T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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891.1 | One Viewpoint | GIDDAY::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Fri May 03 1996 23:09 | 86 |
| Re: Note 891.0 by FABSIX::T_TEAHAN
When I started reading your note, I hoped you were talking about
swearing in the work-place. That's a pet peeve of mine right now, as
I've just joined a department with a higher level of swearing than the
one I was in before.
But you were talking about verbal abuse. I'm afraid the only verbal
abuse I tend to get is either on IRC from Americans or from drunkards
in the street. My work-place is a group of professionals, they tend
not to abuse for some reason. So I'm not sure I can comment
constructively.
However, I was the target of plenty of verbal abuse during my school
years; I was the loner, the only guy in my classes-of-same-year that
was so interested in computers and physics. My adaption to that may be
of some use. Though it did impact my personality development. ;-(
> Maybe it's just me. I do not boast. I come across as a guy that some
> may think is a punching bag. I'm light on anger, patient most of the
> time with dealings, and i come across as a nice guy where people can
> take out their anger on and feel i'll be less to respond than most.
I do this. I can be attacked, goaded, and pushed, and I will _not_
lose my temper. Who of you Australians in here remember when I last
lost it? I'm told it's one of my interesting traits. One of my
managers in a previous job told me just before I left that he had been
trying to goad me to lose my temper for years, and hadn't managed it.
Of course, this comes across also as a lack of empathy, a state of not
caring. But if you care as well! That's a powerful witness to those
around you.
I actually _worry_ when I am attacked. I worry that God's going to
blow my attacker to pieces before they get a chance to apologise and
seek forgiveness!
> I wouldnt swear at them but
> maybe yell at them or know enough of their faults and weaknesses to go
> after them, this isn't a right response and my biggest question is what
> should be the right response? As i mentioned, take a stand in
> correcting them? Turn the other cheek?(in which, as it has built up, is
> harder now for me to turn the other cheek but want to set these people
> straight, if i can) Any comments?
What should be the right response? I feel it varies. For me it varies
most according to whether the person is above me or below me, which
depends on the environment we're both in and what the subject of
discussion is.
For example, I lead my manager if it's a technical issue. He leads me
if it is a budgetary or procedural one. Personal level; everything I
say is my point of view only. Anybody who says anything personal to me
is treated as if they are speaking _only_ their opinion. Potentially
valueless.
Yes, I correct them. Yes, I deflect the attack by claiming lack of
knowledge on my- or their part. Yes, I sometimes turn the other cheek,
often as a technique to apply the guilts to them. ;-)
Correcting is most rewarding for me... I can talk better than most I
meet; I think it was this that I developed as a defence in my youth.
Deflective laughter, or deflective interpretation are also excellent
techniques. I often turn an attack into a jest, implying that the
sender of the attack is making a joke. This most often applies when
talking to Australians, since this is the standard Tall Poppy Defense
response.
Deflective interpretation is a variant of the laughter. I rapidly
search for all alternative meanings of what the attacker said, pick
either the most amusing or the most irreverent, and reply _based on_
that incorrect interpretation of what they say.
I only rarely reply by escalating the attack. But when I do it's
usually 'cause I think it will help the situation by showing that an
attack was made.
My wife Petria just read this and suggested a few things...
My behaviour varies according to who I am being attacked by. My
behaviour depends very much on who else is present, and how close each
is to me. This is why I keep quiet in groups a lot; I can't work out
quickly enough how to respond, because there are too many variables!
James
|
891.2 | | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Sun May 05 1996 09:01 | 81 |
|
I have always been very sensitive to other peoples words. I could
not understand why they were being so harsh, critical and abusive.
I carry the scars from my early childhood to just a short time ago
of the verbal abuse. For me, as it is with you, I would rather
someone physically abuse me then to verbally abuse.
Much of what you identified about yourself and your feelings and
also what James Cameron said I identify with as well. So I understand
your pain.
Today things are much different. People at work may verbally abuse me
from time to time but it has no impact whatsoever. In fact it has
become quite the opportunity for the exercise of wisdom and character
on my part.
