In both relationships and life, trust begets trust.
Easy to say but how easy is it to do, and what does it really mean?
The only way to make a man trustworthy is by
trusting him. And the easiest way to make him untrustworthy is to mistrust him
and show your mistrust. In all good relationships, particularly between
partners, friends, and family the most important ingredient is mutual trust.
How do you show someone that you trust them?
Trust, is all about
the relationship, and what it takes to create, build, and maintain mutually
beneficial working relationships.
Trust isn't a belief about reliability or
dependability, nor glue that "makes things possible." Rather, trust is an active process of relationship building. Giving trust is
what people do who want to enable engagement, innovation, creativity, and great
work.
We have all heard or read that trust begets trust
but this has been proven experimentally that if you trust people, you make them
more trustworthy and, conversely, sanctions designed to deter people from
cheating actually make them cheat.
Here are three trust building approaches to get you
started:
1.
Commit to the relationship. Love
doesn't thrive because you're in an exclusive relationship, and neither does
trust. Effectively handling setbacks, ongoing communication, nurturing each
others' strengths, dealing with differences, and making a continuous commitment
to the relationship allows authentic trust (and love) to flourish.
2.
Focus on what's going right. A common
trust building mistake is spending energy to fix what's wrong or focusing
collectively when only a few are causing problems. Instead, identify and
reinforce what's going right. Put your attention on getting more of the
behaviors and actions you desire. When you reinforce what's going well, you get
more of it.
3.
Start the process. Trust is an action.
Trust starts because you give it and evolves incrementally over time by actions
taken and given. It's not a blank check or on/off switch. Think of authentic
trust building like turning up a dimmer switch. You gradually turn the light
brighter to fit the relationship. It you turn it up too bright, you can turn it
down and adjust the level. Giving trust is like that.
Generosity
begets generosity, is from the Bible, Mark 4:25 and refers to the idea that we
need to share what we have and when we do, we will be rewarded for those deeds.
So, this thought expresses the idea that when we do good things, the resources
will be there for us to complete the good deed. As we share what we have and what
we receive, our generosity will be rewarded.
Love begets love. If you show it, you will feel it.
If you give it, you will receive it.” A quote by Elizabeth Bourgeret
We are all alive and that means we change. We
change from day to day, and the reason we change is because of the ideas we
experience. Life teaches me that I'm able to make changes. Changes that I want
to happen, not just those who just happens without me even noticing it.
But it's easier to make those unseen changes, those
that comes with you going with the flow, not thinking much about how you
present yourself, or how you interact, or what you do. It's harder when you have
to track your progress, ask yourself some tough questions, really find your own
voice.
A simple yet fact, but one that many people do not
understand, to make others love you, you've got to love yourself. To make
others appreciate you, you've got to appreciate yourself. Every change starts
from within, why not start with adding some love for yourself. Love begets
love. Be the spark, especially when it's dark.
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