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Why I never coach on being “authentic”

Danny was completely taken aback. He had just made a breakthrough in his ability to give virtual presentations. The others in the workshop showered him with kudos.  One particular aspect of his presentation received overwhelming praise.  Many voices said, “That was so authentic!” The audience LOVED it.

Danny turned to me in complete confusion.  I had not coached him at all on being authentic.  Even more puzzling, Danny had not felt inauthentic in any way before. And yet everyone was telling him he was now suddenly authentic.

I’ve seen this a lot.  Our graduates frequently hear, “That was so authentic”. Their audiences always love it.  And them.

It’s peculiar because I never coach for being more authentic. Only for communicating more effectively.

So, what’s happening here?

Previously, when Danny was giving presentations, his attention was distracted by many things: his material, feeling like he was performing, apprehensive that he was being judged, concerned about how he was coming across, a little worried about the outcome, wishing he could see their faces so he could gauge their reactions, thinking about what he was going to say next, and keeping an eye on the clock.

So you can understand why Danny was tense. Tense comes from the Latin word tendo, meaning stretched.  Danny was stretched.

I’ve worked with large corporations for over 30 years. Professionals and executives at every level are used to feeling tense.  It’s normal. Feeling completely comfortable is not.

Watching your back is normal.  Being relaxed is not.

After a while, being slightly tense, or even very tense, is habitual.

You tell someone to relax, they look at you puzzled and say, “I AM relaxed!”  They never notice they’re not.

And they don’t notice how cold they’ve become. They are completely shocked when they see their own videos.  They don’t realize that this constant worry depletes their natural affinity for others.

My coaching helped Danny become completely COMFORTABLE.  At ease.  Unworried.

This set the foundation for his next step, allowing himself to LIKE the people in his audience.  And to really feel it as he presented to them.

You don’t tell your audience that you have affinity for them. That’s not the point. You just have to FEEL it.

A funny thing happens when you’re completely comfortable. A happiness inside you grows.

Another funny thing happens when you feel real affinity for others. The happiness inside you grows bigger, spills over into your relationships and sparks that affinity in the people you’re talking to.

Then it snowballs.

Suddenly, everyone is relaxed, comfortable, happy and filled with a strong liking for you and for each other, filled with a really good feeling.

It’s a feeling.  It’s not what you’re thinking. It’s not your words. It’s not what you say. It’s a feeling.

It supersedes logic. It actually commands logic.

You have a tremendous potential and capacity for affinity.  When you tap into it, magic happens.

And, if you’re in one of my workshops, suddenly everyone is telling you, “You are so authentic.”

This triggers a series of profound questions.

Authentic means genuine.  It comes from a Greek word meaning straight from the author. In other words, direct from you.

The opposite of authentic is contrived, which means invented, the idea being that when you’re not authentic, you’re inventing yourself in a way to please others, and that makes you not genuine.

When you start thinking you have to please others or come across a certain way, you start performing, not communicating. That will make you tense.

It’s possible you receive a tremendous amount of personal “feedback” on what you need to do to please others.

If you listen and follow all this “advice”, what happens to the real you?

And why is it that, when I coach people and they achieve a state of being completely comfortable and they’re filled with genuine affinity for the people they’re talking to, that the world tells them, they are being truly authentic?

Most importantly, after hearing so many of my students be told they’re authentic, I have this question for you:  Is being comfortable and being filled with affinity for others possibly the REAL you?

If it is, what would happen if you revitalized this (or any) aspect of the real you fully in all your relationships?  In your virtual meetings and presentations?  What would happen if this was how you lived your life?

Be the cause!

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