One day a lead engineer became upset at something someone had done. He
started to verbally abuse me. He didn't just make quips quickly, he
was just a few inches from my face yelling. I listened for a moment
and then said to him in a calm voice. "You appear to be angry."
He instantly deflated and floundered. Excuses flew, reasons came and
went. I didn't have to say another word. By the end of the day he was
asking me if I wanted a position with his group.
What I feel a person is doing when they cut another down with words is
they are making an attempt to invalidate that person so that they can
feel more validated. In other words they are suffering from the I am
right syndrome.
Natural and carnal man must believe that he is right for if he does not
his entire inner kingdom or empire collapses. So to prove he is right
he must exercise his position to strengthen it and reassure himself
that he is indeed right and everything is OK with his inner world of
his mind(which is where the world really exists).
He exercises it by attacking other peoples empires and causes them to
collapse if possible. If he is the stronger, through being most verbally
abusive, and he sees he is being victorious he is assured of his
rightness and cans more confidence. He thus expands his empire of
which he is god. Might makes right of sorts.
However these empires that people create are as fragile as a house of
cards. One word from the heart directed at thier heart can shake that
house.
Look at what I have said above and now compare it to War between
nations. It is the same thing. What you witness between two people
who verbally abuse one another is war. Someone must come out the
victor and the victor is right.
But all of this is in the mind. To truly overcome the abuses one must
surrender the mind to the Lord and accept that they are not right, that
they are wrong and ONLY God is right. The Lord Jesus wants to give us
His righteousness so that we are right and true in Christ, not in
ourselves.
As this revelation becomes more clear to our hearts and we live by the
righteousness of Christ our own empire in our mind crumbles and the
Kingdom of God is placed in our heart. We then live in our hearts and
not our heads. No one living in thier head can defeat one living in
thier heart for the Wisdom of God is given to the heart not the head.
>>I'm just at a point where i don't know how to handle it.
You cannot handle it. All you can do is surrender it to the Lord. You
cannot understand it with your human mind and in even trying to it will
only bring more grief. The Lord wants you to surrender all of your
abilities, this is why he brings us to the end of our abilities to show
us that anything we try to do is futile. Only He can do it. Faithful
is He who calleth you who will also do it.
There is great peace in surrendering everything to the Lord. He is
using even those verbally abusive people in your life to reveal how
much you need him and how "nothing" is your ability to do what is
right.
Bob
|
891.3 | A Parable: Revealing the Ground | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Sun May 05 1996 11:31 | 73 |
|
There was a man who had a beautiful daughter. In fact her beauty
exceeded all the woman of the village and the surrounding countryside
for many miles. As it was the custom the man's daughter was eventually
betrothed to a young man of one of the families of the village.
Soon they were married and began thier life together. But because she
was so beautiful the husband found himself to be very angry. He did
not know why he was angry because he loved his wife with a great love.
As time passed his anger grew and he would go into rages of angry
fits if his wife spoke with anyone or helped anyone. Many of the woman
of the village would speak to him and enrage him with thier words about
his beautiful wife. They would accuse and rail at her in very subtle
and not so subtle ways in the market place.
She endured here husband's anger and the people's words for she
was as beautiful a woman within her heart as she was comely to look
upon.
At last the husband could stand no more and divorced his wife. She
fell into a great sorrow and for many years wept and prayed. But her
sorrow turned to anger. The man she had married and who left her
continued to express his anger toward her when ever he felt he needed
to and since they were in the same village it was convenient. She had
no one to help her.
As the years passed her anger grew though she could not understand why
she was angry and she felt that it was not within her to want to be
angry but none the less she felt it.
Eventually a woman in the village who was not very beautiful began to
abuse the beautiful woman with her words. She would question the woman
and when ever the beautiful woman gave her reply the other woman would
condemn the answers and point out how wrong she was.
The beautiful woman prayed to God and said, "Lord, why am I so angry at
this woman who is questioning me for you know that I do not feel anger
towards the people, but this woman I am angry with. You also know how
I have become angry since my husband left me and I do not know why.
