The Distancing Effect: Reframing for Better Decisions
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Executive Summary
In this episode, CoachingToResults explores the book 'Distancing: How Great Leaders Reframe to Make Better Decisions' by L. David Marquet and Michael A. Gillespie. The discussion focuses on the concept of 'nearness'—a state of emotional and cognitive entanglement that impairs judgment and triggers reactive leadership. By utilizing psychological distancing techniques like the 'Three Be's' framework, leaders can regain objectivity, escape the traps of ego and cognitive bias, and improve their overall 'Decision Health.'
Key Takeaways
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- Nearness is a state of emotional and cognitive entanglement that blinds leaders to long-term outcomes and objective reality.•
- When leaders are too close to a problem, their brains shift into a fight-or-flight mode, prioritizing self-preservation and ego over strategic truth.•
- Cognitive biases such as confirmation bias and the sunk cost fallacy thrive in high-stakes environments where psychological distance is lacking.•
- Effective decision-making requires manufacturing space through the 'Three Be's' framework: Be Someone Else, Be Somewhere Else, and Be Sometime Else.•
- Detaching from immediate emotional reactivity is not about a lack of care, but about gaining the perspective necessary to lead effectively.
Segments
0:00
Introduction to 'Distancing' and the Authors
0:45
Defining 'Nearness' and its Impact on Decision Health
2:15
The Biology of Emotional Entanglement and the Fight-or-Flight Response
3:30
The Camera Lens Analogy: Why Context Matters
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