I hope I'm not overstepping here
No, by all means. I will gladly take any feedback I can get and appreciate the honesty. That is why I made the thread, for self improvement.
I am trying to comment not on your motivations or who you are as a person, but rather how your actions and words might come across to others who don't know you well
Again, much appreciated. This is the difficulty that I have. Not in understanding the perspectives of others, but in understanding the perspectives of others as it relates to how I present myself. I only know and recognize my own lived experiences and, while I am able to reflect on those of others, I find it difficult to reflect on how others perceive mine. That is some really poor wording....
is that you seem to focus on your accomplishments and role in comparison to others
Actually, I think this does touch on my motivations. I do value my own success in comparison to others. Not because I want to be above them just to be above them, but because I value my personal success on being in positions in which my actions can positively affect the most people. This is why my demeanor aims towards leadership. As a squad leader I can help my soldiers pass their PT tests if they are falling behind. As a lab manager, I can ensure all of the MAs are following proper protocol and we aren't decreasing patient care/prognosis. And so on. It is less about me doing well so I can be the 'best', it is about me being the 'best' so I can do well by those I can help. (that is, again, really poor wording...)
think your idea of focusing simply on your own successes and experiences rather than saying "compared to my peers" or talking about positions of authority/leadership
With the definition of success that I have set forth above, how do you think this can be addressed? If I say the role I was in then the people I helped areassumed, if I talk about the people I have helped then it comes off as just trying to flaunt altruism. I am just unsure.
Consider that your definition of success may be different from others'
Most certainly.
people who are more introverted and private, may all have strengths and skills that you don't have, but are extremely valuable.
Everyone brings something new to the table and we are ALL valuable with no one intrinsically being more-or-less valuable than anyone else. I know I am difficult at understanding things from other cultural perspectives, so I highly value a multi-cultural team for many perspectives. This is just one example, but you are 10000000% correct. This is the topic of like 2/3s of my secondary essays is that of teamwork, value of differing perspectives, etc.
So I think it might help you to show that you understand a broader definition of what it means to be successful, or what traits/experiences can bring value to a team, workplace, or relationship.
My personal definition of success =/= success. I want to be in a position where I can positively benefit the most people while maintaining adequate connection with my family. Someone else may only want to stop once they reach the top program at the top academic institution. Someone else very well may just want to be a PCP in their hometown.I wholly understand, respect, and value other's definitions of success. That is why, until now, I have not said I am successful. I have said I have likely done more, but that is to convey the generic sense of 'success.'Which is not necessarily one that I particularly value. I am self aware of my own accomplishments but accomplishments =/= success. Success is an internal feeling. I guess I didn't really take in to account that others may think I am saying I am more successful then them? Because I am most certainly not. I, and no one, is ever in any position to say they are better than you. No one should ever, with intent, make others feel less than. I wasn't aware that I was or could do that without intent. I guess that is a point of naivety that I need to work on. Thank you for addressing it!
think the general consensus is that you should avoid saying what others may perceive as arrogance. Definitely don’t try to one-up someone’s experiences and values during an interview, like some people like to do.
What you quotedwas intended as a joke based on how preposterous it sounds lol My bad...