Please help me your poor servant girl."
Shortly a wise man visited the village and the beautiful woman went to
visit him to hear his words. She spoke to the wise man and told him of
her anger and all that happened to her and of her great sorrow and she
cried.
He said to her, "My child there is a wall of bitterness within your
heart and it sits upon a foundation of unforgiveness and its
cornerstone is injustice. And yet there is something more that you
must discover on your own." The woman left and walked about the
marketplace and visited all the places of her past to ponder.
The unattractive and abusive woman followed her around the marketplace
and everywhere she went and railed on her accusing her of being wrong
and the unattractive woman was very angry and the beautiful woman
became very angry and soon went home.
That night she dreamed a dream and in the dream she saw her husband and
he had gotten two wives and she said, "Why do you have two wives?" and
she was exceedingly angry. And he said to her, "Because one is not
enough."
She awoke from the dream and knew why she was so angry with her husband
and why the unattractive woman was so angry with her and this
revelation set her free from her own anger and the sorrow fell away and
the wall of bitterness fell and the foundation of unforgiveness
dissolved and the cornerstone was removed, for beneath the cornerstone
was the ground and there dwelt the cause.
|
891.4 | | GIDDAY::CAMERON | And there shall come FORTH (Isaiah 11:1) | Mon May 06 1996 07:28 | 1 |
| (So, the second woman married the guy?)
|
891.5 | >>>(So, the second woman married the guy?) | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Mon May 06 1996 08:15 | 4 |
|
Ha ha ha ha...heh heheheh!! :-)
|
891.6 | | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Mon May 06 1996 08:24 | 14 |
|
I apologize for the laughter but your reply caught me just
right this morning. :-)
>>So, the second woman married the guy?
Actually no, but that is an interesting question.
The answer is contained in the parable and can also be found
in the Book of James Chapter 3.
Bob
|
891.8 | communication skills are key | USCTR1::CARNEY | | Mon May 06 1996 10:28 | 27 |
| Whoops, I'm just leanrning this sytem, so now I have to learn how to
delete a note.
But, what I want to say is, that 1) there's nothing you can do stop
others from speaking abusively. 2) we can affect their reponse to us
by our response to them.
We should not be doormats, but, we can get people to look at them
selves by turning the comments around. We can also make it clear that
we will not own criticism or abuse towards ourselves that
is unjustified. Just tell the person to deal with the problem at the
right source, whoever that is, and leave it at that. I wouldn't even
bother trying to point the person to the true "owner" of the problem,
just state that it isn't you. It also disarms people when we tell them
we can undertand their frsutration at this time; but let them know
clearly that their reaction is ineffective.
The other respnse, if we are involved, is to say, "When you are ready to
talk seriously about this and work it out, I'll be happy to. Let me
know." And walk away. You oculd even follow-up and ask the person the
next day how they are doing, did they get resolution, do they want to
talk, etc.
You can also seek out the Human Resources person assigned to your group and
confidentially ask them what can be done.
-- Marian
|
891.9 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Mon May 06 1996 13:26 | 14 |
|
> Whoops, I'm just leanrning this sytem, so now I have to learn how to
> delete a note.
go to the note you wish to delete. At the NOTES> prompt, type
"delete". (only on notes you have authored).
Jim
|
891.10 | | HPCGRP::DIEWALD | | Mon May 06 1996 13:48 | 6 |
| re: 891.3
I give up, give me a hint. Whats "ground"? The world?
Jill
|
891.11 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon May 06 1996 14:06 | 6 |
| I personally don't like the emphasis on beauty. And the fact that an
ugly person outside is identified with ugly inside.
I personally have never met an ugly creation of God.
Nancy
|
891.12 | Really Enjoyed It - And The Parable Too | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Mon May 06 1996 14:09 | 9 |
| Hi Bob,
I enjoyed your .2 BIGTIME. Very humbling!
