Take all its place

Jean-Yves Mercier

Taking our place means deciding to take responsibility. It means having the courage to take on a role in confronting our aspirations with our changing professional realities. Self-leadership goes further. It's taking your place, but also taking your place.

 
The personal development movement has a tendency to instill in us that each of us has our “true self.” It is up to us to identify it and to live it in the same way at all times in our lives. It's simplistic. We can be different at work and at home. And in our professional environment, it is rare that we have exactly the same attitudes towards our superiors, our customers, our colleagues or our collaborators. There is nothing wrong with that, quite the opposite. Each of our interactions shapes who we are. We learn from different situations and develop different expressions of ourselves. The problem is not role-playing, but wearing a mask. What happens if one of these roles doesn't work for us. In this case, we lose ourselves in an identity that is not ours, conforming to external ideals and expectations. Taking our full place means remaining the main actor in our roles.

 

Could it be by focusing on activities that challenge us while mobilizing our skills, the famous state of “flow”? Or by leaving our comfort zone to develop new ones? These metaphors are misleading if we think of them as an injunction to make the most of our existing or potential skills. We are not just productive machines. We have desires. It means doing something that is important to us. Taking your full place implies pursuing a success that corresponds to our aspirations, whether in terms of contributing to society or social success for example. These determinants are very personal and require awareness. Beyond aspiration, they also refer to the concept of ambition.

 

Being ambitious is necessary to take your full place. Of course, ambition can have a negative connotation associated with selfishness and the pursuit of power. For a leader, for example, the ambition must be focused on the collective. A true leader does not lock himself in his ego, he is open to his aspirations as well as to his environment in order to put forward a vision that can be followed. For everyone, it is the same. Taking our full place means sharing through our actions not only our skills or our personality, but also what we want to contribute to.
 
Ultimately, self-leadership is a personal quest that involves constantly balancing our individual aspirations, collective ambitions, values, and resources by taking responsibility for our environment. It is the answer that each of us can give to our need to build the meaning of our action.

Return to the blog

Discover other items

The psychological contract in the face of the need for meaning

In a constantly changing world, business management must adapt to numerous challenges. Among these, the question of the meaning of work arises acutely. On the one hand, companies are constantly being challenged on their societal, climate and governance commitments. Without always knowing what to put in place beyond specific actions aimed at inclusion or their environmental responsibility. On the other hand, employees are disengaging. Absences at work are at their highest, on average 2 weeks per person in 2023 in Switzerland. 42% of French people under 35 are considering leaving their job, which no longer makes sense for them.

Is the company responsible for meaning?

Advocating individual self-leadership could lead one to believe that individuals bear full responsibility for the meaning of their action. Position rightly criticized by some current authors, such as Christophe Genoud. But then, would it be our organizations that are responsible for it?

Does burn-out result from a lack of self-knowledge?

“I am on the verge of burn-out!” Who has not heard or said this sentence, whose resonance is even stronger in times of pandemic. It has become an overused expression and is often used during a period of intense work-related stress. However, it is full of meaning. Burn-out, the real one, is a professional exhaustion syndrome, which according to the WHO, sets in gradually. But why, faced with the same professional situation, do some people sink and others don't? In addition to external conditions, what role does the lack of self-knowledge play?

Emotional intelligence is at the heart of leadership

Emotional intelligence plays a critical role in our ability to demonstrate leadership. It is our ability to become aware of the meaning of events as we experience them, in order to act effectively and positively.