You Will Mess Up. What Matters Is What You Do Next.
/Mistakes in communication are inevitable.
We cut someone off. We give unsolicited advice. We miss a cue. We speak too quickly, or too much, or not at all.
What defines us isn’t whether we mess up (we will).
It’s how we repair.
Repair means circling back after a misstep to acknowledge impact, re-establish trust, and reconnect.
It’s not about rehashing everything or taking all the blame.
It’s about owning your part and showing that the relationship matters more than being right.
Depending on the context, repair can sound like:
“How did you experience this conversation? I’d like to hear about how you felt.”
“I realized I spoke over you in that meeting; thanks for being gracious about it. Please jump back in if you’d like to add anything.”
“I’ve been thinking about our conversation. I want to clarify something I said that might’ve landed wrong.”
“I lost my temper, and I’m sorry. You didn’t deserve that.”
Repair can be as simple as a one-line acknowledgment or as deep as a heartfelt apology.
What matters isn’t perfection, it’s the willingness to return, take responsibility, and prioritize connection over pride.
Even highly skilled leaders miss the mark sometimes. But the ones we trust most are the ones who pause and take the time to check in.
The ones who don’t avoid awkwardness.
Who understand that courage in communication means facing, not fleeing, relational frictions.
And yet, it’s tempting to skip that step:
To downplay the moment because the relationship “isn’t that close.”
To move on quickly to “more important matters”.
And of course, to shift blame : )
But skipping repair is what quietly erodes credibility and trust.
Repair isn't a luxury. It's a necessity - for leadership, for teamwork, and for any meaningful relationship.
Today is my husband’s and my 12th wedding anniversary. We’ve messed up plenty, by being reactive, misattuned, or not communicating as well as we wanted. But every single misstep has been repaired, which in turn has deepened our bond and love for one another.
A solid relationship isn’t built on getting it right. It’s built on what we choose to do next.
Questions for you:
* Have you ever trusted a leader more because they owned a misstep?
* How do you want to be remembered after a tough conversation?
* What’s one way you model repair in your leadership or team culture?
