Justmehere
Sponsor
I am leading a volunteer team for an agency offline. One volunteer is driving me up the wall!
They are in a dual role, in a mentor role and also in a team member role that I essentially supervise and lead. Weird set up, but great organization, and the check and balance is that I have the power to end her coach role if it’s too much and/or she drops the (more important) other role. Volunteers give a lot but they also get credit back for themselves for their own needs.
I won’t be any more specific about the organization than that.
This one volunteer is getting to me. Her version of mentoring is to critique everyone to death. I set gentle but clear boundaries on this with co-volunteers of hers and she’s made changes. I was clear people were getting upset and embarrassed because she would publicly tell them they were wrong. She recognized she was pushing too much. Kudos to her. I told her to please back off on so much negative critiquing with me, it’s not helping at this volume, and it’s only been a short time I’ve been in this capacity... give me a chance here... I gave her info from the organization to help her learn how to mentor. We met over coffee and it went well at the time. (I spoke with my own superior and this was the way they said to go. Actually, they told me to also consider canceling her mentor role, but wanted me to make the decision on that if/when that should happen.)
Then she pushed and pushed boundaries I was clear about until I said enough.
It was maddening because one day she would say do this, next day, do the exact opposite, third day, “I’ll just do it myself” to something that wasn’t hers to do, and that I had put 7 hours of work into, and she wanted to toss it all out and just do herself. Didn’t even explain to me why or what the problem was. Then came several emails with long lists of complaints and that no one was doing what she said needs to happen as a mentor and etc. It’s just not true!
That’s when I said stop. I told her from now one, 1 email per week as the mentor and giving what she even calls “unasked for advice.” The other role comes first too. (She wasn’t doing her assigned tasks in her program.) No more texting me (the texts were all negative.) I also told her the level of constant complaining needs to shift. And if there needs to be more communication, let’s schedule a time face to face. (She’s less harsh face to face.)
24 hours later, and email from her with next steps with the non-mentor role (good) and then calling me a controlling person who just likes to control. Then she said “I know how to do all of this for everyone and what everyone needs.”
Great. So I have a know-it-all on my hands too.
(I’ve been called many things in my life but controlling has not been one of them.... in fact others told me recently I needed to act/with greater authority and boundaries and control. :/ I’m getting nervous doing that because she’s getting to me.)
I called and left her a message to say I needed to talk with her after the next in person meeting with the whole team and I asked if she was able to do that. I didn’t say anything else.
That wasn’t a smart call, because I’m triggered. I was calm, but still triggered.
I figured that out after the call that I’m triggered, and feel terrible. I’ve become alright (always room to improve tons at not acting on triggered feelings and thoughts in work/professional relationships even when supervising cranky or stressed people.
This is the first time in a long time I’ve been straight up pissed in this type of setting. I’m not sure why she’s getting under my skin, except the double bind of her demanded suggestions... that’s getting to me.
I’m considering canceling her mentor role, but that would be potentially a hard thing for the team to deal with.
This team is facing something soon that’s going to be a challenge, they are all committed, get credit and certifications on some of this work, but also volunteers.
I need them to stay united, and I told them all, it’s progress over perfection, and relationships matter more than being right all the time, and mistakes will be chances to learn...
Because most of them have needed to hear that right now really badly. They are all a little nervous about the challenge ahead. F*ck, I’m nervous but everyone is on board about the challenge...
Except this coach who I think might not be. I don’t know.
I need advice. I’m not sure how to get my feet under me with her. With all of this. If I cancel her coach role, she’ll still be in the other limited role. I want to give her at least another 3 week’s to make more progress away from this constant critiquing and more into effective coaching with everyone. She’s got the passion and she does know a bit.
How do I do this? I feel so insecure at the moment. My distorted core belief: I’m a big fat fake when it comes to leading. I don’t know what I’m doing or how and I don’t deserve responsibility.
