![]() |
| Ladybug on the beach(?!) - Photo by Karina Miller |
As I sat in a personal development seminar early this year listening to a participant stand in front of the group of over a hundred people and talk about how he didn't ever speak in front of groups, and the leader said, "What are you doing right now?" I had to laugh. That was my breakthrough. It was that simple. Just like the dude standing in front of a huge group of people saying that he doesn't do that, I was telling myself that I didn't contribute—all the while contributing on a daily basis and being acknowledged for my contribution by friends, family, colleagues, company leaders, and peers. It was a slap in the face to those around me not to recognize myself as they saw me, but as the little voice in my head had convinced me I was.
In another course, the leader told us that we treat people like either tools or toys. Calling human beings by the term "resources" suddenly struck me as demeaning and extremely limiting. As I watched those around me have life-changing breakthroughs in areas of their lives that seemed completely insurmountable, I understood that humans are not merely resources to be used and abused for profit and fun, we are all walking possibilities.
I hesitate to suggest this because it sounds a little stupid even to me—perhaps our profession should be called Human Possibilities instead of Human Resources. Or maybe we could just think of it this way—we provide resources, including leading and coaching for "what's possible," to human beings for the purpose of collectively creating something good—versus providing, manipulating, improving, and maximizing humans as resources for the benefit of the impersonal, almighty business.
What could be possible in our organizations and the world if we saw ourselves, through all the muck and difficulties of life, as possibilities instead of barely-surviving, Cro-Magnan descendents who can't catch a break? Is this notion too Pollyanna? Sacrilege? Stupid? Or maybe, just maybe, revolutionary?

I enjoyed reading your blog of December 3, 2010. It was very thought provoking.
ReplyDeleteThanks David! I appreciate your comment. What thoughts did it provoke?
ReplyDeleteIt IS revolutionary! And no matter what people call themselves, who HR can BE for their employees is the difference. To me, it's the perceived inflexibility of HR that gives them a bad-rap, that they cannot be flexible & meet the needs of whatever happens moment-to-moment. There is a content of hard & fast rules, but the people behind how the rules show up in the environment are what set the context.
ReplyDeleteKarina, you've demonstrated (with measurable results!) at your current company that you empowered your team & yourself to not just "survive" the scary parts, but the whole company came out on the other side in a winning position!!! That is calm, quiet, & solid leadership, where people are really getting that the company *IS* them, not just their work.
Power in groups, that is what HR delivers when being possibility and being a stand for their "resources" having what they need to be successful. I'd be happy to be one of your resources any time!!
Thanks for your comment, feedback, and constant encouragement Kelley! Love your new blog www.acoolbluepearl.com!
ReplyDelete