A few weeks ago one of my kids moved back to Phoenix from L.A. I
agreed to help her with last minute packing and driving the rental
truck. It was good father-daughter time and I looked forward to it. She
is her father’s daughter. Arrangements had been made well ahead of time
for people to load the truck, take a TV and microwave she didn’t want to
move, pick up a car she was donating to a charity, disconnect the
cable, and do the final walk through of the apartment. Each of these was
reconfirmed one or two days beforehand.
One the day of the move, the packers had dropped her from their
schedule. The fellow who was going to pick up the microwave decided
after several text messages that he didn’t really want it enough to come
get it. For some reason the women who was getting the TV thought she
was to pick it up on Sunday, not Friday.
The cable company had no record
of the pick up of the equipment. The tow truck to pick up the car was
late. Even the apartment representative was 45 minutes later than the
agreed upon time.
Do you see a pattern? It was the absolute unimportance of keeping
commitments. No one apologized, except for a few, insincere “Sorry about
that.” The insensitivity to the inconvenience, and even the anger shown
when we suggested their actions were harmful taught us a very valuable
lesson. Keeping a commitment used to be a rather serious matter. It was
understood that a promise had been made. A commitment meant you and I
could trust each other to do something at a specific time or in a
certain way.
Today, it seems more likely that a commitment is considered very
flexible. When it suits the person or business that made the promise is
when it will be fulfilled. I don’t know why commitments are not that
that important anymore. But, I would like to take a stab at discussing
why it is a disturbing trend.
A commitment kept shows respect for others
Mae West once said, “An ounce of performance is worth pounds of
promises.” When a promise is made to do something, there is another
person or business that is counting on you. To make a commitment and
then treat it as not very important, or flexible in its execution, says
the other person isn’t as valuable as you. It says your convenience and
your needs must always come first.
A commitment kept shows respect for yourself
You are putting your personal integrity and reputation on the line.
You are not willing to fail someone else who is depending on you. You
want to be known as someone who delivers what he promises. You believe
you are able to take responsibility as it affects others.
A commitment kept shows you understand yourself
Sometimes I have over-committed. I think I can do more than I can. I
have promised more than I can deliver based on my available time or
abilities. I don’t want to say “No” to someone who asks me for
something. But, I have had to learn my limits. The amount of time and
energy I have is finite. A commitment that I can’t keep is much worse
than no promise at all.
A commitment kept is essential for success
From a business perspective, a company or a salesman that makes a
promise that something will happen or a product will be delivered on a
specified date could soon be out of business if that commitment isn’t
kept. Trust and a good reputation are essential in business. They are
earned when everyone’s interests are considered and respected.
The same premise exists for an individual. My personal reputation,
the belief in my trustworthiness and my honesty must be above question.
When I make a promise the other person must believe that I will do
everything in my power to keep that promise. Trust is a very fragile
thing, and once it has been broken there’s a chance it may never be
fully repaired. A commitment is a test of that trust.
I’m afraid the moving experience wasn’t an isolated instance. Think
about your own day-to-day life. Does the doctor really intend to see you
at the time set for your appointment, or is any time with an hour of
that time acceptable? Is the car really going to be repaired for the
estimate you received? Will you definitely e-mail the information I need
today like you promised? It doesn’t help to get angry when someone else
doesn’t understand all that a commitment implies. Your only power is to
not patronize that merchant again or avoid a person who has misled you.
You can’t change that person’s understanding of responsibility.
But, each of us does have the ability to understand what commitments
stands for and to keep them. If a promise is made a promise will be
kept. It is that simple. Even if you may be the only person doing so.
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