A
senior executive has made a request, something impossible to achieve. The
request is born of a lack of understanding and rising frustration, and it’s
passed down until it lands in my email.
I
understand the frustration, and I share it. So I respond, politely and with
understanding, directly to the executive. I explain why it’s impossible.
One
of the people copied on the email stops by with a bit of advice. “You need to
be careful saying what you did,” he says. “You could hurt your career.”
This
reminds me of the old line about Socrates. He told the truth, so they poisoned
him.
But
the statement surprises me. Doing anything else other than what I did never
entered my mind. What I believed important was to provide the executive with an
explanation.
Later,
I consider the statement. Why did my fellow employee think that telling an
executive the truth would hurt my career?
To
continue reading, please see my post today at The High Calling.
Illustration by Fritz Ahlefeldt via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
1 comment:
it sounds to me like
doing what Jesus did
the making of His disciples
walking with them
speaking truth to them
in a way that they could understand
knowing them
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