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Coaches Memo is an area where I share what is going on in my world, the ways in which the power of coaching is affecting my life, and insights I have recently experienced.
Receiving Help as an Act of Generosity
I’m changing my mind about asking for or accepting help, when I need it. What I learned growing up was be needless/wantless, be self-sufficient,be self-reliant, and never be beholden to anyone. “Who are you to have needs,
with so many other people in the world in much worse need?” As a kid, I learned that asking for or receiving help was freeloading, a sign of weakness, or of poverty. That’s how it landed for me, anyway. After 50-something years of living with those rules, I decided to find a better feeling perspective.
So, working with my coach (yep, I have a coach too!), I discovered there is another more satisfying perspective for me to explore about asking for and receiving help. We all can use some help sometimes. She asked me “how do you feel when you are asked for help by someone else?” Hmmm. Well, generally, I really like being asked to help, sometimes even honored. It feels good to be able to assist someone. (BTW, neuroscience calls it the “helper’s high” – actually a chemical buzz from showing kindness or compassion to another. So we are hardwired to be of service.) Next, she asked me, doesn’t it follow that if someone offers help I need or if I ask someone for help they, too, might feel good by my allowing and accepting their help?
With a Coach’s Skillful Guidance . . .
With a coach’s skillful guidance, my new understanding of my assumptions about offering and receiving help is three-fold. First, I feel rebuffed when I offer help and it is declined or ignored, so maybe they do too? Second, I found that I was fearful of the answer – whether yes or no! And third, I see how being overly invested in “looking good” as needless/wantless and low-maintenance keeps me from connecting and moving ahead in life. Ick. As Joe Weston, author of an amazing new book “Mastering Respectful Confrontation” says, being vulnerable is actually a very powerful place in which to stand.
Okay, there are always exceptions to this. But in most instances, my own new perspective on receiving help – whether requested or offered – is that accepting help can have outcomes much greater than the help offered. It can engage connection with another, even when the help is not granted or ultimately received, and it also can be an act of great
generosity.
Some Questions for You. . .
It feels really good to share my journey on asking for and receiving help. Thanks for reading this far. And if any of this resonates with you or brings up some curiosity about your own beliefs, here are some Coach’s Inquiries to mull:
- Where can you really use some help, big or small, right now?
- Who do you know who can help you?
- What might be generous about asking them for help?
- What if they say “no?”
- What if they say “yes?”
- Can you take “yes” for an answer?
This is a great example of ways in which working with a professional coach can help shift perspectives, to live more powerfully and with greater connection. Why not contact me today to set up a complementary 30-minute consultation call to explore ways that I may be of service? (You might even want to ask me for help!) Please visit my website www.kincaidcoaching.com
“Be Bad!”
That’s what comedian Kate Clinton wrote when she autographed a photo for me a few years ago.
Be Bad really landed for me. I’ve spent so much of my life being “nice” and living in ways that catered to others comfort and wishes at the expense of my own wants and needs. Think “Best Little Boy.” (Maybe you can relate?)
With the help of my coach, I learned that I often saw rules where there weren’t any! I unconsciously opted out of many things in life based on unquestioned assumptions I made, informed by rules that I made up or that others imposed that were unacceptable. Moments of clarity like that are powerful outcomes from working with a coach.
So, I took Kate’s admonition to heart. I made a commitment to myself. . . If living life with dignity, integrity, personal power, speaking up, playing bigger, with joy and kindness is somehow bad, then okay – I choose to Be Bad.
If this resonates, I invite you to consider some coach-like questions for yourself:
- Where do you see rules that aren’t there?
- What would it feel like to come out of the “nice” closet and Be Bad?
- What might happen if you said “no” to one unreasonable request today?
- How will you know when you will be ready to make a change and Be Bad?
I’d love to hear your thoughts on this. Perhaps we can explore coaching together? Please click on the Contact Me tab to the left to schedule a complementary Sample Session call. (Go on, Be Bad!)


