Are you the engine, the boxcar or the caboose?

By Chase Murphy on August 20, 2018

A few weeks ago a friend of mine called and asked for a pep talk. He just wanted to get everything off his chest and complain about how things were going at work. Sometimes these life talks happen over a beer, but when you’re long distance, a phone call works just as good.

 

In his opinion, the new boss was making poor choices and he didn’t agree with the direction the group was going. “If they would just listen to me” was the phrase he repeated multiple times during his “selling” of the situation.  He was stating his case to the new boss and his co-workers, but didn’t feel he was being heard or taken serious.

 

I pride myself on being a great listener and a sympathetic ear to those in need.  It’s important to listen to the world around you. We learn more about life and a lot about the people we connect with by simply being a good listener. It’s healthy to wrap your brain around new situations as well as share your insight and experience with those who are in need.

 

I have one rule when it comes to asking me for a pep talk or advice.  If you’re going to ask for it, be prepared that I am going to tell you what you need to hear (at least from me) and probably not what you want to hear. I will give you every opportunity to sway my vote in your direction, but know that in the end I am not going to pet you on the head and tell you everything is going to be great and that it’s everyone else’s fault and not yours.  NOPE!  If you ask for the bull, you need to be aware that I might give you the horns.  Maybe it’s because I am getting old, but in my forty-plus years of being on this earth, I’ve learned that blunt is the best form of communication. It saves everyone the most time and it’s far less work than crafting ways to sugarcoat the truth.

 

Back to my friend.

 

The boss, in my friend’s opinion, was making a series of terrible mistakes in piloting a new direction for the workplace. The boss was unnecessarily shaking things up and causing stress in every department. The boss was not taking the time to listen to those around him and ask for opinions. So if nobody was going to ask him what he thought, then he was going to make it a point to let the boss know that the choices he was making were huge mistakes.  Sounded smart to him as it came out of his mouth, but not so much as it entered my ears.

 

You’ve heard this before, right?  Many of you have been the employee and maybe even the boss in this situation.

 

So I asked my friend, “Are you the engine, the boxcar or the caboose”?  There was a long pause on the phone and then he asked me to repeat the question. “Are you the engine, the boxcar or the caboose”?

 

When you’re the engine, you’re the driving force and you set the direction. You burn energy attempting to pull everyone in the same direction. Towards the same goal. To the destination. You don’t have to be the boss to be the engine, but you need to be a leader and inspire others to follow. Popular or not, you are tasked with making a decision and acting upon it. You are given opportunities to grow and you have to have the confidence to lead people into scary and new places.

 

When you’re a boxcar, you can be supportive and skeptical at the same time, but your role is to keep momentum. You help to push projects and people along and make yourself available for insight if the engine ever needs help.  A boss does not always have to be the engine, they can also be a supportive boxcar (or both depending on the day). A train can still be a train without a caboose, but it’s just an engine without boxcars.

 

When you’re the caboose you are the one slowing down the train. You’re an anchor. You are dragging your feet because you don’t agree with the direction that everyone else is headed. You’re uncomfortable and not convinced that the team is going the right way. The train is headed east and all you want to do is go west. You are rarely the savior and will likely be perceived as the problem. More often than not, you are the caboose because you hate the direction you are going, but you’d rather just complain and drag your feet than become a true leader.  You’re scared.  Right or wrong, the caboose hates change and is often the contrarian. The caboose is always the first to get fired. The caboose likes to complain because it’s the farthest mouth from the ear of the engine.

 

My friend thought he was a boxcar, felt he should be the engine, but in the end, I informed my friend that he was being the caboose. He disagreed and two weeks later was fired.

 

We have all been an engine, boxcar or a caboose in life. Sometimes being the caboose is actually healthy because, if you’re self-aware, this role is telling you that this (whatever “this” may be) is not for you. Right or wrong, the direction is being set and maybe it’s just not where you should be in life. People have changed jobs or ever careers after being a caboose and have flourished afterwards. I’ve been all three parts of this train at different stages in my life and even all at the same location. I would never judge a piece of the train, you are what you are and that doesn’t make you a bad person, but it’s important to honestly know where and who you are on the track of life.

 

#Tryharder to be self-aware of the part you play in the creation of momentum.

 

ABOUT CHASE MURPHY

chasemurphy
Radio host, consultant, and Author, Chase Patrick Murphy is the creator of the #Tryharder philosophy. A way of thinking that encourages readers to stop, take a moment, and do the right thing. To try a little harder in life, do right by others, and make the additional effort to improve your situation and theirs.

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