THANK YOU,
Tony
By the way, Jill, what is usually "revealed"???
|
891.13 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon May 06 1996 14:20 | 3 |
| Someone once said, "Beauty is only skin deep...
but ugly goes to the bone." ;-)
|
891.14 | :-| | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon May 06 1996 14:36 | 3 |
| Sorry Mike.... but that was NOT funny..
/me wipes grin off face
|
891.15 | Where Does The Seed Fall??? | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Tue May 07 1996 08:27 | 8 |
| Hi Jill,
Check out the parable of the sower. (That would be my
guess and Bob can let us know if I erred.)
God Bless,
Tony
|
891.16 | | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Tue May 07 1996 10:49 | 102 |
|
The tongue is the member used as the outward manifestation
of the heart. When one witnesses the outward manifestation, either
people abusing one another with their words, or blessing others what
they are actually seeing is a piece of the heart or spirit of
the person.
The parable is summed up in these verses.
Who is a wise man and endued with knowledge among you?
let him shew out of a good conversation his works with
meekness of wisdom.
But if ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts,
glory not, and lie not against the truth.
James 3:13-14
Bitterness is an attitude based upon beliefs about how one
has been unjustly treated either by God or people. This bitterness
is given life through unforgiveness. That is why the wise man in
the parable spoke of the wall of bitterness sitting upon a foundation
of unforgiveness which had a cornerstone of injustice.
But the ground upon which the cornerstone sits is envy.
Envy is a powerfully strong desire to have something one can not have.
When one can not have it, or possess it, then they feel that they
have been unjustly treated by God or people or life, how ever they
may see things.
This feeling of injustice now gives that person the feeling
they have the right to not forgive others and thus the bitterness
grows like a root in them. Bitterness is manifested in an insidious,
ever present anger which robs the soul of peace and joy and hope.
All of this mixture of bitterness, unforgiveness, injustice,
because of envy results in what can come from the tongue.
The husband in the parable was envious of his beautiful
wife, he wanted her but could not possess her as he wanted to. He
could not get enough of her. In addition he was self protective
and he would listen to the words of the woman of the village about
her and receive justification from them so he was justified in his
anger toward his wife. He would not humble himself to God.
The not so beautiful woman was also filled with envy and
would attack the beautiful woman verbally because she desired the
woman's beauty or so she thought, this was a belief as well.
She wanted something she felt she did not have.
She would ask a question and then point out the error of her words
to tear down the beauty of the woman in her own eyes, thus could
say, "See this woman may be beautiful outwardly but I know
more than she does"
The unattractive woman was also self protective and would
bait and switch the beautiful woman to justify her feeling of
the other woman inferiority though the unattractive woman felt
inferior but was in denial of it. She also would not humble
herself before the Lord.
The beautiful woman discovered that she had envy buried
deep within her as well. This envy or jealousy was over her deep
need for the people that she wanted in her life. She was jealous
over her husband. But she saw within herself the anger and did
not accept it as part of herself but rejected it, humbled herself
and asked God for wisdom and He gave it to her.
She was angry with the unattractive woman because the jealousy
of the unattractive woman connected or touched the jealously
within the beautiful woman and thus this unconscious knowledge
resulted in the manifestation of anger.
There is so much more hidden within the parable but it
would take me hours to speak about it all.
We tend to look upon the outward appearance of things but
God looks at the heart and he desires that we also look at the
heart as well.
Listen to what comes out of your mouth and ask the Lord
to give you wisdom and to reveal what is in your heart. When the
Lord reveals the hidden things of the heart, it will be enlightening
to you and you will taste the freedom that the Lord has for each of
us.
This is all a process and we must be patient with ourselves
and with the Lord as he does this. He will use others that verbally
abuse us and who act poorly toward us to show us what is also within
us both things of the character the Lord is developing and the things
the Lord wants to remove.
As we humbly acknowledge what He reveals to us through all that
we endure, he will free us from the hinderance and we will grow.
It needs be that offenses come said the Lord Jesus. Woa unto
whom they come through, but nevertheless It needs be.
