Lots of people - myself included - talk a good game about being
open-minded. But how many of us are truly open to ideas that challenge
our most closely-held beliefs? This question is important because the
odds are overwhelming that at some point your career, marriage or even
life will be undone by your belief in an idea that proved to be wrong.
One
of my most treasured and longstanding friends is a conservative Texas
CEO; I am a somewhat liberal creative type born in Massachusetts. I'm
pretty sure we have never voted for the same candidate. But one reason I
treasure his friendship is because he works very hard to try and
understand how I think, and I do the same about him. Each of us
recognizes that we are limited by our beliefs, attitudes and - most
importantly - restricted access to information.
Limited access to information in the Information Age?
Many
of us are surrounded by people who share our views. If you are
religious, you congregate regularly with people of the same religion.
Americans are surrounded by Americans; the same is true in Russia,
India, China and Portugal. If you work for a cautious firm, you are
surrounded by other cautious professionals. If you work for a startup,
you associate with people more willing to take risks than the general
public.
When you go online, you do not see the same Web that I
see. You see a Web that has been personalized to match your ideas,
preferences and activities. So you find more reasons to be set in your
ways, and so do I.
The more set you are in your ways, the more blind spots you have. That's why a closed mind is so dangerous.
The big problem is, we are blind to our blind spots.
But few of us have
the courage to SEEK OUT our blind spots. Doing so requires challenging
many of our most cherished beliefs. It makes us feel foolish. Why would
we deliberately do something our brains are telling us is nonsense?
Let
me be clear: I am just as blind as you. I count pattern recognition as
one of my best skills, but thinking in this manner limits my creativity
and causes me to draw some conclusions that are stunningly wrong.
(Unfortunately, it can take months or years for me to recognize when
this happens.)
I cannot give you an easy prescription for opening
your mind. Anything that's easy will simply fool you into believing you
are being open-minded; it won't actually open your mind.
The only
thing I can tell you is that lurking among your beliefs are one or more
deadly traps that have the potential to cut short your success, health
and/or happiness.
I tell you this not out of a sense of altruism. I
tell you in the hope that your responses to this article will further
motivate me to seek out and challenge my own blind spots.

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