I gotta to get that out of my head and respond to the situation and what I value and what everyone needs.
They are in a dual role, in a mentor role and also in a team member role that I essentially supervise and lead. Weird set up, but great organization, and the check and balance is that I have the power to end her coach role if it’s too much and/or she drops the (more important) other role. Volunteers give a lot but they also get credit back for themselves for their own needs.
I won’t be any more specific about the organization than that.
This one volunteer is getting to me. Her version of mentoring is to critique everyone to death. I set gentle but clear boundaries on this with co-volunteers of hers and she’s made changes. I was clear people were getting upset and embarrassed because she would publicly tell them they were wrong. She recognized she was pushing too much. Kudos to her. I told her to please back off on so much negative critiquing with me, it’s not helping at this volume, and it’s only been a short time I’ve been in this capacity... give me a chance here... I gave her info from the organization to help her learn how to mentor. We met over coffee and it went well at the time. (I spoke with my own superior and this was the way they said to go. Actually, they told me to also consider canceling her mentor role, but wanted me to make the decision on that if/when that should happen.)
Then she pushed and pushed boundaries I was clear about until I said enough.
It was maddening because one day she would say do this, next day, do the exact opposite, third day, “I’ll just do it myself” to something that wasn’t hers to do, and that I had put 7 hours of work into, and she wanted to toss it all out and just do herself. Didn’t even explain to me why or what the problem was. Then came several emails with long lists of complaints and that no one was doing what she said needs to happen as a mentor and etc. It’s just not true!
That’s when I said stop. I told her from now one, 1 email per week as the mentor and giving what she even calls “unasked for advice.” The other role comes first too. (She wasn’t doing her assigned tasks in her program.) No more texting me (the texts were all negative.) I also told her the level of constant complaining needs to shift. And if there needs to be more communication, let’s schedule a time face to face. (She’s less harsh face to face.)
24 hours later, and email from her with next steps with the non-mentor role (good) and then calling me a controlling person who just likes to control. Then she said “I know how to do all of this for everyone and what everyone needs.”
Great. So I have a know-it-all on my hands too.
(I’ve been called many things in my life but controlling has not been one of them.... in fact others told me recently I needed to act/with greater authority and boundaries and control. :/ I’m getting nervous doing that because she’s getting to me.)
I called and left her a message to say I needed to talk with her after the next in person meeting with the whole team and I asked if she was able to do that. I didn’t say anything else.
That wasn’t a smart call, because I’m triggered. I was calm, but still triggered.
I figured that out after the call that I’m triggered, and feel terrible. I’ve become alright (always room to improve tons at not acting on triggered feelings and thoughts in work/professional relationships even when supervising cranky or stressed people.
This is the first time in a long time I’ve been straight up pissed in this type of setting. I’m not sure why she’s getting under my skin, except the double bind of her demanded suggestions... that’s getting to me.
I’m considering canceling her mentor role, but that would be potentially a hard thing for the team to deal with.
This team is facing something soon that’s going to be a challenge, they are all committed, get credit and certifications on some of this work, but also volunteers.
I need them to stay united, and I told them all, it’s progress over perfection, and relationships matter more than being right all the time, and mistakes will be chances to learn...
Because most of them have needed to hear that right now really badly. They are all a little nervous about the challenge ahead. F*ck, I’m nervous but everyone is on board about the challenge...
Except this coach who I think might not be. I don’t know.
I need advice. I’m not sure how to get my feet under me with her. With all of this. If I cancel her coach role, she’ll still be in the other limited role. I want to give her at least another 3 week’s to make more progress away from this constant critiquing and more into effective coaching with everyone. She’s got the passion and she does know a bit.
How do I do this? I feel so insecure at the moment. My distorted core belief: I’m a big fat fake when it comes to leading. I don’t know what I’m doing or how and I don’t deserve responsibility.
I gotta to get that out of my head and respond to the situation and what I value and what everyone needs.
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