Bob
|
891.17 | That Was Prophetic | YIELD::BARBIERI | | Tue May 07 1996 11:59 | 8 |
| Only the mind of God could have revealed that to you Bob!
Too brilliant for our feeble minds!
Oh and I was wrong...I thought the ground was the heart.
Thanks!,
Tony
|
891.18 | | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Tue May 07 1996 12:29 | 27 |
|
Tony,
>>Only the mind of God could have revealed that to you Bob!
>>Too brilliant for our feeble minds!
I agree with you. There is so much that I am learning
as well from the parable. There are new and deeper things
in the parable that the Lord is showing me.
>>Oh and I was wrong...I thought the ground was the heart.
In a sense you were not wrong because this is what you
saw in the parable. The Lord wanted this part to stand out
to you.
In the parable of the sower of the seed some seed fell in
the thickets and sprung up then the thickets strangled
the plant. Jesus said that the plant in the thickets was
a heart that heard the word, started to grow but the cares
of this world over took the plant.
That is a heart of envy. A heart that wants the things of
the world. There is different grounds, pride, envy, confusion,
strife, etc. but it is all within the heart.
Bob
|
891.19 | Thanks | FABSIX::T_TEAHAN | | Thu May 09 1996 23:30 | 12 |
|
Bob,
Please continue to give us anything in your heart that you have
learned concerning any subject, it would be great to read more from
you.
respectfully, Thomas
|
891.20 | | SOLVIT::POLAND | | Fri May 10 1996 11:31 | 39 |
|
Thank you Thomas.
I appreciate your desire to read what has been written and your
interest.
As the Lord places things upon my heart to share with you and the
readers of the conference I will freely give as it has been freely
given to me.
I feel that I of myself have nothing to offer to anyone, even my
experience and learnings are nothing if the Holy Spirit does not
quicken them to others. It is the Holy Spirit that does the work
and gives the light. I am thankful to be an unworthy servant.
Just to be near the Master, Jesus, is all I desire.
Allow me to share this one thing.
Hearing from the Lord is like being a book with nothing written on the
pages. As the book we must not have any expectations as to what or
how or where the Lord will write upon our pages. In fact we must not
expect to even be written upon or not.
We have many expectations. Some expect they will not hear the Lord and
others expect to hear. As the book some turn to a certain page and
then expect the Lord to write on that page but the Lord may surprise us
and write upon another page instead.
Sometimes he may write upon a page and we do what he has written but
the outcome does not make sense to our human understanding and we
question as to wether we really did read the words correctly. When we
go back to the page to find the words again we find they are gone.
The Lord is cultivating us so that we grow and faith grows in us.
For faith to grow the Lord brings us through trials and experiences
which require us not to lean on what we expect the Lord to do but
rather we lean on Him and His moment by moment revelation of Himself.
Bob
|
891.21 | A prayer for "Tongue-control" | SOLVIT::NIEMAN | | Tue May 14 1996 08:42 | 33 |
| Hello to all -- & my apologies for having first directed this prayer into
its own Note (i.e 893.0 --- I deleted this Note and moved this prayer
into where I first intended it to go -- I believe it belongs here.).
At any rate, I thought I would share this prayer with you all.
*********************************************************************
Father, in the name of Jesus, I make the quality decision to take
control of my tongue.
I renounce, reject, and repent of every word I have spoken against
You and Your operation in my life. I cancel the power of those words and
dedicate my mouth to speaking Your Word.
Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks; therefore, I
set myself to fill my heart with Your Word. Put a watch, Oh Lord, over
my lips.
I set myself to speak in line with The Word. As Your child, I
confess that I am healed --- I am the righteousness of God through Jesus.
I am victorious in every area of my life because You have made it so.
Father, I thank you that I no longer will be doubleminded by the
words of my mouth. I let The Word of Christ dwell in me richly in all
wisdom. Everything I do, whether in word or deed, I do in the name of
The Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks unto You.
In Jesus' name,
Amen.
********************************************************************
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