Numerous studies have been conducted exploring and
testing the power and promise of expectations. And it’s been proven that
many people make their decisions and understand themselves in the light
of what others expect of them. When we know someone expects something
from us---our attitude, how we act, what we want and don’t want---we
will try to meet those expectations. It’s thought that we do so to try
to gain respect, position, likeability, belonging.
Succinctly describing the power of expectations: what is expected happens.
Studies
have established the fact that people tend to live up to what’s
expected of them whether negative or positive and do so mostly
unconsciously.
To make this post a working
document for you, please bring to mind a time when you either
consciously tried to live up to someone’s expectations or realized after
the fact that you’d done so. That way you can personalize what you’ll
read here by applying it to your own experience.
Here’s an example of how the power of expectation manifested between teachers and students.
Two
groups of students, who were academically very similar, were assigned
to two teachers. One teacher was told that the students in her group
were high achievers. All she had to do was guide them. The other teacher
was told that her students were difficult and slow and she was to do
her best. It was planned that the two groups would be
tested again at the end of the year. You can imagine the results: the
high achievers scored significantly higher than the “slow” kids and both
groups did so unconsciously. They rose or fell to the level that their
teachers wanted of them. This kind of result has been replicated many
times across a variety of different scenarios.
Before I continue I want to make the distinction between expectations and goals.
Though
not exclusively, goals are largely a product of your conscious mind.
They are limited in their focus and narrow what is available for you to
see. You’ve no doubt heard that you must make your goals as specific as
possible. That way they will be maximally actionable.
But
goals are set in the context of your expectations and expectations
contain a much larger field of imagination---i.e. they also emerge from
your unconscious. Expectations are made in part of
fantasy---end results that you envision whether or not you have a solid
ground to anticipate them; part concepts---the contribution of your
linear mind which allows you to understand and create a story around
them; and part wish---that may reach back into your childhood making
them dreamlike. Expectations are gestalt structures, unified wholes that
cannot be described as the sum of their parts. Expectations are more inclusive and much more expansive than goals.
So
now, I have several questions for you. To what degree do you need
expectations to be placed upon you from someone else? Have you thought
about it? What about the expectations you have of yourself? To what
degree do you conceive, organize, and keep your expectations of yourself
in your daily consciousness? How do your expectations guide what you
do? How well do you live up to your own expectations?
Like
the two sets of students above, when expectations are believed (the
teachers believed what they were told) they become self-fulfilling. They
anticipated the events that were implied in their expectations to occur
and they did. Without knowing it they began teaching their different
classes with a prediction of the future and that future came to be.
That’s
the promise in the power of expectations. And that’s why, as specific
as your goals may be, you need to attend to your expectations; what you
say to yourself when you are alone; the thoughts and images that arise
in your mind with respect to what you expect of yourself; even your
dreams which may give you clues to those parts of your expectation that
arise from your unconscious. Because if you don’t, if your expectations
are a hodgepodge of thoughts and feelings with little or no attention
from you, they too will be self-fulfilling---but a result may surprise
you.
So what about the example for your own
life? How aware of yourself were you? Because it’s in your awareness of
yourself that you can have a better grasp of what’s going on in your
mind---conscious and unconscious---and be better able to conduct your
life toward outcomes you truly want.
That is the power and the promise of expectations.
I would love to hear from you whether you agree or not. Thanks in advance.

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