Saturday, June 10, 2017

Who Are You?

I'm taking faster steps. I delivered my next project at Toastmasters as well.
The objective of this one was using visual aids.

I had a beautiful PPT accompany me on stage. But sharing the first draft of what I spoke:

MOC introduces me:

TM Aman Who Are You? Who Are You? TM Aman

"Wish I could answer that in 7 mins.
*laughter*

But instead, today, I’m going to tell you, who you are.
And instead of pointing at you, which would be intrusive, I’m rather going to tell you a few facts and stories, in which you may catch a glimpse of yourself.


Fellow Toastmasters and Guests
Have you ever felt that you’re not in the right job? That’s just not who you are?
Or maybe you don’t prefer going to parties and when you go, you don’t feel your most natural self?
While people around you are totally happy to be there.


It’s simply because we all have different preferences. And they boil down to our personality.
Let’s try a quick activity. I want you to cross your arms.

Now you probably didn't even think, "Which arm do I put on top?" You have a natural preference for how you cross your arms.

So, try crossing them in the other way.
You can do it, easily. It doesn't feel quite as natural.
That is it with our preferences. This.. (enact) may feel natural, whereas here, you did have to put some effort. Similar it is with our personality. Some activities, some decisions come to us very naturally whereas to others it may feel alien to them.
I recently got certified in one of the personality assessment tool that not only helps me understand myself but also others around me, better. That tells me how different people see the world differently.

Chances are you’ve taken Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, or will. Roughly 2 million people a year do.

The fundamentals of MBTI include identifying the four main personality preferences pair which describe who you are. How do you act and think.

The first what we call ‘preference pair’, is about where we do we draw our energy from. This pair is E and I. Where Extraverts or the Es tend to focus on their outer world, Is focus more on their inner world. Now, these are not social skills. This is about energy. While Es want their energy to go out and, when it goes out, it comes bouncing back to them. And Is want their energy to go in. By looking at ideas, impressions, facts inside their head, they create more energy. We believe that you have both within you. It's just that you prefer one over the other.
How Es and Is appear in meetings is kind of interesting. Extraverts in a meetings are more likely to be talking their ideas out. I have a preference for extraversion and I feel if I bring it out, it becomes real, and I may start over here and end up over here, because I've made it real as I'm talking it out. Now, an I listening to that E may be thinking, "If they just shut up, we would get somewhere." Whereas an E looking at an I is probably going, "Are they awake? Are they listening to me?"

Silences for Es are space to be filled. Silences for Is are space to be cherished.
For example, both an introvert and an extravert may like going jogging after work. And while the extravert notices people, things around in the park and draws energy from these outward sources, the introvert's energy is turned inwards. He uses the time outside to mull over ideas and what has happened that day.

Moving to the next one, which is how we gather data and the kind of information we like and trust. The preference pairs here are sensing and intuition. S and N. People who prefer sensing want things to be practical, actual, real, facts and data. They just really want to get down to the here and now, the present of what's going on. By contrast, intuitive types like possibilities, meanings, the big picture, the future.
Let’s have a small experiment.

Unlock your phone and look at it for 3 seconds.
Alright, what’s the time on your phone?

Okay, that’s a good start.
Can also tell me the battery percentage on your phone?

Even though all of us got the same time to look at our phones, for some it was natural to look for these details.
While the Sensing types would look at the details and the intuitive types would be interpreting some bigger picture behind all these details, forming patterns. So next time, someone points things out the things you didn’t even say, check if they are forming a bigger picture and interpreting your facts differently.

Alright, once we have information in, we make our decisions. The third preference pair: thinking and feeling. Thinking types when they take a decision, they look at the information that they have, in an objective way. They look at the pros and cons, and make their decision. But feeling types step into the decision. They become aware of, "How is this going to impact people? How does this fit with my value system?," and they're looking for harmony with their value system. It does not mean that Feeling types are emotional people or use their emotions to make decisions. Rather they use a structured way of using their values for it.
Hence, the definition of being fair, if different to both the types.

Giving you an example, let’s say you have 10 DIFFERENT chocolates to be distributed among a group of 10 children. How would you distribute it?
A person with Thinking preference would distribute they equally for they need to treat everyone according to same standards, and equally. However, a person with Feeling preference would give each kid the chocolate each of them likes. Because for them, being fair means treating everyone to what they need. Individuals are different and they need different things.

Now, both thinking types and feeling types came to the exact same conclusions. They just did it in different ways.
Our last one has to do with how we like to go about living our lives. And our words are "judging" and "perceiving" in this preference pair, and "judging" here doesn't mean "judgmental." But what J types like to do is organize things, make decisions, get on with it, and perceiving types like to kind of go with the flow and be spontaneous and continue gathering information. So, I'm a perceiving type, my life is all about options. It’s about going with the flow. And routines and strict organization of things make me feel suffocated. True confessions. Okay.

Now, I happen to have a friend, who prefers Judging. He thinks I'm nuts. He loves to make lists, and checking things off that list. So, you can imagine what happens when we go out for a meal: He’s making his decisions -you know, judging is about, "Let's make a decision and get on with it" -And I’m looking over the menu, looking at what other people have, trying to decide what I’m going to have, that's perhaps new and different, and he’s getting hungry.
But, for perceiving types, it's no decision before its time. So, judging types will often use words that end in "ed": "I've finished that," "I've completed that," I've decided that," and perceiving types will often talk in "ing" words: "I'm finishing that," "I'm completing that," "I'm deciding that."

So, this is about how you live your life.
All of these come together in a magical way. So, we've got four preference pairs. We've got

how you gain energy - extroversion, introversion -
how you gather information - sensing, intuition -,
how you make decisions - thinking or feeling -,

and how you live your life - judging or perceiving.

They come together to form 16 unique combinations.
So does that tell you who am I or who you are already? Is that all we are? Are we a bunch of these alphabets? No, we’re not.
You’re like some other people and like no other person. And that is what makes us who we are.

Do all humans get divided and boxed into one of these 16 combinations? No, there’s more intricacy to it. But it sure is a small window to your soul. And understanding the personality type sure does help you understand yourself better and the others who have surprisingly different preferences.
Remember, these are just the preferences. You and I can act other ways when I need to. Maybe not want to.

So, I'm going to ask that you help me demonstrate preferences for one last time.
And that is I want you to clap your hands and just freeze them. So, clap and freeze. Okay.

Now, you probably didn't even notice that you have a way of clapping, you have a preference for that.
So, I want you to practice, as loud as you can, the other way.

It's a cheap way to get applause. Thank you."

Finding Home

I moved to Canada about 2 years ago. The world around and within me changed. Now, this realization wasn’t instantaneous. Definitely not th...