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Knowing Yourself Without Being Overwhelmed

personal growth, sin, holiness, growth, sanctification, journal, make a plan

Develop a plan for personal growth.

Developing a Plan for Growth

Knowing yourself can be a bit intimidating, especially if you are a perfectionist like me. Growing up in a home where โ€œyou can do betterโ€ was a theme had both positive and negative effects.

On the positive side, two of my signature themes are Maximizer, someone who strives for excellence and seeks to take things from good to superb; and Responsibility, someone who takes ownership for what they should do. (See StrengthsFinder 2.0 for more on signature themes.) These two themes often drive me to perform at a high level.

On the negative side, my perfectionism can make me fight dual fears โ€“ the fear of failure and the fear of success. Fear of failure can cause procrastination, while fear of success is self-limiting.

All this means that I can be very self-critical when I look in the mirror. For people like me, a comprehensive self-initiated review is like shining a spotlight on all my faults at once. This will either cause panic and frantic striving to fix everything at once, or it will overwhelm me, causing me to give up or shut down. The end result of both approaches is failure. Itโ€™s a nasty shame cycle.

Stop the Ride! I Want to Get Off!

Is there a way to do comprehensive personal reviews that will help me grow as a person and as a leader without making me feel like a complete failure? Karl Vaters shared four principles in a recent article. He says, โ€œThe more a person wants to tell you what they think, the less valuable their feedback is likely to be.โ€

Larry Osborne also shared some ways he conducts self-initiated reviews in a 1994 Christianity Today article. He suggests:

  1. Initiate the process yourself to remove defensiveness.
  2. Donโ€™t take anonymous feedback.
  3. Get it in writing.
  4. Change evaluation tools every two years.
  5. Keep the salary review separate.

While these are all good suggestions, it can still be overwhelming to hear all your perceived faults at once. I suggest breaking reviews down into smaller bites. This will allow you to think more deeply on one subject. To digest what was said about one or two things instead of trying to swallow everything at once. Think of a good review process as fine dining, not a trip to Golden Corral.

To do this, I try to focus on one element of personal growth each year. Sometimes Iโ€™ll ask for feedback from people I trust. Other times I will listen to criticisms that were already offered. Here are the steps I follow:

How to Choose One Thing

There are several categories that you can use as potential areas of focus:

However, these categories are much too broad to be of real use. For example, you cannot address all of biblical character in one year. Frankly, that takes a lifetime. You can look at the different lists of biblical character traits (Galatians 5:22-23 is one such list) and ask, โ€œWhich one do I most need to work on?โ€ Use a survey of friends or some other review process to help you pick just one.

Here is a sample review surveyย I recommend using parts of it as a guide and customize your review process to meet your unique ministry needs and goals. Donโ€™t just print it and ask people to fill it out. That can be self-defeating.

In 2018, I worked on clarifying my call to ministry. Iโ€™m starting 2019 with prayer retreat to listen to the Holy Spirit and decide what to focus on next. Iโ€™ll let you know what I decide when Iโ€™m back from my retreat. What is the one thing you need to work on in the next year? Is it a common theme when you ask your friends, family, and coworkers? Leave a comment below; maybe we can help one another.

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