Belief It or Not: How to Rewrite the Narratives That Hold You Back
By Think Fast Talk Smart
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Seven common beliefs holding leaders back**: Common limiting beliefs identified in leaders include 'I need to be involved,' 'I need it done now,' 'I know I'm right,' 'I can't make a mistake,' 'If I can do it, so can you,' 'I can't say no,' and 'I don't belong here.' These often stem from past successes but may hinder current effectiveness. [01:29] - **The three-step process to unblock limiting beliefs**: To overcome limiting beliefs, first 'uncover' the dissonance between desired and actual outcomes to identify the underlying story. Second, 'unpack' why this belief served you in the past and if it still serves you now. Third, 'unblock' by reframing the belief into a narrative that aligns with your current goals. [04:24] - **Mindset shift: What you think about what you do matters**: A study on hotel attendants showed that simply reframing their work as exercise led to significant health improvements. This illustrates that 'it's not just about what we do, but it's about what we think about what we do that makes all the difference.' [12:00] - **Healthy vs. Toxic Productivity**: Toxic productivity involves getting things done at any cost, driven by urgency. Healthy productivity, conversely, focuses on doing things that matter, involves prioritization, and operates under the belief 'I'll do the best that I can with the time that I have,' acknowledging constraints. [08:53] - **Reverse engineering for alignment**: To achieve desired outcomes, work backward from the result: identify the necessary actions, the feelings needed to support those actions, and finally, the thoughts and beliefs required to foster those feelings. Ensure alignment between your thoughts, feelings, and actions. [14:44]
Topics Covered
- Hidden beliefs sabotage leaders more than skills.
- Uncover, unpack, unblock: A three-step process to overcome limiting beliefs.
- Toxic productivity drains you; healthy productivity focuses on what matters.
- Mindset shift: How you think about work transforms your experience.
- Reverse engineering goals: Align thoughts, feelings, and actions for desired outcomes.
Full Transcript
For many of us, our success is blocked.
Blocked by our beliefs and approaches.
If we remove these barriers, we can have
more impact and add lasting value. My
name is Matt Abrahams and I teach
strategic communication at Stamford
Graduate School of Business. Welcome to
Think Fast Talks Smart the podcast.
Today I'm really excited to have another
conversation with Muriel Wilkins. Mural
is an executive coach, author, and
podcast host. She hosts the HBR podcast,
Coaching Real Leaders, and she has a new
book out, Leadership Unblocked:
Breakthrough: The Beliefs That Limit
Your Potential. Well, welcome back,
Muriel. I really enjoyed our previous
conversation in episode 102, and I look
forward to learning from you again.
>> Likewise, Matt. Thank you for having me
back.
>> Excellent. Shall we get started?
>> Absolutely. Let's do it.
>> Okay. A lot of your work focuses on
helping leaders be more effective. In
your experience, what are the most
common beliefs that hold leaders back?
>> There are quite a few.
>> Yes. Yes.
>> And I've spent spent some time looking
at them. But you know, let me caveat
that by saying I think beliefs are very
unique to the individual. So while I
have identified some common ones, the
work is to identify which ones might be
getting in your own way. But to get us
started, and that might be a little bit
of an appetizer to tease out some of the
ones that might exist for any leader,
there are seven that I identified that
are most common amongst the leaders that
I've coached. And so, the first is I
need to be involved. The second is I
need it done now. The third is I know
I'm right. The fourth is I can't make a
mistake. The fifth is if I can do it, so
can you. The sixth is I can't say no.
And the last one is I don't belong here.
And what I have found is that nine times
out of 10, if there is frustration that
you're feeling or something is getting
in the way of you being able to lead
effectively, many times they might end
up being one of these beliefs that are
completely in your subconscious or
another that has helped you in some form
at some point in your life, but may not
be helping you in the situation that
you're in. I always think it's useful to
think through some of these barriers and
beliefs and identify them so that we can
then become focused on trying to to fix
them. In looking at your list, I'm like,
"Oh boy, I've got a few of these going
on." Um uh
>> yeah, Matt, I'll tell you, as I wrote
this book and I worked through each of
the beliefs, I was pretty sure I only
had like maybe two of them. And every
time I would finish a chapter, I'd be
like, "Oh my god, I have this one, too."
You know, the one that rings really true
for me is the can't say no. And in fact,
when you were last on the show, we
talked about that and you gave me some
good advice. I've dialed that one down a
bit, but it's still there. And I I do
have a lot of uh being afraid of making
mistakes and there's a lot of pressure
given what I do to to feel like I have
to have a good right answer for things.
