Words matter. Whoever said, “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me” is out of their mind. I can think of a few hurtful things that have been said to me and some hurtful words that I’ve said. Even if we don’t mean to, we have all said hurtful things that leave marks on people. Then we hold grudges, some of which we don’t even realize until bad feelings come out of nowhere. I think a lot of hurt wouldn’t happen if we just thought for a second before we said those things we feel we need to say. It doesn’t take much time to think before you act. Try it. Now, instead of asking you what hurtful things you’ve said, I will ask you to focus on the other side of this.

What are some ways that you lift others up?

Adam Kirk Smith
Adam Smith
25 Years in Retail, Restaurants & Hospitality · Author · Speaker · Coach

Adam spent 25 years in retail, restaurant, and hospitality leadership — managing teams of 60, growing a store from $600K to $2M+, and overseeing guest experience at a corporate level. Author of The Bravest You (endorsed by Seth Godin). Host of two podcasts. 170K monthly readers. Grimes, Iowa.

14 responses to “Your Words Matter More than You Think”

  1. Its very easy for me to tear people down with my words, almost like I see all the negative things in people instead of the good things.
    But I am working on becoming a champion of peoples dreams. The way I do this is find out what they are doing and passionate about. I try and encourage others inside of what they are passionate about.
    And I try to remember these things so that I can come back and continue to encourage them.

    • Just by being a good listener. Words can definitely be hurtful, especially when it goes from mere talking to gossip.

      I just read this today in Ephesians 4:29:
      Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.

  2. by listening. by giving my time. by being present. this seems to really assure them that i value them and being valued usually feels pretty darn good;)

    • I don't have one example, but this is my approach: I try to be very specific when I offer a compliment or praise. "Good job" is fine, but "I really like the way that you did __________…" shows that you were really paying attention.

      You are right. Words are powerful.

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