By Scott Kiekbusch
Can’t is a word that I am attempting to eradicate from my vocabulary. It’s more than just a word (or two words smushed together)—it’s an excuse, a mindset, an attitude. I hear this word too often lately, at work (internally and from clients) and in my personal life. The truth of the matter is, when people say, “I can’t do that,” what they often mean is, “I won’t.”
Remember, if you decide that you can’t do something, you’re absolutely correct. If you have a tendency to be the one who declares what cannot be done, ask yourself a few questions:
After you’ve begun to eliminate can’t from your own vocabulary, the next step is learning how to use this approach to deal with those who tell us what can’t be done. The same four questions asked above, posed in a non-threatening manner, can also be used to help shift the attitudes of Those Who Can’t (or won’t). Offering assistance or a fresh perspective are additional methods to shift attitudes and break through roadblocks. Try using the following:
“The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.”
– Arthur C. Clarke
This was thought-provoking; thanks. I think there a lot of people out there who, like myself, have run up against so much possibility that never comes to fruition due to reality, it’s hard not to put up roadblocks for yourself - almost like you’re trying to avoid disappointment again.
To me, equally frustrating as people who whine “I can’t” are the people who don’t listen when you give good reasons why not - given enough time and money, sure anything is possible. Unfortunately, especially today, both are scarce and some people are optimistic to a fault.