10/12/2020
Fear can be one of the greatest threats to an Enabling Conversation.
Fear, like all emotions, is neither good nor bad. It is merely your bodies reaction to what you think about a situation (your story). You are hardwired for an almost instantaneous reaction to situations that are a perceived risk or a threat.
Some of the perceived threats and consequent fears that surround Enabling Conversations. The fear of:
Being attacked:
“I don’t want to speak to him. All he does is raise his voice and he will never let me speak.”
Being challenged:
“How dare they criticize me and point out where I have gone wrong?”
Conflict:
“It is just going to escalate into a fight.”
Being exposed:
“I really can’t face the possibility that I may hear the harsh truth and what people really think.”
Not being liked
“I am not going to be very popular if I say what is really on my mind.”
The moment people perceive a threat or risk in a conversation, their attention shifts to defensiveness: fight, flights or freeze behaviours, and the conversations stops being constructive.
As Brene Brown says in Dare to Lead:
“Leaders must either invest a reasonable amount of time attending to fears and feelings or squander an unreasonable amount of time trying to manage ineffective and unproductive behaviour.”