Tale 3: The
Importance of Self Understanding.
This tale took
place in our factory back home in Vietnam. I have always remembered how my mum
was an extremely good communicator. She inspired people when she connected with
them. Even little children took a shine to her and were keen to have a chat
with her.
I can recall
whenever we had new workers starting in our factory Mum would always make them
feel at home. She gave them her full attention and would engage in deep
conversations with them. She learnt a great deal about them and had an
understanding of what they wanted to do with their careers and in life. Many of
the younger workers were unsure what they wanted to do in life. But after a
chat with mum, I’d notice that they started to look at their futures
differently. They became motivated and developed a sense of purpose as to what
they wanted to do to follow their dreams.
I was quite
young at the time, and I loved spending time with mum and listened to the
conversations she had with these young workers. At time I tried to emulate how
she talked to people and tried to recite the same kind of questions she used to
ask the workers too.
One day I was
curious and asked mum.
"Mum where
did you learn to ask these questions?"
and "how do
you know what questions to ask them?"
because when I’m
a big boy, I want to ask people the same kind of questions and engage in
conversation the way you talk to them too.
Can you teach me
mum?
I want to be
like you mum?
My mother looked
at me and smiled and said.
“My little one,
what is your hurry to learn this?
You have plenty
of time to learn.
Don't worry, you
will when you become a big boy my mum said.
Even when my mum
did explain it to me, I was too young to understand the meaning behind the
importance of self understanding.
However, I did
recall something like this.
"Knowing
who you are, and understand what you want in life is the highest contribution
you can make for yourself"
Now when I think
back to what mum said, I totally understood the real reason as to why mum asked those
questions. They were used to encourage them to think about what
they wanted to be in life and what they had yet to discover in themselves.
So what do we
learn from this tale?
To be good at
what we do in life and in business, we need to invest the time to learn and
understand ourselves. WHO we are and to know WHAT we want!
If you
understand yourself, then you can understand others and therefore you have
compassion. If you care for yourself and the people who work with and for you,
then they are more likely to support you and grow your business with you. It is
your role as a leader to help build the people around you by genuinely looking
after their wellbeing and helping them grow as a person.
In business, knowing who you are, and understanding the
importance of the goals that you have set for yourself and by having an
actionable business plan with a clear vision and mission will help you understand what your business
is all about. So when you share this with your team and they understand
the overall vision of your business, they too will feel empowered and aligned to
your business vision. This is why self understanding is so important.
Once you understand what you want in business, the people who work
with you or for you will understand it too.
So what do you
like from this tale?
Please share
your thoughts and leave your comments here or leave a comment on ArtSHINE Facebook
page.
Tune in next
Friday for tale 4: "Being Compassionate"
More Tales My Mother Told Me...
Volume 1:
Volume 1:
Tale 2: "Your Mind is Powerful"
Tale 4: "Being Compassionate"
Tale 6: "The Magic Pen"
Tale 8: "Confidence & Competence"
Tale 11:"I never see what has been done; I only see what remains to be done"
Tale 12: "Frog In The Well"
Tale 12: "Frog In The Well"
Volume 2:
Tale 3: Talking about army on paper.
Tale 4: Being Persistent
Tale 5: A Poet’s Writing Skills Decline
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