Why Smart Professionals Ignore Their Own Instincts (And Pay For It) – The Grace Trap
Most people don’t get played by villains, they get played by someone they trusted.
If this has happened to you, you might have even seen it coming and talked yourself out of it.
I’ve been in enough boardrooms, training sessions, and debrief conversations to know that this is one of the most expensive mistakes professionals make.
Getting played rarely happens through a giant dramatic betrayal. It happens through slow erosion, something you sensed but decided to be gracious about.
I call it the Grace Trap. It’s the tendency of high-integrity professionals and people-pleasers to rationalize away their own instincts in the name of fairness.
I used to think people pleasing was the highest form of cooperation. I’ve done my best to provide grace, space and empathy so we all work collaboratively towards the same goal. I’ve learned that this is both my superpower and my kryptonite. I’m collaborative and cooperative but by allowing too much grace, I haven’t always set boundaries with people and circumstances that don’t share the same ethos.
I’ve been exploring these ideas as I build out a framework called Tellspotting, a training that involves reading behavioral incongruence and cognitive dissonance in real time and acting upon it. Why? Because what people say and what people do are two different datasets. When those datasets don’t match, that’s a tell, and tells are information you’re allowed to use.
To avoid falling too far into the Grace Trap, you want to be more proactive than reactive. How you communicate and document also depends on where you sit in the org chart.
COMMUNICATING UP IN THE WORKPLACE
When you’re communicating to someone senior in your workplace, it looks like deference. You absorb the vague directive, the shifting expectations, and the credit you worked so hard for that quietly lands somewhere else. You tell yourself you don’t have the full picture yet.
ACTION: The move here is to start creating a paper trail, not aggressively, just consistently. Confirm verbal directions in writing. Summarize meetings in a quick follow-up email. Create a record for yourself at the very least.
COMMUNICATING LATERALLY IN THE WORKPLACE
When you’re communicating laterally, it looks like collegiality. You don’t put the agreement in writing because that would feel paranoid. So the commitment stays fuzzy, and fuzzy is exactly where some people do their best work.
ACTION: The move here is to close every peer conversation with a specific, stated next step. “So you’re handling X by Friday and I’m handling Y.” Simple. Normal. Protective.
COMMUNICATING DOWN IN THE WORKPLACE
When you’re communicating down, it looks like you’re giving the benefit of the doubt. Which is good management, until it becomes a pattern someone is counting on.
ACTION: The move here is to stop evaluating single incidents and start looking at sequences. One missed deadline can happen. Three missed deadlines with three different explanations is a dataset.
Your instincts already know, and Tellspotting gives you the language and the structure to act on them.
Nobody teaches you how to read behavioral patterns in real time. How to trust what you’re seeing without second-guessing yourself into inaction. That’s the work I’m doing with Tellspotting, and this is just the beginning.
If this resonated, I’d love to hear where the Grace Trap has shown up for you. Drop it in the comments or send me a note directly.
