Former education minister Hazel Manning has urged women to develop high moral standards by improving their spirituality as a means of unlocking self-empowerment.
Speaking at a Women’s Breakfast seminar held by The Leadership Firm titled When Women Roar, Manning said it was important for women to examine their personality traits, find their weaknesses and work on achieving their full potential.
She said women should evaluate their personality type, find their passion, embrace their purpose and make spirituality the foundation of their lives as they juggle numerous responsibilities associated with daily life.
“I was born shy and in hindsight, I realised that my mother understood I was naturally shy and she took measures to empower me to build confidence in myself. She coached me through many challenges. As I matured I became exposed and read more on the topic of leadership,” Manning recalled.
Urging women to find the positive aspects of their personality, Manning said true empowerment begins when women release their purpose.
“The empowerment has to be from within. I was a peacemaker and I let that personality trait guide my passion. Authentic power comes from deep within and it is spiritual. The real power comes from opening your heart and sharing with someone else,” she added.
She then invited the audience to assess their own personality traits using an assessment developed by Dr William Moulton Marston in 1920. Titled DISC (Dominance, Influence, Steadiness and Conscientistious) Manning said each personality type had blind spots or weaknesses.
Under the type D, Manning said people can be task-oriented or people-oriented where they focus on experiences, feelings, relationships and interactions with other people whilst being confident and driven, results-oriented, thrives on challenges, decisive and action taker. However, she said people who are in the D category can be impatient, argumentive, overpowering, dislikes routine, workaholic and egotistical. Their fear of losing control makes them dominant and unable to motivate people.
Those in the I category are outgoing and people-focused.
“These are friendly, talkative, adaptable, optimistic, encouraging but they have weaknesses in that they experience difficulties in following through, inattentive to details, easily distracted, more concerned with popularity than results, and has a tendency to over compromise and under deliver. To correct this, you have to listen more and focus on milestones and deadlines,” she added.
Those under the S category comprises the majority of people. Under this type, people are reserved and people-focused.
“You are reliable, loyal, systematic, a good listener and mediator. But you lack self-motivation, resistant to change, sensitive, experience difficulty in establishing priorities and you avoid confrontation. You need to learn to accept change and balance the needs of others with your own. If you don’t deal with the fear of lack of security, you can withdraw from the situation,” she explained.
The final category C referred to people who are reserved and task-focused.
“This group of people are analytical problem-solvers, organised and scheduled, creative and quality-focused. However your weaknesses are that you may overanalyse and under-react, you may experience perfectionism, fear of failure, isolation and inflexibility and you may be resistant to change. To solve these blindspots you must focus on excellence, not perfection, set limits for analysis in order to reach deadlines,” she added.
She told the audience to work on their personality challenges and never neglect their spirituality.
“Empowerment starts with listening. We all deserve dignity and deserve a hearing. Empowerment starts with a job, work provides worth, education leads to innovation and mentorship nourishes relationships. As you empower yourself and others you must understand that investing in the whole person is the crux of the matter because people are worth it,” Manning said.
She added, “The most important tole of such a woman is her unwavering relationship with God. Not her job title, marital status or social clout. Become a woman who has dignity, integrity and high moral standards,” she added.
During the function, awards were given to Dr Agatha Carrington and former Attorney General and Senator Glenda Morean-Phillips.