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“The woman who doesn’t require validation from anyone is the most feared individual on the planet.”
Mohadesa Najumi
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“Everybody is looking for validation, no matter who you are, and I think that’s a need of the human condition – to look for affection or recognition or validation.”
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu
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So. We all need validation.
It would be silly to suggest you don’t.
That said.
If you type in ‘seeking validation’ in google you get about 341,000 results in about .57 seconds and, well, they are almost all about ‘approval seeking behaviors you need to stop. ’
Well.
That sucks.
Basically what this means is that if you went solely by what you could find online you could quite possibly think that you should simply “damn the torpedoes and go full speed ahead without anyone’s approval or validation at any point in the trip.”
Basically this suggests “fuck what other people think … fuck approval.”
That seems slightly out of whack from reality to me.
Look.
I am not going to suggest you should be waiting around for someone to validate your behavior or your existence … but … it kinda seems to make some sense to receive at least some validation ‘nudges’ on occasion.
Why?
Well.
Maybe just to make sure you are still within the guardrails of what makes sense and that you haven’t completely lost any sense of direction.
Maybe just to make sure your head hasn’t got too big … or too small.
Maybe just to make sure you are still … well … doing the right things and making the right decisions.
To be clear. You absolutely should not assess self-worth from solely from external validation. That is not only crazy, but basically means you are chasing Life and not leading Life.
All I am suggesting is that external validation, when viewed as some sign posts in your Life road, ain’t a bad thing.
And, yes, even good external validation can be tricky.
Most people seek validation <for who they are, their behavior, response to a situation> because they worry they cannot be objective or that they might be prejudiced/biased by their own beliefs.
And, yes, that is a fair worry.
We are all influenced in some degree by our own personal perspective on things.
But here is the big problem looming in front of you if you do not trust yourself because of this self-distrust – you are then assuming the external validators will actually be objective themselves.
Uh oh.
99% of the time that is a really really bad assumption.
Sure. You may assume that they don’t have the same prejudices as you.
Sure. They most likely don’t have the same things at ‘stake’ so are at least one step removed from any natural stress of the situation.
Sure. They will definitely have their own prejudices, perceptions, beliefs and attitudes.
While we all want that occasional validation from someone else because we consciously discount our own feelings, perceptions and opinions, you have to be careful to not make someone an expert even if they aren’t qualified to actually be an expert.
Here is what I know about validation and business leadership.
Decision making Validation.
You will need it on occasion if you are in a constant decision making position.
Even the best decision makers can get slightly overwhelmed. Not overwhelmed in terms of “I cannot make any more decisions”, but rather ‘it is hard to reflectively assess decisions when smothered in decisions’.
** note: this is important because most great decision makers adapt and assess contextual learnings>.
Part of what makes good decision makers good is decisiveness once decision has been made. Occasional validation maintains the decisiveness muscle.
Leadership validation.
You will need it on occasion if you are in a leadership role with responsibility.
This one varies by person.
Some people don’t need this often — kind of like maybe once a quarter you receive some validation that you don’t suck as a leader.
Some people need this a lot — kind of like every day.
Neither is good or bad, it just is.
One last thought on leadership validation.
This validation can be required in a variety of ways:
maybe you want to make sure you aren’t too much of an asshole
maybe you want to make sure you are communicating effectively
maybe you just want a general sense that people think you are doing an okay job as a leader.
The worst business leaders look for shallow validation – better than predecessor, well liked, ‘strong’, etc. they tend to seek a linear ‘cause & effect’ validation which tends to reside in the ‘look who is at the door’ type feedback.
The best business leaders look for deeper validation – the organization is optimistic, vision is embraced, confident of future success. They tend to seek what I call “ripple validation” which tends to reside on the horizon type feedback.
Anyway.
We all need some validation on occasion.
And I get a little concerned when the only advice out there is about ‘how to ditch approval seeking behaviors.’
I kind of wish we had more ‘effective ways to gain some validation to maintain effectiveness’ type advice.
Because we all need some validation on occasion.





the opportunity arises.
Let me begin by saying it’s kind of a tough world out there today for dreamers and dreaming living in a world where pragmatism, outcomes and measurement are put on the pedestal of Life.
Life, and reality, pushes and pulls us in many directions.

This expense can come in a variety of larger perspective forms — character, self-limitation and time.
immediately but at some point – you realize you have to be accountable for what you have done under the guise of ‘surviving.’
about what you do and how the objectives need to align with a certain moral code <this can get even trickier because not everyone’s moral code is the same>.
I am not a past guy and I believe “authentic” is one of those words that is currently being abused in a variety of definition-type ways, but, I would offer a reminder to everyone that if you want something authentic it is actually the past <I will expound on that in a minute>.



Look. Haven’t we seen those people who go 110% all the time on everything? And they get tired. And often frustrated. And they often don’t seem to get as far in life as you would expect for all the energy they have invested. While they may debate with me (because they feel like they are making the choice that has to be made, i.e., I am ‘working at being successful in life’), the reality is they aren’t making any real choice. Anytime you do something 100% of the time you haven’t made the tough choice. Shit. You actually haven’t made any choice at all. The switch is simply flipped into a default mode.
Life is about balance. Balancing rest and energy. But this is where stagnancy or indolence issue steps up to the plate. Because happiness can be such a struggle and ‘doing nothing’ sometimes seems the easiest thing to do. It isn’t (no matter how it may look or feel at the time). You HAVE to invest some energy at some point. If not for you then you have to for those around you. Because in the end we see that the energetic displaces the passive. Even if the passive is “good” (intentions or in heart). Because evil is restless. And energetic.


let it out, and shine, and grow. It is kind of like the latin thought of
born finished and we don’t need others to piece us together and that each of us is strong enough, and born good enough. The thought that all we have is within us.
i.e., 
The shallowest of people in the room will scan the tips floating around and assess that way.

Uhm. Is that a reach goal … or a settling goal?
We don’t reach far enough to access the true colors to cover our achievements in to make it worth looking at over and over again.
while the last one I wrote sounds exactly like what everyone wants, there are no guarantees in Life.
efficiency, the poor ones triple down on efficiency. But. 95% (I made that # up) of businesses focus on customers, service, process, systems and “best practices” — in their pursuit of efficiency (with head nods to effectiveness). This means 95% typically
some broader cultural narrative. People leave, therefore, if your modus operandi is to enforce or impose (this includes ‘best practices’) systems, I can guarantee you that enforcing or imposing is not motivating nor long term effective (nor even optimizing short term effectiveness).
Of course I believe discussing new organizational models is important and, in some cases, a business should have a new business model. But at the core of any organizational discussion it really isn’t about models but rather