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Writer's pictureKeith Sones

The Power of Saying "I Don't Know"

“I’m sorry, I don’t know the answer.”


The interviewer placed his paper on the table and smiled at me. The expression on his face

reminded me of how one might look at a new puppy who had just had an accident on the carpet.

Translation – ‘I feel sorry for you because you’re not very competent but I’m still the boss and

I’m not very happy with you and there will be consequences’. You may well have been on the

receiving end of such a “look” at some point in your life. Perhaps often. It makes you feel small,

incapable and weak.


I felt, at that moment, like the world’s biggest loser. It was 1986 and after a few years in

university studying biology and chemistry, I was applying for a summer position at a popular

marine scientific research center. The job consisted of working in the lab, conducting some very

basic experiments in support of the researchers who were too busy doing important things to

perform these tasks. According to my education and my very positive application letter, I was

easily qualified for this role; I could execute the daily duties in my sleep and still have time to

learn a second language or become a concert pianist. So when it came time to be asked a few

simple science questions at the second interview, I figured I’d easily skate through.


And I bombed. I mean it was terrible. I couldn’t remember the most elementary equations, the

simplest of concepts. To this day, I have no idea why. Perhaps a lack of sleep? Panicking about

the interview? The same kind of mental block we all get from time to time, like when can’t

remember your neighbour’s name? I don’t know. What I do know is my confidence crashed like

the Hindenburg in New Jersey – rapidly and spectacularly. If I couldn’t answer the most

straightforward questions after three years of study, how would I ever succeed in the real world

of science when I graduated? It would be me against all of the “real” scientists, the result being

my failure while the rest of them laughed.


It wasn’t my best day.


In part, this event was a significant contributor when I finally decided to leave school and take

my chances doing something else, somewhere else. I simply couldn't regain my former

enthusiasm for disassembling complex chemical models or searching for answers in a

multistage physics question. No matter how hard I studied, I was continually haunted by my

experience at the research center. Keith, you’ll freeze. You can’t do this. Everyone else can, just

not you. There was an omnipresent spectre lurking over my shoulder, ready to cast a shadow of

doubt whenever I felt good about myself.


So, after some soul searching and occupational testing, I agreed that I would never be any good

at this “science stuff” and quit. I drifted into a few years of manual labour and factory work,

where all I had to do was lift harder or move the truck parts faster to be viewed as a good

worker. It was unfulfilling work but at least I wasn’t getting the “look” by someone more

intelligent and experienced than I was.


Eventually I returned to school, targeting an education in a very different field but which still

required scientific acumen. As classes commenced on the first day, a single thought bounced

around my mind – when graduation day rolled around, I would be number one. The idea wasn’t

created by arrogance or greed; rather, it was defensive. I wasn’t sure how I’d react to the feeling

of being second best, as the phantom was still on my shoulder, waiting for me. I had to fight it

off, or…well, whatever might happen wouldn’t be good.


For the next two years there was no let up. Classes, lab time, exams, projects, then repeat it all

over. I was intense in my desire to succeed. Whenever I didn’t get top marks in an exam, I

doubled down on study time. When a team project was laid on the desk, I’d offer to lead. When

it came time to deliver a large complex project as a summary of our learned skills, I did two!

Nothing would stop me.


One day, I had a conversation with the program head, a soft spoken and wise leader with

decades of industry experience. I was daunted by people like him, and thrilled that he was

taking time to talk with me privately. The topics of discussion varied as we recounted our lives to

that point in time. As he had walked the earth more than twice as long as I and had loads of

professional experience, I valued his time.


I don’t recall how the subject came up, but at some point he mentioned he was divorced. For

their own reasons the bond between he and his (ex) wife had come to an end, and it hadn’t

made him happy. The look on his face showed his pain as he talked about his loss, the financial

damage and the hardship of spending years developing the relationship only to see it crash and

burn. We spoke a while longer, then parted ways. Alone with my thoughts, I was struck by a

realization.


The person I had put on a pedestal was a real human just like me. He felt pain, had a significant

part of his life ripped apart and had regrets. He and I, in spite of our differences, were closer

than I’d imagined. I thought about the amazing love my wife and I shared (and still do), how I

had something that filled my heart while he had suffered. Of course I knew that divorces

happened and people had other problems, but not the people I admired or feared or were

intimidated by. Not those people. They were infallible, successful, popular and knew far more

than I did. Then the epiphany.


Was that really true?


It’s hard to shake that thought. When you are sitting in your manager’s office, awaiting a

performance review, it’s often difficult to see them as anything other than the person that has

control over you and your future. They seem to have more knowledge, are better connected,

make more money, go on better vacations and have the ability to make your life inspired,

mediocre, or a living hell. It’s their choice. So although I had one example of a vulnerable leader

that didn’t entirely fit that model, the rest didn’t seem to have a lot of cracks in their armour. For

years I cowered in the knowledge that while they were living hassle free lives, I had problems.

There was never enough money, I was surrounded by people that were smarter and better at

their jobs and I was just generally inadequate.


Over the next several years I had a growing number of discussions that revealed insights similar

to the one I had gleaned from that distant conversation with my school program head. Other

people also had problems. A supervisor of mine had money troubles stemming from his own

divorce. A colleague wasn’t able to get the proper accreditation for a job he needed, so was

stuck in his career path. Another had aging parents with dementia that were hard to handle,

while yet another had a teenage son who had found his way into drugs and was wreaking havoc

on his family.


In fact, everyone had problems. And some had big ones.


I had learned one very valuable lesson about people, but a second one was about to spring

itself on me. Working as a utility operations manager, a small group of customers had been




experiencing some serious electrical issues. The engineers lined up and with a single voice

stated their view on what the problem was. With a few years now under my belt, something

didn’t feel right, so we launched an investigation. The cause of the problem was discovered and

it turned out to be quite different from the prevailing engineering perspective. In other words,

they didn’t know in spite of their brimming confidence. The verdict, assigned before the

investigation, had merely been an opinion.


I had no idea when I first sat down for that technical interview at the research center that I was

starting a journey that would eventually leave me with a superpower. But it did. I am no longer

intimidated by or fearful of anyone. I understand that no one knows everything, and everyone

has their own problems. These two facts do not bring me joy; they merely help me to

understand that my problems aren’t the worst in world, and that I don’t need to know everything,

because that’s impossible.


I’m now very comfortable saying the words “I don’t know” and asking questions of those that

might. That lone idea has helped me learn much more about myself and the world around me.

When I hear a newscaster, politician, or neighbor claim to have the hard evidence on any

subject that comes up, I know they likely suffer from a lack of confidence and are attempting to

overcome it by being a know-it-all. When I hear outrageous promises being made by someone

that had a track record of not delivering, I expect more failure and plan accordingly.

Why did I write this?


One of my regrets is that I spent so many years worrying about things that didn’t matter and

simply weren’t true. I could have been so much more productive and helpful had I arrived at that

realization earlier. However, it is what it is. We live in a world of 24 hour internet spin,

governments making policies that sound good but won’t work, and everyone telling us how to

live better lives if we just do it their way. So what to do?


Breathe deep and relax. Appreciate what you have. Know that if you feel like you’re struggling,

so is everyone else. Don’t feel the need to know everything, because you can’t. Ask questions

and get into debates with others to hear their points of view. You’ll be better off than you were

before. And most of all, don’t be envious of the latest TikTok star. Their life isn’t any better than

yours. It just looks that way.

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