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Tam Bouret's avatar

Yes, "Righting" is the ground of training for coaching. When done well, asking the right questions allows the client to find the "light bulb moment" on their own. The answers are always available. A little guidance leads the way. The client will almost always say, "Wow, I can't believe the answer was there the entire time." It's a gratifying experience to be part of this transition. Thank you for the hard work.

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Charly Cox's avatar

I loved reading this Renee! It felt a lot like the lightbulb moment I had when I realised that you could use professional coaching skills to galvanise people into climate action (we don't call it motivational interviewing but a lot of it is exactly the same). I really appreciate your explanation of why people 'right'. We're not running around trying to be know-it-alls, we just feel the urgency so viscerally that we don't think we have the time for anything else. So often we have to demo coaching skills for people to believe that they're FASTER than righting. I'd love to know why we have this belief that good listening is slow and laborious. Is this baked into how we learn in school somehow, or part of the rush-rush-rush of modern life, I wonder? The most wonderful thing about the approach you're advocating is that it feels like performing a magic trick, for you and the other person. I love that!

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