I became involved in the coaching industry when I was 22. I lived in London at the time and, in exchange for coaching, helped with facilitating events for some coaches.
That was the time the phrase ātake responsibilityā came into my vocabulary, and I remember thinking, āwtf does that mean?ā But I pretended I got it and also went around telling people, āYou need to take responsibility for your actionsā or similar š©.
It felt dishonest to hear that it was my responsibility to deal with the consequences of being raised by a single mum, that I was creating my patterns with men, and that I was overweight because I chose to be. I wanted to be heard, coddled, and understood, but my coach was āmakingā me feel the opposite.
Iāll spare you the details, but through various pieces of training and coaching that Iāve experienced, I came to relate to the word responsibility completely differently.
When I google the word, I get the meaning in the picture above. This is the meaning we collectively created of the word responsibility, so it makes sense to me that I would have felt slightly triggered when I was told itās my responsibility.
Responsibility: response-ability. Responsibility is made up of 2 words! Responsibility is the ability to respond.
Ability to respond to anything - a traffic jam, your emotions, work colleague, natural disaster, failureā¦ You get it.
I notice that most of us walk around the world with a victim mindset.
My parentsĀ did this to me. My boyfriend cheatedĀ onĀ me. My schoolĀ failedĀ me. The governmentĀ didnāt give x to me. My friendĀ lost myĀ money. A drunk driverĀ hit meĀ and broke my leg (this could be an infinite list š).
Notice that the focus above is on someone/something else. You didnāt choose this to happen, so why should you take responsibility?
Because itās your life, and youāre killing your aliveness, your essence, by relating to life as a happening to you.
Life just happens; people do what they do, the weather does what it does, and you do what you do.
As human beings, we take an event, create a story around it and then go around complaining to other people about all the things that happened to us. Look around. Thatās how most people bond!
Look, Iām not denying that bad, terrible things happen to people. And thereās a space for grieving, blaming, anger, sadness, frustration, sense of unfairness. But itās absolutely your response-ability to respond to everything in your life!
If Iām stripped from response-ability, Iām just a meat body walking around at the effect of everything else. I feel a lack of control, a lack of agency over my own life. Is that a life well-lived?
The truth is that most things in the world we personally didnāt create (e.g. malnutrition, corruption, hunger, disease, natural disasters), nor did we choose our parents. Nor being bullied at school. Or our partner dying. Heck, we canāt even choose our following thoughts or emotions that will get triggered the next time someone cuts us off in traffic.
But itās the ability to respond that creates a life well-lived and leaves the world a little better than we found it.
You have the ability to respond to anything. Use it āØ
Also published here.