0 £0.00
products in your basketto quote Checkout
Ooops no items were found.
Try something else.
Ok
Loading…

Self Reflection

If you think mirrors are the enemy, we’re with you! Sure if you are ready for a big Saturday night out the mirror might be your friend, but for most of us seeing
our reflection is something we actively avoid. Here comes the hard part, should we spend more time looking in the mirror and evaluating ourselves honestly? We live in a world where we assess and judge others regularly but rarely focus on introspection and self-reflection. Busy and demanding lives leave us little time to thoroughly examine who we are and how we grow both personally and in business.

In your early career, it was expected that you had a lot to learn and that you would make mistakes. Over time as you progress, feedback becomes less frequent and you get less advice to become better due to a lack of coaching, guidance and mentoring. Circumstances change and you adapt but it’s likely that you don’t stop to take time to reflect. Self-reflection is a process whereby you grow your understanding of who you are, your values, and why you think and act in the
way you do. Without undertaking this exercise, you’ll find it impossible to align your life with what you wish it to be. By merely pausing for a moment and evaluating yourself, you will be surprised by what you uncover. Self-reflection can be a really useful business tool as you examine your strengths and weaknesses.

To experience personal growth, you need to take a cold, hard look in the mirror. Embrace the flaws and work out strategies to improve them, as John says “Our biggest competitor is really ourselves”. If you want to improve and evolve, the only way to be a better version of yourself is to be truthful about where you are in your life and what you want to achieve. Casting aspersions on others is easy, selfanalysis is much harder. If you want to be good at your job and inspire others, you don’t just need to imagine the new you, you need to live the new you. It turns out that the mirror might just be your friend after all.

So, what do you see in the mirror?

Self Reflection

If you think mirrors are the enemy, we’re with you! Sure if you are ready for a big Saturday night out the mirror might be your friend, but for most of us seeing
our reflection is something we actively avoid. Here comes the hard part, should we spend more time looking in the mirror and evaluating ourselves honestly? We live in a world where we assess and judge others regularly but rarely focus on introspection and self-reflection. Busy and demanding lives leave us little time to thoroughly examine who we are and how we grow both personally and in business.

In your early career, it was expected that you had a lot to learn and that you would make mistakes. Over time as you progress, feedback becomes less frequent and you get less advice to become better due to a lack of coaching, guidance and mentoring. Circumstances change and you adapt but it’s likely that you don’t stop to take time to reflect. Self-reflection is a process whereby you grow your understanding of who you are, your values, and why you think and act in the
way you do. Without undertaking this exercise, you’ll find it impossible to align your life with what you wish it to be. By merely pausing for a moment and evaluating yourself, you will be surprised by what you uncover. Self-reflection can be a really useful business tool as you examine your strengths and weaknesses.

To experience personal growth, you need to take a cold, hard look in the mirror. Embrace the flaws and work out strategies to improve them, as John says “Our biggest competitor is really ourselves”. If you want to improve and evolve, the only way to be a better version of yourself is to be truthful about where you are in your life and what you want to achieve. Casting aspersions on others is easy, selfanalysis is much harder. If you want to be good at your job and inspire others, you don’t just need to imagine the new you, you need to live the new you. It turns out that the mirror might just be your friend after all.

So, what do you see in the mirror?

SEARCH ×