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do I need a personality transplant?
my boss says my lack of enthusiasm
is keeping me back

Jim is a computer programmer in a large computer service company.
Jim says: I came to work for this company right out of
college eight years ago. I think I do a good job – I deliver
projects on time, customers request me for certain jobs and I stay
on top of new technologies. I’d like to become a consultant,
but my career seems to have stalled. In recent reviews, I’ve
heard, “You are a very good, solid performer. However, you
seem to lack the enthusiasm necessary to become a consultant. Have
you ever considered taking a Dale Carnegie course?” While
this makes sense at some level, I feel as if I’m being asked
to alter my personality. But how am I ever going to get ahead if
I don’t do something to improve my image?
The expert says: In his book,
The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, Stephen Covey discusses
his analysis of self-improvement literature from the past 200 years.
He discovered that the writings from the first 150 years focused
primarily on what he calls the Character Ethic, which says success
is grounded in integrity, honesty, justice, simplicity and the Golden
Rule. Over the last 50 years, on the other hand, the emphasis shifted
to what he refers to as the Personality Ethic, which focuses on
developing superficial techniques for improving our public image
in areas such as speaking better or influencing people – basically
working on the presentation rather than the substance. He says that
there’s nothing inherently wrong with the Personality Ethic,
but if your character is flawed, eventually the façade will
crack. On the other hand, if you have a solid character, people
will trust you.
Isn’t this how we know Jesus? He didn’t present himself
like a tax collector or Pharisee. He was just a carpenter.
But he glowed from within with the power of the Holy Spirit. His
ability to speak and draw people’s attention didn’t
come from self-improvement classes; it came from the mission for
which his Father sent him into the world. Jesus said that all of
us have this inner light and that we shouldn’t hide it. (Luke
8:16) Our individual mission and success needs to be defined in
God’s terms, not in terms of how this world defines success.
Just because Jim is a very good programmer doesn’t automatically
mean he would make a good consultant. People are drawn to Jim’s
natural easy-going demeanor and his ability to translate their needs
into an effective computer program – they trust him. If Jim
tries to change the surface to become someone he isn’t, he
may lose that trust. We need to ask ourselves if what we’re
pursuing, and how we’re pursuing it, is what God is really
asking of us.
Originally Published: June 2006
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