
If you want to know where you stand with someone, donāt listen to what they say. Watch what they do.Itās taking me years to learn this. And I got a great reminder of it a few weeks ago. It was late afternoon in Mammoth Lakes, California, fifty degrees with a little cloud cover, and the trails near our favorite place to stay, Tamarack Lodge, were enticing. I mean, the mountain looked absolutely pristine, birds were chirping like they were auditioning for Pitch Perfect, and there was hardly anyone around. Ideal conditions.So Iām about a quarter of the way up the mountain, and I notice where the snow has melted thereās a line where reality begins. One side looks composed in gorgeous white. The other side is real life.Broken branches. Dry brown scrubs. Rocks. Dirt. Dead trees.It was the perfect metaphor for the disconnect between what someone says theyāll do and what they actually do.And then I thought about all the people I know who are job hunting.The follow-up that never comesHow many times have you refreshed your inbox over and over after a submission or an interview?They said Iāll be in touch by Friday. Or the colleague who said Iād love to read it, send it over. Or the boss who keeps promising youāll have that conversation next week. And then, crickets.When the follow-up doesnāt come, most of us wonder what we did wrong. We debate whether to send a nudge. We tell ourselves the silence might just mean theyāre busy, swamped, or traveling.Hard truth: the silence does mean something. You just havenāt been trained to hear it.The problem with wordsIf I could turn back the clock on my career, one of the things Iād do differently is stop listening so hard to what people say, and start paying attention to what they do.Weāre wired to take people at their word. It feels respectful. Optimistic. Generous. And words are data. Just the least reliable kind.Hereās what Iāve come to believe: most people arenāt lying. Theyāre doing their best, and theyāll often tell us what we want to hear to reduce tension in the moment. Arenāt we all a little bit people-pleasers on some level? Words are easy to give. They cost nothing.Actions, on the other hand, take effort and investment. They reveal someoneās true priorities, capacity, and intentions.Words are the snow on top of the mountain. They look perfect.When the words melt away, youāre left with whatās really there.Part of why we over-index on words is that we donāt want to seem cynical. In professional settings, especially, itās not cool to challenge someoneās promises. We prize harmony over honesty. Weāve been taught to respect hierarchy and not to question it. So if youāre job hunting, hoping for a promotion, or trying to get funding, the last thing you want to do is treat someoneās words with skepticism.And so we wait. And refresh. And wait some more.What it looks like when you ignore the actionsMy client āMaryā spent 18 months putting a deal together. It had nearly fallen apart half a dozen times, but she always managed to pull it back. Until she was one deal point away, and the investor walked.She was stunned. Then outraged. And when we finally unpacked what had happened, the signs had been there for a long time. The weeks it took him to respond to a single negotiating point. The pouting and obsessing over minor issues. The questions heād ask during their calls revealed a naivete about how their industry worked.Mary had heard his words ā Iām committed to this, letās make it happen ā and held onto them. Sheād overridden what the actions were consistently telling her.She missed the signals because she wanted to believe what he said.Four ways to start listening to actions insteadIāve been there countless times. It even happens to me at home when my teenager says, āYeah, sure,ā when I ask her to pick up her dishes. Every time I choose to listen to the words, and then Iām shocked the next morning when I find a dry, crusted bowl of pasta lying on the living room floor.Inspired by mothering two teenage daughters and a few decades in the entertainment industry, here are four ways to better listen to the actions, not someoneās words. Theyāve helped me figure out who my people are and, most importantly, protect my self-esteem.Look for the pattern, not the single miss. One unanswered email? Things happen. A consistent pattern of not following through? Thatās your track record. Thatās your data. Once you see the pattern, youāre no longer Charlie Brown waiting for Lucy to hold the football. You know how this story ends.Take your emotions out of the analysis. This is hard, but important. Strip the words away entirely
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