Did you grow up, like I did, hearing The Golden Rule, "Do unto others as you would have others do unto you," espoused as the litmus test of moral living? This is a universal moral code, found in the scripture of every great religion of the world. It is a helpful rule, a guiding principle, a reminder of how to behave if we want to live in harmony and peace with others. Sometimes it is called the ethics of reciprocity, a concise formula of how to live. I am sure you have, like I have, tried to live by this rule.
A few years ago, while training to use the PeopleMap Personality System developed by Mike Lillibridge, Ph.D., I learned the Platinum Rule: Do unto others as they want to be done unto. I don’t think Lillibridge invented the Platinum Rule because I have since found it on the website of Dr. Tony Alessandra and have even seen it as the title of a network TV episode of How I Met Your Mother. Whatever its origin, this rule takes into account an important truth about relationships of all kinds. We feel most loved, valued, respected and cherished when we are treated in ways that matter to us. Because we are unique and we each have different ways of giving and receiving love, we need to know how to treat and love those with whom we are in the closest relationships.
We feel most loved, valued, respected and cherished when we are treated in ways that matter to us.Thinking about the Platinum Rule recently, I was remembering a parenting class I taught more than twenty years ago. I remember asking the parents, “How many of you love your kids? Really, truly love your kids?” Every hand in the class went up. Next question: “How many of your kids feel loved?” Less than half of the hands went up. That was why these parents were in this class. Their child was acting out, having trouble with behavior at school, and the class was designed to help parents connect with their child at home in a way that would encourage better classroom behavior. So why was it the kids didn’t feel loved?

Kids who feel known accept discipline more easily.Gary Chapman wrote a NY Times Bestseller in 1992 (already reprinted four times) called The Five Love Languages: The Secret to Love That Lasts. Written mostly for couples, the premise of Chapman’s book is that we don’t all feel loved in the same way. Some people like words of affirmation, some like gifts, some like acts of service and kindness, some like physical nurturance and affection and some like quality time. What makes this tricky is that you might like one kind of love, and your spouse or lover may like another. Your challenge is to love another in the language that most speaks to them, and for them to love you back in the language that speaks most to you.

Your challenge is to love another in the language that most speaks to them, and for them to love you back in the language that speaks most to you.The PeopleMap System takes this premise and applies it not only to couples and families but to other systems like corporations, schools, and churches to name a few. When you find out what your PeopleMap type is


The Platinum Rule not only makes good sense, it makes for good relationships.Here at LiM2 our last few blogs have been written to help us all navigate this difficult political season, as well as to help us in our personal lives. As you have heard me say, everything is related to everything else, the personal becomes the political, and how we treat those different from us is often how we treat those close to us. The Platinum Rule not only makes good sense, it makes for good relationships. So, Friends, do unto others as they want to be done unto. And make this messy world a little more marvelous.
