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Dr. Maria Church Love-Based Leadership Speaker, Motivational Speaker, Best-Selling Author, Organizational Culture Expert

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Dr. Maria Church Love-Based Leadership Speaker, Motivational Speaker, Best-Selling Author, Organizational Culture Expert

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4 Steps for putting the "Civil" back in Civil Service

July 27, 2021 DrMaria
4 Steps for Putting the "Civil" Back in Civil Service - Dr. Maria Church

We have found ourselves in the Rage Age.

Incivility is almost becoming the norm. In a recent retreat I facilitated for a Mayor and City Council, incivility was a big part of our conversation. They’ve noticed an increase of incivility in the community, especially after the last major election. It was their belief that the frustration with the federal government and the incivility demonstrated during the last divisive presidential election continues to trickle down to the local government level.

We certainly do not need to look far to see the incivility demonstrated on “social” media. I know of many people who stopped using Facebook and Twitter during the campaign because the conversation went from civil discourse to rage, rude, and abusive dialogue…in other words, the conversations became uncivil.

We also see this in our own communities. A very good friend of mine recently was the victim of road rage. When I discussed this incident with a local sheriff, he explained that he wasn’t surprised by this act of rage as it is becoming much more apparent in this time of uncertainty. Wow, living in uncertainty contributes to rage.

This incivility is also showing up in our workplaces.

18% of the 867 hate incidents reported in the 10 days after the election occurred in workplace environments. However, incivility in the workplace is not new. A study conducted a few years ago uncovered contributing factors to this phenomenon at work. More than half of the employees said they were overloaded at work, 40% claimed they did not have the time to be nice, and 25% reported that their rude behavior was because that is the way their bosses behaved.

According to another study, the experiencing rude behavior reduces employees’ self-control and leads them to behave in a similar manner, which only prolongs the cycle of incivility. This type of behavior is compounded in workplaces that are perceived to be political in nature where co-workers act out of self-interest rather than what is best for the organization or the community in which they serve.

When people don’t feel respected, productivity, innovation, and loyalty suffer. People just stop communicating with each other. They stop sharing and seeking information. This can be the death of an organization.

Another study showed that people lose the ability to concentrate after being treated rudely. Cognitive skills dropped 30% in experiments that the researchers conducted.In many cases, rude, uncivil behavior stems from a lack of self-awareness.

People who behave rudely often don’t realize the impact they have on others around them.

We need to get those people who are acting rudely to understand what is going on around them and how they can improve their behavior.

Start now, to create more civil workplace cultures by:

  1. Getting support from senior leaders to change their cultures.

  2. Walk the talk, model the behavior you want to see.

  3. Coach your executive leadership team, department directors, managers, supervisors, and employees on how to be civil and respectful of each other.

  4. Hold people accountable, regardless of their title in the organization.This change won’t happen overnight, but moving in the right direction with commitment and awareness will help to change workplace cultures to civil, productive, and innovative organizations.

As always, I love to hear from you. What steps have you taken to help create a civil culture?

With Love and To Your Success,

Maria

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In Collaboration, Communication, Cooperation, Culture, Source, Team, Transparency Tags (change intelligence), (emotional intelligence), (government leadership solutions), (government leadership), (how to deal with incivility in the workplace), (incivility in the workplace articles), (incivility in the workplace incidence and impact), (incivility synonym), (is incivility common in the workplace what might be its costs), (local government), (love-based leadership development), (millennial management), (organizational culture), (types of incivility), (workplace incivility in nursing), (workplace incivility scale), change management, Dr- Maria Church
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4 Strategies to Intentional Leadership

July 20, 2021 DrMaria
4 Strategies to Intentional Leadership - Dr. Maria Church

For many, intention is defined as a motivation, a drive, or an ambition to succeed. It can be a demonstration of force, determination, or your immutable will to attain or accomplish something indicates that you have a firm intention.

These are examples of our Western mental models of intention. A deeper understanding of the power of intention, described by Carlos Castaneda, suggests,

“In the universe there is an immeasurable, indescribable force which shamans call intent, and absolutely everything that exists in the entire cosmos is attached to intent by a connecting link”.

Similar in description to how Wallace Wattles describes this intention in his book, “The Science of Getting Rich”. Wattles wrote:

“There is a thinking stuff which all things are made, and which in its original state, permeates, penetrates, and fills the interspaces of the universe. A thought in this substance, produces the thing that is imaged by the thought. Man can form things in his thought, and by impressing his thought upon formless substance, can cause the thing he thinks about to be created.”

This is not a model of perseverance or a mindset where only the fit (determined) survive, but a realization, again, of the connection to each other and Spirit. What this model of intention describes for us, as leaders, is that we are not alone in this organization, community, country, or even universe: but we are together, linked to the energetic force of intention.

Why is intention crucial to our leadership? It is the purpose, the why we are here, our belief in something greater than we are. Intention is how we derive meaning. In order to create a vision for our companies, or even our lives, we must first ask, “why?” Tapping into the power of intention requires clearing space in our minds and allowing and trusting our intuitive insights to flow.

Here are some strategies we can use to ensure that we are leading with intention:

  1. Knowing our values helps bring clarity to what is meaningful to us. Identify ten important values. Narrow the list down to your top five and write a sentence or two explaining what the values mean to you and why they are important.

  2. Look at your calendar and review how you spend your time. Do the activities on your calendar align with your values? If not, why not?

  3. Create a mind map on a clean sheet of paper, and in the center of the paper write, “My purpose for living this life is…” and circle it. Now draw lines out from this circle with as many ideas that flow into your head and heart and draw circles around each one of those words or statements, always connecting the circles with lines to the center circle of your purpose. GRAPHIC

  4. Using the above information you have developed, write a purpose statement, including the activities involved in achieving that purpose, people necessary to support you, and the value you provide to others.

Enjoy the process and see what you discover! What is your purpose statement?

Let’s share those and celebrate our clear intentions together.

With Love,

Maria

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In Uncategorized, Communication, Culture, Influence, Leadership, Leadership shift, Love-Based Leadership, Vulnerability Tags (10 characteristics of a good leader), (change intelligence), (emotional intelligence), (good leader quotes), (government leadership solutions), (government leadership), (leadership qualities list), (leadership qualities pdf), (leadership qualities ppt), (leadership weaknesses), (local government), (love-based leadership development), (millennial management), (organizational culture), (qualities of a bad leader), (what makes a good leader essay), change management, Dr- Maria Church
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