>> Yeah. I mean, it can be because we
associate we identify with them so much,
right? Maybe it's been what's been the
key to your success. And so I think a
part of it is, you know, to what extent
have you taken some time to potentially
redefine what success might look like
for you now? And does that belief, that
driving principle still serve you in
terms of the new definition of success?
>> Wow. Already providing really useful
information for me personally and I
think everybody listening in that that a
lot of these beliefs are tied to how we
envision success. And if you change that
vision of what success looks like, that
can make a big difference. I appreciate
that. Which leads me naturally to the
next question. You talk through three
stages on how to get unblocked from your
hidden beliefs. Can you walk us through
these?
>> We live in a very actionbased culture. I
myself
for most of my life have been very prone
to take action as quickly as I can. And
what I found is that it, you know, while
we can move to action to sort of change
our approach, if we don't also take some
time to think through what might be
leading to that action, we'll we'll come
back right to where we started to begin
with. So the three-step process is to
try to mitigate us having to return to
that starting point over and over again.
The first step is to uncover. The second
step is to unpack. And the third step is
to unblock. Let me take a little bit of
a deep dive on each one of those. So
with uncover, it's number one,
understanding that there might be
dissonance between the way that what you
want to achieve and what you're actually
achieving, right? So in your case, maybe
when the I I can't say no belief was
driving you, maybe you were finding
that, hey, I'd really only like to have
five things on my to-do list, but here I
have 50 instead. Right? So there's
something that's queuing you up that
something is off. Something doesn't feel
right. And you can then ask yourself,
well, what is the belief that is driving
this potential situation that I'm in or
the behavior that I'm having or what I'm
seeing manifests itself in front of me.
So, you uncover the belief. And what is
a belief? A belief is a story that you
tell yourself. It's not a bad or or a
good. It's not a wrong or a right. It
just is. It is the operating principle
that is driving your behavior or the
decisions that you make. Once you can
uncover that, then you can go to unpack.
And the unpack is to familiarize
yourself with why you have that mindset
to begin with. In what way has it served
you up until now? As we just talked
about, in what ways has it made you
successful? And then is it making you
successful now? Is it driving to the
outcomes that you want to drive to? And
and if it's not, then you can allow
yourself to move into the third stage,
which is unblock, which is what most
people want to run to right away. And in
unblock, you reframe the belief, right?
So you reframe in your language the
communication that you're having with
yourself. Um, and you reframe it to a
message, to a mantra, to a narrative
that actually is going to serve you in
this moment. And how do you know it's
serving you? It's more aligned with the
outcomes that you want to achieve. uh
and increases the probability that you
will get to those outcomes. Once you've
done that, you can then ask yourself,
okay, so if that is what I believe now,
what actions can I take? What actions
does it open up for me? What can I do
that not only helps me get to those
outcomes that I desire, but also
reinforces that belief and then you have
set the path to actually leading or
behaving or communicating in a way
that's more sustainable than if you just
move to action right away. The tendency
I have and many people I work with is
hey, let's get to that unblock stage. I
really appreciate though the the you
breaking down the uncover, the unpack,
and the unblock. And it's really it
boils down to the stories we tell
ourselves, those beliefs, and then
questioning that and then changing that
narrative and and that leads us to the
new action that can help us mitigate,
change, evolve, grow from from those
problems. And I I really appreciate
that. I just recently spent some time
thinking through I did a values exercise
to try to help me really understand what
success looks like for me and from that
that led me to I think be better at
unblocking and and I'm I'm putting
putting this process I put myself
through into your steps and I and I can
see the values
>> even with values we sometimes have to
kick the can on them right where did
those values come from are they truly
your values or are they the learned
values that you adopted
as a way of making you feel worthy,
accepted, and safe in your original
tribe or the original community that
you're a part of or early on in your
career. That may not be necessarily the
values that you need now, you know, in
the position that you're in or in the
the type of leadership role that you're
in that are going to help you get to
again the the success that you want.
It's a little spooky, mural, because
what you just said is exactly the
process I went through. It was where are
these values coming from? And and a lot
of it for me was my early career. Uh I
had some mentors and some people I
really admired and and they inculcated
in me some of these values and yet now
being in a very different stage in my
career, those values are different and
needed to evolve and they hadn't. You
distinguish between both healthy and
toxic productivity. Uh-huh.
>> What is the difference? And how can we
focus on the healthy stuff? Because I
had never thought of toxic productivity,
but I think I might be waiting in that.
>> You know, it's so interesting because
sometimes we just talk about
productivity, which is about getting
things done. And there's healthy
productivity and toxic productivity.
