fully in the present and ready to journey out to the future to create wild, ambitious, and even audacious goals. Coaching differs from therapy in that it is not so much about nurturing, re-parenting, or dealing with problems and hurts. Coaching is about challenging, pushing, awakening, and activating one’s best dreams. And to do that a truly competent coach will have a fierce conversation that “quickly gets to the heart of things” to challenge the client. It takes a lot of ego-strength to face that. 2) A robust and positive attitude about mistakes. 3) A receptive openness to feedback. Openness to feedback includes a willingness to be held accountable to what one says he or she wants. The power of coaching lies to a great extent in this accountability factor. In fact, a client contracts for it, contracts that the coach will not let him or her off the hook, but will hold the client’s agenda first and foremost and hold the client’s feet to the fire. 4) A passionate commitment to one’s full development.Since coaching is not about the past, not about getting over old things, but about creating a bold, compelling, exciting, and challenging pathway to the future, it demands (yes, “demands”) a full commitment to oneself. This is where coaching frequently begins, awakening in a client a bigger vision and dream about what’s possible in order to get that commitment. Coaches frequently ask, “Are you willing to do anything it takes to make this dream of yours become a reality?” This is also part of the accountability within a coaching relationship—to grant a coach the right to call one’s bluff and to keep having the fiercely focused conversations about what the client is doing or not doing that might be selling one short of one’s highest values and visions. In this a coaching client is willing to be open and vulnerable to his or her needs, drives, possibilities, beliefs, values, meanings, etc. And it is the embracing of this vulnerability that makes the coaching effective. 5) A passionate commitment to change and transformation. Coaching clients are change embracers. They are people who think about change, plan for it, and long for it. They are not satisfied with the status quo, and in fact, often embrace the ambiguity of the unknown for the joy of the adventure itself. This differs from the typical client in therapy who resists the very change that they need and may know that they need, and/or may relapse to a previous pattern. 6) A passionate embracing of ambiguity and dis-equilibrium. Summary Are you ready for coaching? Could coaching be the methodology to take you to the next level of your excellence? Are you ready for this adventure? In the Meta-Coach Training SystemTM we have a worksheet about coachability.3 You may want to take it to determine if you’re ready for the intensity and ferocity of a coaching relationship. Author: End Notes: 1. Almost every book on coaching asserts that coaching is not therapy. For the specifics of how coaching differs from therapy, see the articles on this subject on this website as well as what we have written in the books on Meta-Coaching, Coaching Change, Meta-Coaching, Vol. I (2005); Coaching Conversations, Meta-Coaching Volume II (2004). 2. See Susan Scott’s book, Fierce Conversations: Achieving Success at Work and in Life, One Conversation at a Time. 2002, New York: Viking: Penguin Press. We adapted on of the conversations on the fierce conversation in Coaching Conversations (2003). 3. Coachable Questionaire: Ego-Strength: Do I have sufficient ego-strength for facing reality as it is? Openly Receptive: Am I open to change, learning and personal development? Feedback openness: Am I open for receiving feedback? Committed to growth: Am I committed and invested in my own development? Relationship readiness: Am I ready and able to enter into a coaching relationship? Vulnerable:Am I ready and able to make myself vulnerable to another? Hungry for transformation: Am I hungry for making a change or transformation? Dreams and Goals: Does the person have goals, hopes, and dreams? Patience and persistence: Do I have the patience to stay with the coaching process? Yes/ No To What Degree? |
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Are you up to the challenge of Coaching?
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