T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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235.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Fri Jun 03 1988 12:09 | 5 |
| I would not agree with your generalization. That may be what most
men and women will tell you, but I also feel that inside things
are a lot more equal.
Steve
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235.2 | A Question of Emphasis Perhaps ? | KISMIF::THOMPSON | tryin' real hard to adjust ... | Fri Jun 03 1988 14:27 | 24 |
| RE: .1 Eagles and Lions seldom agree since we see things from
such different angles. Steve Lionel speaks from his
own inner wisdom while bird-brains view from a distance.
re: .0 we agree on the general hypothesis ... now what to do?
a suggestion: suppose one were to discuss your general proposition
and carry either orientation to it's extreme conclusion to help get
things into better perspective ... Would a female cease to *exist*
on an island with nobody and hence no relationships? And is a man
carried to perfection a robot totally programmed to produce widgets?
Maybe your SO can see the value in becoming a bit more concerned
with relationships until his "natural" career orientation gets back
to being able to support that facet of his orientation. Much as
a working mom may tend to learn that "neglected" children find their
own forms of amusement and often mature into self-sufficient adults.
~--e--~ Eagles_Try_2_Help_Rather_Than_Argue_Against_Your_Hypothesis
Any suggestions on how to deal with a male SO who is
suffering from job-related low self-esteem?
Thanks for all opinions/suggestions.
Helaine
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235.3 | I've been there | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Fri Jun 03 1988 16:28 | 24 |
| (Gee, Steve, did you change your name to Helaine?)
I've been in this situation, where a former SO had a very low
work-related self esteem. Entirely unjustified, I will add. But
it seemed the more supportive I was, the more she denied it and
turned her anger against me. (It was this experience that caused me
to suggest that there are not innate male-female differences here.
I feel that it is pointless to approach the problem from that
perspective.)
It seemed that the best approach would be to provide a shoulder
to "cry on" (or "lean on", take your pick). DO NOT try to rationalize
away his feelings - that will only make it worse (I know!) It is
all to easy to set yourself up as "the enemy", and your relationship
will be headed down the drain if you do.
This is hard - I was not successful when it happened to me. Eventually
she picked herself up and is doing much better. That's about the only
way I think it can work - self-esteem has to come from inside.
Encourage, yes. But don't nag. It's a razor-sharp line you have
to walk.
Steve
|
235.4 | | FRAGLE::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Fri Jun 03 1988 17:57 | 12 |
| I am female [big surprise! :) ] and I have often suffered from
low-esteem related to my work. The major aspect people have tried
with me is to show me that indeed I am great at my work so I shouldn't
feel bad about it. That didn't work; it only made me feel more
like a fraud.
What worked on me was telling my boss I needed regular strokes for
good performance so please give them to me, and being shown by my
loved ones that I am good in other realms, that work is not the
only thing that can make me feel good or bad about myself.
Lee
|
235.5 | time will help | USHS06::BEAN | | Sun Jun 05 1988 15:51 | 16 |
| When I hired on at DEC, my boss *warned/told* me that he seldom,
if ever gave out postitive strokes. Many years ago, while at another
employer, I, too suffered from low self-esteem (work related) and
felt *very* insecure. Luckily, the years matured me, I learned
that I am *good* at what I do, and while *strokes* are nice and
are appreciated, they are no longer critical to my self-esteem.
But, because the memory of *my* insecure times is so vivid, I try
to *give* strokes whenever I can. Positive feedback from boss/sup-
ervisor/peers can work positive wonders IF THEY ARE SINCERE. Fake,
insincere strokes are just flattery...shallow and largely meaningless.
All this to say, the friend (.0) needing help will most assuredly
find that as time passes, his self-esteem will improve.
I don't envy him this passage of time
Tony
|
235.6 | You is what you make yourself to be | FLOWER::JASNIEWSKI | | Mon Jun 06 1988 09:35 | 15 |
|
Self esteem *has* to come from within. It's so difficult, because
we *always* judge ourselves the hardest! It's quite possible that
your friend is doing just fine at work; *only he* doesnt think so...
A friend of mine once told me (discussing "nothing to do" at work)
that he had a job at a research firm where he "had nothing to do"
for 4 YEARS! He said they kept him around "because he was like a
ball of string" - handy to have, when needed! Can you imagine being
told that? His strategy for dealing with that situation was entirely
self motivated - he said he always appeared to be busy anyway! Hence,
his self esteem about his *work* also came from within - he gave
himself his own "pats on the back" for what he accomplished that
day.