Toxic productivity is getting things
done at any cost, right? And it is
universally applied across anything that
has the notion of needing to be
completed. The toxic productivity is
really driven by a mindset of I need it
done now. There's a sense of urgency in
everything and everything needs to be
done. While healthy productivity is more
about doing things and focusing on
things that matter. So beyond that you
have to understand then what is it that
matters right? there's a certain level
of prioritization that needs to happen
and the belief that will drive the
healthy productivity is more around
something like uh I'll do the best that
I can with the time that I have. So what
I love about that is that it takes into
account that we have constraints whether
we like it or not. We have guard rails
and the guard rails are what is the best
that I can do meaning what is within my
capabilities or my team's capabilities
or the organization's capabilities and
what is the time limit that I have and
then what's doable within that time
frame and the there is a cost to both
toxic and an opportunity with healthy
that we can see happen within
organizations but also on ourselves. So
most people don't really discern between
the two. they just think about being
productive rather than shifting their
mindset so that they can have one type
of productivity versus the other.
>> I really do need to distinguish that
because I have that mentality of just
get it done and the biggest thing that
suffers is my sleep and I know I'm not
at my at my best when I'm I'm tired. I
have a new mantra. I'm going to do the
best that I can with the time that I
have. Uh and and the the distinction
that you make really reminds me of that
distinction between urgency and what
what's urgent and what's important.
>> And and if you live in that world of
urgency, that's that toxicity you're
talking about where while you might get
things checked off your checklist, you
put yourself at a disadvantage. And and
I I do, you know, uh I do appreciate you
giving me that new mantra.
>> You know, there's also the other side of
that formula, which is if you regard
everything as important, not everything
is important, you know, whether
>> Yeah. Yeah. know it had to do with
prioritization, right? And and again
comes back to your values and your
beliefs, which really are important. You
know, last time we talked, we discussed
the importance of mindset. I know you
spent even more time since we last
talked thinking about and studying the
impact of mindset uh on well-being and
success. Can you share the new thoughts
that you have about mindset?
>> Absolutely. Uh you know, and and these
thoughts aren't mine. And I just became
more curious about mindset because I
found that not only with myself and my
own life experience and leadership
experience, but also with my clients
that they were moving to action, but the
actions weren't sustainable. And so it
got me curious around, well, why is
that? I'm a big fan of reverse
engineering. And when I reverse
engineered, I'm like, well, let's start
at the beginning. And the story in the
the beginning is the story we tell
ourselves about what we do. You know,
one of the the studies that really
fascinated me was a study by I believe
her first name is Aaliyah, last namerum,
and she's a social scientist. So, she
did that study with the hotel attendants
where they asked those hotel attendants,
"Do you think that the work that you do
is exercise?" And they were like, "No."
And so they said, "Well, what if you did
your work?" And all you had to do was
change the way you think about your
work, you think about it as exercise.
Four weeks later, with that small shift,
they saw significant enough uh
improvement in the health and fitness of
these individuals just by the mindset
change. And that fascinated me and her
conclusion
which is that uh it's not just about
what we do, but it's about what we think
about what we do that makes all the
difference literally was a gamecher for
me. And I started taking that approach
with my coaching clients in terms of
really exploring, well, how are you
thinking or what is it that you're
thinking about the conversation you're
having with your colleague? What is it
that you're thinking about that
presentation that you're about to go
make? What is it that you're thinking
about that report or that deck that you
have to put together? By shifting the
way that you think about the thing, not
only may have a direct outcome on the
thing itself, but even more importantly,
Matt, it changes your experience of
doing the thing, right? And so in my
world, I really just want leaders to be
able to lead with a little more ease,
right? Doesn't have to be as difficult
as we make it. challenges are
challenging enough, but if we can
approach them and respond to them with a
little more ease, boy would that open up
opportunities. And I think the mindset,
the way that you do the work or how what
you think about the work is what can
open up that possibility of leading with
more ease.
>> I love Aaliyah's work and and like you,
I see a tremendous amount of power in
it. It's how we frame and reframe it.
I'll give an example from my life. You
know, one of the things that that has
always been or had been difficult for me
was the grading part of the job I do as
a teacher. I have to give grades. It was
not something that I would get up in the
morning excited to do. But then when I
reframed grading as actually another
form of teaching, which I am very
passionate about, it was like a
gamecher. So refraraming can really
change the way in which you interact.
And I want to highlight something else
for everybody. The way you got to where
you did on your perspective on on
mindset and reframing is by reverse
engineering and I think that is such a
powerful tool and I know you use it a
lot to understand things in your own
life and the lives of those that you
coach. Can you walk us through sort of
how you think about reverse engineering
because for many people that's not an
intuitive thing to do.
