T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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444.1 | Good topic - my needs & DCU idea | ATSE::LEVAN | Living in a Gemini dream | Tue Oct 16 1990 14:59 | 19 |
| Thank you for starting this topic, Judy. I too need help in dealing with
troublesome situations effectively. I'll be looking forward to hearing from
people who are adept at this skill. I'm an expert at *avoiding* confrontation,
and I believe this has hurt me somewhat at work and in personal relationships.
re: your DCU story - If I had done anything (80/20 chance I wouldn't!) I think
I would have touched the line-cutter's arm as she was moving in front to hand
in her withdrawal slip. Then I would have said (in a coldly polite voice)
"Excuse me, but I believe I was ahead of you in line", meantime handing MY
paperwork or badge past her to the teller. Or maybe I'd have said, "Pardon me,
but the line begins at the door and it's my turn now".
I suspect that the line-cutter would respond with an apology which I could
acknowledge with a nod and return to my banking business. Or she might just
step silently back into line, giving me a dirty look (which I could ignore). I
doubt she'd argue with me or shove me out of the way (maybe at a concert, but
not too likely at DCU IMHO)!
Sue
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444.2 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Tue Oct 16 1990 15:00 | 9 |
| Judy,
I don't think it is so much knowing what to say as having the
guts to say it. It would be nice sometimes to have no inhibitions
to what you said, and just say the first thing that comes to mind.
One thing I try to do is to reward myself if I do say something in
these situations, and if I don't just accept that the confrontation
wasn't worth it to me that day. Maybe think about what you would
have said, and practice saying it out loud to yourself.
Linda
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444.3 | | IE0010::MALING | Life is a balancing act | Tue Oct 16 1990 15:02 | 8 |
| I'd probably have said something like "Excuse me, but I'm next" at the
time she cut in front. I tend to not want to be too insulting because
she may have been really spaced out and not aware of what she did. I
do some pretty inconsiderate things when I'm not paying attention, and
feel really bad if someone insults me, 'cause when I am paying
attention I'm considerate, and we all have those days.
Mary
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444.5 | stray thought | DECWET::JWHITE | sappho groupie | Tue Oct 16 1990 16:44 | 8 |
|
no doubt i am weird, but in such situations as the queue cutter at
the bank, i always feel a sense of power and/or superiority by
doing nothing.
this is not meant to imply that 'assertiveness' is trivial. the
opposite, perhaps. what is true power or control in a situation?
|
444.6 | | REGENT::WOODWARD | I've got friends in low places. | Tue Oct 16 1990 19:25 | 14 |
| Aha! A similar situation happened to me the other day. I was in a
department store and searched high and low for a shopping cart.
I finally went out side and brought one in. With cart in tow,
I went about my business. As soon as I left the cart, a man
started to take it for his own. (it was still empty.)
I walked up to him and said "I'm sorry, but that's my cart."
He gave me the rudest look! I didn't care....let him find
his own cart.
I don't think I've ever done that before, but I didn't have
time to get another cart!
BTW...I took Dale Carnegie a year ago...it is about $900.
I can think of better ways to spend the tuition..
|
444.7 | | MOMCAT::CADSE::GLIDEWELL | Wow! It's The Abyss! | Tue Oct 16 1990 22:04 | 27 |
| > I would like some ideas as to how I can start to overcome a problem
> that I have - Confrontation.
As a Past Guru of Doormat-hood, let me express my condolences. It's so
frustrating to hold your feet in internally boiling waters.
Start small. When you get dreadful coffee or food in a restaurant,
request a swap. This is not so personal, and it's a good start.