Joe Jas
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235.7 | WORK vs. Relationships ? | KISMIF::THOMPSON | tryin' real hard to adjust ... | Mon Jun 06 1988 11:08 | 12 |
| ... perhaps it just isn't constructive to define approaches to self
image as "male" or "female" ... But if anyone tends to be oriented
toward EITHER work OR relationships ... Why not accept the "cycles"
that occur as periods to focus on the other aspect. WORK can give
strength during times when relationships are falling apart because
it is always there to be done ... as many hours per week as seems
worth doing. If one job doesn't satisfy ... get a second job that
allows other facets of personality to evolve. Work inside, work
outside, work with people or just with things ...
~--e--~ Eagles_Find_Work_Always_Ends_Eventually_And_After-Work
SHOULD_Be_About_Relationships...Unless_You_Own_a_House...8^)
|
235.8 | i needed to hear that | SCOMAN::DAUGHAN | heathcliff,its me,cathy come home... | Mon Jun 06 1988 13:17 | 5 |
| eagle,sometimes you say the right things at the right times :-)
kelly
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235.9 | can't get self esteem from outside | MERIDN::GERMAIN | Down to the Sea in Ships | Mon Jun 06 1988 13:41 | 32 |
| I disagree with the proposition stated in .0. Mainly because, as
others have said, self-esteem comes from within.
So, you can't say that a man gets it from the outside, and
a woman from the inside. If a man "gets" self-esteeem from the outside,
he isn't really getting self-esteem - he is getting strokes - thee
is a big difference.
A person with a high level of self-esteem will take a few hits when
the job situation gets a little rough. But then that person will,
as has been said before, know that they are not worthless; know
that they are intrinsically worthwhile (i.e. just because they exist).
To .0, I would say that all the examples in the world, all the
arguing you can do, will not make a difference. Encourage him, support
him, but remember - any real self-esteem must be gathered by himself.
Pretend that there are little messages playing in his head, over
and over. These messages are:
You are worthless.
You always were worthless.
You always will be worthless.
And you can never do enough to change that.
It's a tough place to be, but a place that can be left behind.
Gregg
p.s. One of the best things you can do, is to let him know that he is
acceptable, JUST THE WAY HE IS, RIGHT NOW, TODAY, unconditionally.
|
235.10 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Situation hopeless but not serious | Wed Jun 15 1988 15:38 | 29 |
| Although I personally don't agree with the statement (in .0),
I'd be a little surprised if it wasn't currently a majority
view on the planet. But, as far as I'm concerned, the majority
view (or mine, for that matter) don't matter a whole lot to your
SO. What matters is how *he* feels and sees things and while
I'm hardly an expert in this area, a couple of thoughts do come
to mind.
One is that the advice to be accepting and patient sounds good
to my ears. In times of similar troubles, I found that kind of
support comforting. The other thought is that, without wishing
to sound an unreasonable alarm, sometimes these kinds of feelings
can be indicative of other things. A couple of possibilities are
"mid-life crisis" and depression. Please understand that I'm
specifically not trying to make any kind of diagnosis or create
undue concern. I simply want to point out that such feelings are
often seen as parts of other conditions. And I'd also quickly
say that both of those conditions and others *are* treatable.
A couple of yardsticks for these situations are duration and
intensity; very intense and/or prolonged bad feelings are signals
worth paying attention to and one possible alternative would be
to explore some counselling/therapy. Whatever the case, I have
a notion that the accepting attitude of "I care for you and I'm
here for you; together we'll get through this" is one that will
stand you in good stead.
Steve
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235.11 | Ranting about the wrong thing? | VINO::MCARLETON | Reality; what a concept! | Tue Jun 21 1988 18:40 | 16 |
|
> Any suggestions on how to deal with a male SO who is
> suffering from job-related low self-esteem?
Often you can find me ranting and raving about something that has
nothing to do with what I am really worried about. Might this be
the case here?
Perhaps he is like many men who feel valuable as a love-object
because they know they are valuable as a work-object? Perhaps
he thinks you will stop loving him if he is no longer a great success?
If this is the case the answer of "To bad work is not going well
for you. Lucky for you I don't love you because you are a success
at work!" would be what he really wants to hear.
|
235.12 | Thanks For Your Responses | STEREO::VINDICI | It's the Journey, Not the Destination | Wed Jun 22 1988 17:43 | 20 |
| I'd like to thank you all for all your interesting and
thought-provoking responses. They've really helped me to
put things in perspective.
I agree that the *source* of one's self esteem has to come
from within. However, I still feel that self esteem is
*influenced* by either internal or external factors.
The comment that really hit home the most was to *accept
my so for the way he is now - unconditionally*. I think
things had piled up all at once, ie. job, financial,
life goals, etc. and he wasn't feeling that acceptance
and support from me unconditionally on top of everything
else.
Time has a way of working things out (And This Too Shall Pass).
Thanks once again to all of you for your words of support,
advice and encouragement.
Helaine
|