>> My tendency is to be very
resultsoriented, right? Very outcomes
driven. I've I'm a lot of the work on
myself is to not be so attached to the
outcome. But when I look at the outcome
either either the outcome that has
occurred or the outcome that I want or
that I desire I can then look and say
okay this is what I desire this is what
I want to achieve let me work backwards
right what would I need to do to be able
so that's the action what would I need
to do to be able to achieve that outcome
all right if that's the action how would
I need to feel about that action in
order for it the increase the
probability ility that I would actually
do it or that we could make it happen.
And then from the feeling, I can work
backwards and say, what would I need to
think? What would I need to believe
in order to increase the probability
that I could feel and also fulfill those
actions? And that's where the reverse
engineering is, are those thoughts or
what I need to believe, are they aligned
with the way that I believe right now?
If it's yes, great. If it's not, then
here's an opportunity to reframe the
belief. not lose the one that I've had,
just put it to the side momentarily
until it's useful again. Right? But
there needs to be alignment between how
I think, how I feel, and how I act in
order to achieve a particular outcome.
Start with the outcome and then work it
backwards to say, okay, what would that
alignment look for me? When we feel
frustration or we feel dissonance or we
feel stuck, it's often because there's
somewhere along the line there's some
misalignment. Thank you for walking us
through that backward mapping. You know,
I I spend a lot of my time talking about
how people should have a clear goal in
their communication and I use this
structure of no feel do and you've just
applied no field do in a very different
way to help us with our internal
communication to align ourselves to the
beliefs we have and the beliefs we
should have to achieve our goals. I
really appreciate that backward mapping
process. You are an expert coach. I
certainly have benefited from this
conversation. But last time, you were
kind enough to coach me through a
challenge I was having around setting
boundaries. Your advice was incredibly
helpful and foundationally changed how I
do some things. And anybody wanting to
hear that advice can go back to episode
102 to hear. Uh would you be willing to
coach me on another issue I'm having?
>> Of course. Of course. If you're willing,
I'm down. So, one of the things that I
struggle with is I get very emotionally
invested in my work and as a result
often find myself exhausted and run
down. Any advice? I I don't want to lose
my passion. I think that's one of the
strengths I bring to the things I do,
but I also don't want to lose more sleep
and energy.
>> So, let me just ask you, when you say
emotionally invested, what's the emotion
and what's the investment?
>> I have a lot of curiosity and passion to
help. So in many of these situations, I
see opportunities to learn, to help
others learn, and to help. The biggest
emotions that drive me are are those
curiosity and and the desire to help.
And the investment is often time, not
just time in conversation and work to
accomplish that, but it's just mental
time. I I am somebody who ruminates, who
reflects. And so even when I'm not doing
the work, when I'm I'm trying to
vegetate, uh, sitting in front of the TV
or I'm going for a walk, it occupies my
time in my head. So, so the the
investment is a lot and constant.
>> Yeah. And so what would it look like for
you to still be able to exercise that
passion you have and the desire you have
to help others uh, and not
let it consume you as much as you feel
it does or you've stated it does? I
actually don't know the answer to that
question. I do have some role models,
some people that I really admire who
seem to be able to do it. So, what I've
noticed that they can do is they're able
to compartmentalize. They're able to
say, "Okay, just spent time doing that.
Going to put a bow on it, might come
back to it later, and I'm going to move
on to something else." The other thing
I've noticed that people do is they have
some kind of transitioning ritual. It
could be taking a walk. It could be
calling a friend. It could be checking
email. I've noticed that I haven't been
able to find a good transitioning risk
rule to get myself out of whatever I'm
focused on.
>> What do you believe that gets in the way
of you being able to compartmentalize?
>> When I reflect on what we've talked
about just previously, I think there is
an underlying belief that
commitment to to something I'm
passionate about is full-on commitment.
And in some way, I'm failing either
myself or the other people involved if
I'm not constantly working on it. And
and that was an unlock for me from our
earlier part of this conversation. And
perhaps I need to revisit that belief
that that failure is is nothing less
than 110% investment.
>> Yeah. I mean, well, let's try it, right?
How would you redefine that belief now
in a way that would allow you to both
drive to your passion and get more
sleep?