Bad restaurants were the prime source of my "Say There!" skill,
although the first time I ever "spoke up" to a stranger was 20 years
ago in a fire storm of irritation. She cut in front of me in line,
occupied the ticket taker for three or four minutes getting detailed
directions, thus making me miss my train, tried to block my passage on
the stairway and ripped by $5.00 stockings, AND THEN told me to watch
where I was going. I went beserk and followed her up and down the
train platform hollering that she should give me $5.00 to pay for the
stockings. For the first five seconds I was trembling with shock at
what I was doing ... and then -- while I kept hollering -- at last, I
knew what L I B E R A T I O N felt like. It was worth the price
of the nylons. :) :) :)
So good luck. It takes practice but gets easier. Meigs
P.S. For those of you who find the Carnegie courses a bit costly,
try Toastmasters. COMET::TOASTMASTERS, note 41, has a list
of all the clubs in DEC that I know about.
|
444.8 | Outlaw self-bashing | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Full-time Amazon | Wed Oct 17 1990 08:44 | 17 |
|
I had the impression that it is precisely this kind of situation
(plus some) that the current spate of Assertiveness Training addresses.
I too am an ex-doormat. Getting over it had to do with my growing into
the view, in all aspects of my life, that I had a perfectly equal right
with *anyone* else (regardless of age, gender or "status") to make
myself heard and state my view.
I also came to realise that overcoming the fear of speaking out in a
situation was less painful than the pain of beating yourself up
endlessly about your non-assertivenss after the incident.
I had two choices - either speak up, or stop beating myself.
I took the former, but both are valid approaches, IMO.
'gail
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444.9 | | RAB::HEFFERNAN | Juggling Fool | Wed Oct 17 1990 09:06 | 7 |
| I usually say as nicely as I can, "Excuse me, there's a line".
Works every time.
Good luck,
john
|
444.10 | Assertive behavior | CUPMK::SLOANE | It's boring being king of the jungle. | Thu Oct 18 1990 11:17 | 25 |
| I teach a half-day course and workshop on assertive behavior for
documentation folks (writers, editors, artists, typesetters, etc.), but
much of what's covered is applicable to general situations. (About 80%
of the students are women. The next class which probabably will be
a full day to include more role playing, is tentatively scheduled for
Dec. 5 or 6 in Acton.)
There are many books on assertive behavior. I use a lot of material
from YOUR PERFECT RIGHT by Robert Alberti and Michael Emmons (Impact
Publishers. I have the 5th edition dated 1986, but I think there is
now a 6th or 7th edition.)
I have ordered and am eagerly awaiting my copy of THE ASSERTIVE WOMAN
by Stanlee Phelps and Nancy Austin, same publisher. I've never read it,
anc can't comment on it now. I'll enter a review here.
Re: several back. An appropriate assertive response to the person who
cut ahead of the line is to say something like, "Excuse, but I believe
I was next."
I don't consider myself to be an extremely assertive person, but these
techniques have been very helpful to me, both at work and in my
personal life.
Bruce
|
444.11 | We can defend ourselves peacefully | CUPCSG::DUNNE | | Thu Oct 18 1990 15:38 | 17 |
| Do you assume the other person is being deliberately rude to you or
devaluing you? This could make a difference. They may be,
but more often, in my experience, they're not. As someone else
pointed out, they may be preoccupied and not fully aware of what
they are doing.
Even if they are being deliberately rude, you are not obligated to
be rude in return. You can politely remind them that you are next
in line. Your anxiety about protecting your rights may stem from
the belief that you have to insult the other person in order to
do so. Any kind of aggressive behavior or thoughts brings guilt
with it, in my experience, and that guilt will cause the jamming
of feelings that results in immobility.
Let us know what happens next time you are in this situation.
Eileen
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444.12 | "Exercises in Assertiveness" | EDIT::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Thu Oct 18 1990 18:01 | 16 |
| In some book or other I read the suggestion that you go buy something
(like a blouse, for example) that you don't want so that you can
return it -- *if* returning an item is one of your problems with
asswertiveness. Then make yourself return it. It's a step.
