A while back, I read “Trust” by Dr. Henry Cloud. He writes repeatedly about how humans are hardwired to trust. We are built to trust others and form relationships. The book covers a lot of ground but one of the over-arching ideas is that when you spend time with someone, the natural by-product of that time is that you begin to trust them.
It does not matter much about the
person’s actual conduct or character. It
also does not matter much how they treat you.
If you stick with them, you deepen your trust in them. The books goes in depth about how this plays
out in your daily life (it IS a worthwhile read), but I think we should also be
very conscious of the inverse side of this equation…
The people who are spending time
with you, most likely trust you. Even if
there is no conversation with a trust litmus test or any other form of a DTR (Define
The Relationship), they probably trust you and more significantly- your
opinions. Our environment has a HUGE
influence on our perceptions of ourselves.
You are someone else’s environment.
Are you being intentional about making sure that environment is good for
the people around you? Are you affirming them?
Are you building them up and encouraging them? Are you modeling a good attitude or being a
Debbie Downer?
As an educator, I was blown away
by how many of my students told me that their parents repeatedly called them
stupid. These students saw themselves as
stupid, casually called others stupid, regularly called themselves stupid, and
worse yet, they believed they were stupid.
I was shocked by the reports that
their parents called them stupid, because my mother would have NEVER called me
stupid!! Now that I’ve raised a few
teenagers, I get it! My teens did
a LOT of really STUPID stuff. I was
constantly scratching my head asking, “how could they be this stupid?” I knew they were smart. I had seen them do smart things. I had seen them use higher level critical
thinking skills. Still, they would make
the dumbest mistakes. (Like real mistakes, not just being incapable of loading
the dishwasher LOL, IYKYK.)
While I would hope I did fewer
stupid things than my own kids, I have talked to enough parents by now to know-
we ALL do stupid things when we are teenagers.
It is part of the process. As an
adult, I don’t remember half of them and in retrospect, I see myself as an
incredibly smart teenager who had my life together. Why? Primarily because I did not have someone
calling me an idiot every day (regardless of whether or not it was warranted). I had parents who celebrated my
accomplishments and successes, and diminished and forgave my mistakes.
My environment dictated my
perception of myself.
Proof that I did dumb things... I committed trespassing just to take this pic (Age: 18) |
I have also seen this play out in
a less healthy way in my life. I used to
be overweight. Honestly, …I didn’t know that I was significantly
overweight. I told myself that I was big-boned, and that the scale and the few photos I couldn’t avoid were inaccurate
depictions of my health.
I had no clue that my physical
health was a problem, because my environment assured me that it was not a problem. I was surrounded by
people who ate the same way I did.
People who loved me well, regardless of my pants size. My husband treasured me as I was and made me feel
beautiful. I went in for annual
check-ups and never once had a doctor point out that I was medically overweight
and on a trajectory that would likely lead to serious medical problems in the
future. Everywhere I turned, my environment reinforced that everything was good. I
trusted my environment.
Back to the context of my classroom,
my 6th period…
The majority of the students in this class struggled academically but were
plenty sharp. I was regularly caught off-guard
by next-level, quick-witted jokes from the student that typically had the
lowest grade in the class. They asked
which of my classes was the “smartest.”
I pushed the question to a discussion and articulated that I knew the gradebook
was not an accurate measure of the intelligence of my 6th period
class. I stated that I knew that the
student at the bottom of the gradebook, was actually really smart; he either was not good at school or was choosing
to not apply himself in my classroom.
The students in the class knew
him well enough to know his grades, but none of them contested my statement. They also knew him well enough to know about
his sense of humor, his side hustles, and the other things in his life that
demonstrated his capacity. After this
group discussion, that specific student started making an effort to learn in my
classroom. That was cool, but the
biggest win was the day when he referred to himself as stupid and then
immediately corrected his own self-talk, “well I’m not stupid, I’m just not
good at this.”
My students knew I had a zero-tolerance
policy for negative self-talk. They also
knew that the same standards applied for how they spoke to one another. Why?
Because environment matters!! I
believed that that student was smart, I made it a point to call that out in
him, and I changed his perception of himself.
Not because I’m special, not because I’m some superhero teacher, but
because words are THAT powerful.
YOUR
Words
Are
That
Powerful!
- Where do you need to be
intentional about creating a better environment for others?
- Are you allowing your environment
to normalize things that you know are toxic or unhealthy?
- Knowing that you are hardwired to trust, are there any steps that you need to take to strategically curate your environment?
Let me know if there is anything
I can do to encourage you in that process or pray for you. Let’s love one another well, and ourselves!
I had never thought about trust as also being a product of environment but you definitely opened my eyes to how we will trust others despite the environment. I know for me those words resonated with me. ❤️
ReplyDeleteBeing mindful of it makes a difference! Thank you for sharing 💙
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