>> Yeah. So, I I think the first thing I
have to do is be is is ask other people.
you know, I I I'm realizing I make the
assumption of what success looks like
for me and perhaps those that I'm trying
to serve in that moment or with that
project or whatever it is might have a
different version of success that is not
as amped up and intense as the one that
I have. Uh and so so I think getting
external for myself might be helpful and
then perhaps setting some boundaries
around investment like while this is
important prioritize it relative to the
other things that are important.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And I and so what my advice
to you would be to go back and redefine
as we said earlier in the conversation
redefine success because if success
means I can do all the things and I need
to do all the things in order for other
people to be helped right because it's
grounded in helping redefining that
would be helpful to you and as you said
maybe getting some outside measure of
what that looks like because what might
be good enough for others might not be
the way that you're defining ain't good
enough for you. And so getting that
outside metric to really help
reformulate your definition of success,
which is a belief in and of itself, and
then let that drive, you know, how
you're prioritizing, how you're creating
boundaries and all of the other things
that you just said.
>> You are so good at what you do. I think
an external recalibration and an
internal recalibration of what success
is for me will really help in this
circumstance.
You know that before we end I always
like to ask three questions. One I
create just for you and the other two
I've been asking people forever. Are you
up for that?
>> Absolutely.
>> So you had mentioned that when you were
writing about the barriers that get in
the way for some leaders that you
actually recognize some in yourself. So
I'm curious if you're willing to to
disclose. What's one of the challenges
that you have and how are you working on
that?
>> Yeah. I mean I to be honest I I ended up
recognizing myself in all of them.
>> Yeah. which was kind of hard. The
longest standing one and that I have
learned to befriend because it's not
going away nor do I need it to go away
is that I need to be involved. And
underlying that is this false belief
that if I'm not involved, everything's
going to fall apart. And I understand
where it comes from. And by
understanding where it comes from, I
give myself a lot more grace because I
also recognize that where that belief
was cultivated and formed is not the
place that I'm in right now. And so I
con the work for me is constantly
reminding myself that I am in the here
and now and I'm not in the place where
that belief was actually critical to my
success and therefore I can let it go
for a little bit or put it to the side
and use a different one to help me get
my work done and be more effective in in
the here and now.
>> I really appreciate you sharing that
with us. Thank you. So you had an
opportunity to give an answer to this
question before. I'm wondering if it has
changed at all, but who is a
communicator that you admire and why?
>> The one that's coming to mind for me
today is um Dr. Gabbor
>> Mate,
>> who does a lot of work around uh mental
health and mindset.
And what I really appreciate about the
way that he communicates is number one,
he's able to take what feels like
complex ideas and break them down in
very simple terms for anyone to really
understand. Number two, he is an amazing
storyteller and by telling the story
associated with the concepts, it allows
it to be relatable uh and also
memorable. And number three, he just
exudes authenticity, right? Like he uh I
don't know if you've ever heard him
speak, but you literally feel like he's
sitting right in front of you just
having a conversation with you. It's not
him trying to be anyone else or it
doesn't feel like that. It doesn't feel
performative. It just feels like him
like that's who he would be whether he
is having a coffee chat with you or
whether he's on, you know, on stage in
front of thousands of people. So, he's
someone I I hugely admire, not just in
terms of the work that he does, but also
his communication approach,
>> the ability to make things accessible,
but also be very authentic. Uh, very
powerful skills. So, since you were last
here, I'm wondering if you uh your
answer to our final question has changed
as well. What are the first three
ingredients that go into a successful
communication recipe?
>> I think you have to start with the why.
Uh so why are you communicating what
you're communicating? What's the purpose
behind it? Okay. Uh because if there's
not a purpose, you should be asking
yourself whether you should be
communicating it at all. I think the
second is the how. What is the best way
for me to communicate this? And that is
grounded again in this question of how
do I want to experience myself as I
communicate it? How do I want others to
experience me? How do I want them to
feel when they leave that communication?
And then the third is what in what way
do I need to reframe what I believe
about what I'm communicating in order
for me to be able to communicate it
effectively. So it still goes back to
mindset going back to what we talked
about before. It's not just about what
you do, but what you think about what
you do. So what would you need to think
about what you're communicating, why
you're communicating, and how to
communicate it for it to optimize the
communication that you're about to make.
very clear. Why, how, and then how do I
reframe it to make sense to not only to
me but to those I communicate with.
>> That's right,
>> Mural. This was a fantastic conversation
as I knew it would be. You opened up uh
my mind and hopefully everybody is
listening to how we can be more
effective in our own lives and how
leaders can lead better, how we can
unblock ourselves from the things that
get in the way. Thank you for your time
and best of luck with your new book,
Leadership Unblocked.
>> Thank you so much, May. Always a
pleasure to talk to you.
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