These days, Iāve started to notice how I guide othersāand why I do it differently than before.
Itās not something I planned.
Itās not something I learned in one place.
It came from years of seeing, learning, making mistakes, and slowly understanding:
“When someone trusts you to guide themāeven for five minutesāit matters how you show up.”
Now, whether Iām reviewing work, answering a question, teaching something new, or correcting a mistakeā
I do it differently than I used to.
I slow down.
I try to understand what they already know, where theyāre stuck.
I donāt explain to show what I know.
I explain so they can move forward with more clarity and less doubt.
I donāt give everything at once.
Sometimes I wait.
Sometimes I just ask something backāto help them think through it themselves.
Because itās not about giving answers.
Itās about helping them believe they can find the next one.
āā
The label doesnāt matter.
It might be called mentoring at work.
It might be called parenting at home.
It might just be a one-time interaction with someone younger or unsure.
But for me, itās all the same work:
“To help people learnānot just what to do,
but how to trust themselves more as they do it.”
āā
Iāve also learned not to over-correct.
If somethingās wrong, I say it directlyābut with care.
Not because I want to soften the truth,
but because Iāve seen that how you speak often stays longer than what you said.
Even when someone doesnāt ask for guidance directly,
I try to notice.
If someoneās lost, quiet, or unsureāI just let them know Iām here.
That small check-in sometimes opens the door.
āā
You donāt need to lead a team to do this.
You donāt need to call yourself a mentor.
If youāve ever explained something to someone, or helped them understand betterā
youāve already started this work.
The question is: “how will you keep doing it?”
Itās not about time.
Itās about intention.
A small sentence. A moment of patience.
The right pause before correction.
The confidence you pass without saying much.
All that matters.
āā
Still learning from every time I guide.
Still improving how I explain.
Still staying with itāone question, one step, one person at a time.
Still adding my digit.
āfrom me,
Lekshmana
š¹Side note:
My approach to guidance, characterised by calmness, clarity, and care, consistently applies across all interactions.
This includes both day-to-day moments and more focused guidance like skill development, career pathing, or navigating difficult choices.
The way I hold it doesn’t change.