Fulfillment and Success Start with Kindness
How to lead with compassion
The mind and body rewards are well documented: Those who show compassion and kindness report lower blood pressure, less heart disease risk, and improved cognitive function plus increased happiness, vitality, and better relationships.
But what about your occupation? Does being nice at work translate to success in your career? Can you climb the ladder while holding it for others? Yes, it turns out.
Although every organization and profession has notable exceptions (strikingly so it seems in politics), being a decent human being is an advantage at work. And when compassion and kindness are augmented by participating in and contributing to groups, your star can rise even higher.
Good people can finish first.
Does that mean you can make a list of niceties to perform each day to reap personal and professional rewards? Not exactly — genuineness matters.
And while you’d come by it more easily if kindness and compassion were modeled for you at an early age, goodness can be learned.
Good Nurtured
Like all behaviors, you can cultivate kindness and compassion through practice. The more you do, the more natural it feels and the more genuine it becomes. A recent On the Road by Steve Hartman, for example, follows a self-centered young man growing into a selfless giver, starting with the simple act of holding the door for others.
Try these steps to exercise your kindness and compassion muscles:
Though wellness pros tend to be compassionate and kind, increasing technology along with remote/hybrid work can limit your opportunities and create obstacles. For your personal and professional fulfillment and growth, consciously look for ways to exercise these valuable attributes in 2023.
Further Reading
For more on workplace compassion and kindness, read: