
Librarian, Follow Your Guidance System
06/23/21 • 9 min
Do any of these sound familiar to you?
- You create an important document for presentation to others. You’re pretty sure you need to make some changes, but use it anyway, only to receive the feedback that it needs those very changes.
- You have a significant problem at work. You instinctively envision a solution, but don’t trust it. Instead, you get guidance from an outside authority and end up making the problem worse.
- You receive what looks like a great job offer but your inner “danger” radar keeps going off. You ignore those signals, take the job anyway, and find yourself unemployed several months later.
I personally have had all three and more over the years of my career. My guess is that you’ve had your share of very similar experiences – because most people do.
What’s wrong when this happens? Why do we do that?
We’re not following our own brilliant inner guidance systems.
Every one of us has an intangible but accessible genius within us. That genius is capable of guiding us correctly nearly 100% of the time.
In fact, it may be 100% of the time, we just don’t quite interpret the signals correctly and get something wrong. But the guidance was sound.
Some people refer to this inner guidance as their intuition, some their higher self and some call it divine guidance. It doesn’t really matter what you call it or even if you believe in it - it’s there and it always knows how to set our perfect course.
Why would we ignore such valuable information? Because our minds and, for some, our insecurities, get in the way.
Most of the time, when I ignore my inner wisdom, it’s because my logical mind convinces me that I must be wrong. Or I’m convinced that someone else knows better than I do – so I ignore my gut and follow the other person’s instructions. Things usually go wrong for me when I do that.
The truth is, our minds are just machines – mechanical entities that move along in well-established and comfortable grooves.
The mind doesn’t “think outside the box”. It relies on memory and past impressions and can easily ignore – actually willfully ignore - flashes of insight and creativity. And it’s typically afraid of trusting anything that it doesn’t feel is supported with visible, tangible evidence.
That inner guidance system, on the other hand, can give you instructions that seem totally novel, random, or out of the blue. Maybe even illogical. Those instructions may not look logical at all. But if we follow those nudges, we rarely go wrong.
It’s pretty amazing.
I’ve used this inner guidance for everything from hiring personnel to making cross country moves with no promise of employment.
When I follow it, I always land on my feet in a good place.
When I don’t – I can end up flat on my backside in a mud pit.
For complete show notes, please visit masterfullibrarian.com/ep25
Do any of these sound familiar to you?
- You create an important document for presentation to others. You’re pretty sure you need to make some changes, but use it anyway, only to receive the feedback that it needs those very changes.
- You have a significant problem at work. You instinctively envision a solution, but don’t trust it. Instead, you get guidance from an outside authority and end up making the problem worse.
- You receive what looks like a great job offer but your inner “danger” radar keeps going off. You ignore those signals, take the job anyway, and find yourself unemployed several months later.
I personally have had all three and more over the years of my career. My guess is that you’ve had your share of very similar experiences – because most people do.
What’s wrong when this happens? Why do we do that?
We’re not following our own brilliant inner guidance systems.
Every one of us has an intangible but accessible genius within us. That genius is capable of guiding us correctly nearly 100% of the time.
In fact, it may be 100% of the time, we just don’t quite interpret the signals correctly and get something wrong. But the guidance was sound.
Some people refer to this inner guidance as their intuition, some their higher self and some call it divine guidance. It doesn’t really matter what you call it or even if you believe in it - it’s there and it always knows how to set our perfect course.
Why would we ignore such valuable information? Because our minds and, for some, our insecurities, get in the way.
Most of the time, when I ignore my inner wisdom, it’s because my logical mind convinces me that I must be wrong. Or I’m convinced that someone else knows better than I do – so I ignore my gut and follow the other person’s instructions. Things usually go wrong for me when I do that.
The truth is, our minds are just machines – mechanical entities that move along in well-established and comfortable grooves.
The mind doesn’t “think outside the box”. It relies on memory and past impressions and can easily ignore – actually willfully ignore - flashes of insight and creativity. And it’s typically afraid of trusting anything that it doesn’t feel is supported with visible, tangible evidence.
