Excusitis

excuses.jpgExcusitis: Psychological disorder resulting from the need to defer responsibility to anyone or anything other than oneself. This disorder is usually accompanied by rationalization disorder.

There is a story about a farmer who went to his neighbor to borrow some rope. The neighbor refused. “Can’t. I need the rope to tie up my milk.”Confused, the farmer replied, “But you can’t tie up milk with a rope!”To which the neighbor replied, “True. But when you don’t want to do something, one excuse is as good as another.”

The more successful people are, the fewer excuses they tend to make. Paraphrasing Yoda: There is no try. There is only do or not do.*

It is an interesting exercise to listen to yourself throughout just one day and keep a running, written tally: How many excuses do you make?

Another exercise: How many commitments do you make? How realistic are those commitments? How enthusiastic and committed are you to your commitments? How many excuses flow from making commitments you are not committed to? Would you have been better off (and those depending upon your response better off as well) if you had paused and thought through the commitment you were making?**

Would your reputation for dependability, reliability, and professionalism rise over time if you made fewer, but higher quality, commitments?

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*Actual dialogue, Star Wars Episode V, The Empire Strikes Back:
Luke: All right, I’ll give it a try.
Yoda: No. Try not. Do. Or do not. There is no try.

** Frequently people ask for more than they need or ask without understanding the full impact of their request. I often throw the initiative back to the other person. “If you need that, would you please email me a request for it?” You’d be surprised how often the email doesn’t arrive. On second thought the person decided it was not that necessary or it was not really needed in the first place.

2 Responses to “Excusitis”

  1. Rob Myers says:

    Yoda is sage-smart! And, for the record, The Empire Strikes Back is the best of the Star Wars films. I’m just going to put that out there.

    Oh, and the email request is TOTALLY the way to go. I’ve got Residents that will ask for crazy stuff (get my roommate to stop recording “dancing w/ the stars” on my DVR in the living room) and I tell them to put the request in writing via email so I can have the documentation and consider it “officially”. Just as you said, most never write!

  2. gpa says:

    Sometimes excuses are so automatic..when I really think of it I realize there is not reason to have an excuses for this or that because because in realitiy who ever it is is making the request or comment not looking for an excuse but a solution ..goes right back to being reactive vs proactive..I still think often about Q-tip..I find if I quit taking it personaly..I offer less excuses and more solutions..

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