That inner guidance system, on the other hand, can give you instructions that seem totally novel, random, or out of the blue. Maybe even illogical. Those instructions may not look logical at all. But if we follow those nudges, we rarely go wrong.
It’s pretty amazing.
I’ve used this inner guidance for everything from hiring personnel to making cross country moves with no promise of employment.
When I follow it, I always land on my feet in a good place.
When I don’t – I can end up flat on my backside in a mud pit.
For complete show notes, please visit masterfullibrarian.com/ep25
Previous Episode

How to Be a Good Enough Librarian
In this episode, I’m talking about good enough librarians – and how vitally important those people are.
So if you often feel uninspired and fret over not having brilliant new ideas for you library programs and lessons, stick around. This episode is for you.
You’ve probably noticed that I often mention people I consider to be rock star librarians. I’m fortunate to know and have worked with many of those people. And I love them.
They’re full of fresh and fun ideas, boundless enthusiasm, and a great passion for libraries. I learn so much from visionary people like that.
And I am not one of them!
For a long time, I faulted myself for that. I kept telling myself I should be more creative and resourceful - that I should be posting cutting-edge ideas on social media and writing articles for library journals.
And for a long time, I didn’t do those things and I felt like that made me a lame librarian.
I was dead wrong. I wasn’t lame – I was good enough.
By that, I don’t mean I was a slacker or that I did just enough to get by. I mean that I did my best and it was enough!
We’ve all heard the aphorism, attributed to Voltaire, that “perfect is the enemy of the good”. This is a profound truth. Doing our best and working hard is what’s called for – there’s no need or purpose for all of us to be rock stars.
If you don’t feel like a rock star librarian because you aren’t doing all the things either, how can you give your users the best?
Well, my motto was always “don’t reinvent the wheel”.
As I’ve recommended in previous episodes such as episode 17, smart librarians follow the thought leaders and influencers.
Identify some real rock star librarians that you admire and resonate with and get ideas from them. That’s why they’re putting all their stuff on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram - why they’re writing articles of library journals, and presenting at all the conferences. They want you to use their ideas.
So do it!
Maybe you’re not generating the innovative content, but you can sure be an early adopter! You can be as cutting edge in your library as they are - simply by using their awesome ideas.
Collaborate with other library professionals and co-create lessons, programs, and services together. My best ideas are always generated when I’m brainstorming or problem-solving with a group.
It’s like somehow great conversations turn on the creativity faucet in my brain. I always come away energized and with fresh perspectives and innovative plans when I’ve worked with a group or with another peron.
Could that work for you, too?
For complete show notes, please visit masterfullibrarian.com/ep-24.
Next Episode

Masterful Librarian Podcast Takes a Vacay!
Summer is in full swing and I know many of you - especially my school librarian listeners - are finally enjoying some well-deserved time away from work. It’s been a tough year.
If you’re a public librarian, you may be in your busiest time of year as Summer Reading Programs are in full swing right now. But I hope you, too, will get some time off to refresh and rejuvenate sometime this summer.
This has been a pretty crazy year for me and I am once again entering into a time of big change and transition. I’ll tell you more about that in a future episode.
But for now - for the month of July, I’m taking a vacation, too. That will allow me to get recharged and focused before I enter into my exciting new adventure. It will also give me time to take care of details related to that adventure.
Look for my next episode on August 4. I hope you’ll be back with me at that time. I’ll have lots to share!
In the meantime, enjoy this season of longer days, warmer nights, maybe some afternoon naps, time to read all those wonderful new books you’ve been receiving in your libraries all year, maybe get some fresh fruits and vegetables at the market, and enjoy some beach, lake, or pool time, if you can. I know I’ll be trying to do as many of those things as I possibly can during the month of July.
So, for now, enjoy your summer! And I’ll see you back on August 4.
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