Another suggestion used in classes or groups: Everyone shares some
small assertiveness problem they have. Group members suggest
strategies for overcoming the problems -- things to say, etc. Between
classes people practice their individual problems and share results at
the next gathering. Being part of a group of others who have similar
problems -- and knowing that everyone has a commitment to each other
to try and then to report results -- tends to help carry you through.
You want the others to succeed and somehow your own efforts are a
crucial part of all that.
Nancy
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444.13 | anyone know a good insurance agent? | TLE::D_CARROLL | Hakuna Matata | Fri Oct 19 1990 14:43 | 23 |
| I had an interested confrontation experience yesterday. Typically I
avoid confrontation. (I am the type who cringes when my dinner partner
complains to a waitron.)
About two months ago I tried to buy renter's insurance. I met with the
agent and he wrote me up, but never sent me bill or policy. I kept
calling and getting the run around, then he lost my form...and other
stuff. In a word, a gazillion things went wrong, and I felt they were
due to the incompetency of the agent. Thursday he called to finalize,
and I felt really uncomfortable about being insured through such an
unreliable agent, but to avoid confrontation, I just answered yes to
his questions, as he once *again* promised to send me to policy ASAP.
Then I got off the phone and thought about...if this is how bad he is
about *getting* insurence, how bad will filing a claim be? So I called
him back, and told him politely but firmly that I didn't like the way
he did business, that I didn't want to buy insurance from him, and
would be please return my check immediately.
It felt really good to stand up for myself, and make a decision I knew
was right even though I had to directly confront someone to do it.
D!
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444.14 | One more step needed! | CUPMK::SLOANE | The Sloane Ranger writes again! | Fri Oct 19 1990 16:47 | 5 |
| D!
Make sure he returns your check, or better yet, stop payment now!
Bruce
|
444.15 | Is there a middle ground? | CLOSUS::CABRAL | KC -- DTN 523-2205 | Wed Dec 05 1990 22:13 | 44 |
| Boy, this is a good topic! My problem with confrontation seems
unique, at this point (PLEASE share similar experiences so I'll
know I'm not alone in this!). When faced with confrontation, I
react one of two ways:
1. I either OVERreact (yes, bordering on rude if I'm angry enough)
2. Or I completely back down and walk away.
I can't seem to find a middle ground... Had I been in the DCU for
the cutting-in-line episode, I most certainly would have spoken up,
LOUDLY. It wouldn't have occurred to me that the woman who cut
in front of me was simply not paying attention and didn't realize
her mistake. Had she stated that as her case, I would undoubtedly
have felt bad about my outburst. But 9 times out of ten, in that
situation (happens in the grocery store, dry cleaners, etc.), when
I speak up, I get a dirty look and the offender goes to the end
of the line).
How do you find a middle ground, where you can remain tactful and
polite (when extremely angry) or be willing to make the effort when
the anger isn't present?
And another question -- at the risk of sounding sexist (sorry, but
recent experiences have made me realize that this is a fact of life)--
How do you handle confrontations with men who are extremely insecure?
(for example, men who take advice, criticism, polite suggestions,
anything along those lines as an ATTACK, and who react by shouting,
swearing, and not speaking to you...). I'm honestly tired of dealing
with females as fellow human beings and dealing with the insecure
males with kid gloves, on tip toe. (Don't get me wrong, I'm not
lumping all men into this category -- but there are quite a few
out there who fit this description, and I've yet to come across
a female who does). I know there's a difference between being
assertive and being aggressive. But short of returning to the doormat
role (which seems to be the only way to avoid confrontations with
men of this kind), I don't know how to get my point across without
offending their fragile egos...
Help!
kc
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444.16 | Painless instruction | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Dec 06 1990 08:54 | 14 |
| kc,
First, I am not good at confrontations either. My tendency is to
go all icy, and speak through clenched teeth. (I try to overcome
this, but...)
My suggestion is to read what Miss Manners has to say about speaking
up politely among the unspeakably rude. You should therefor go to
your library, look up Judith Martin, and check out anything with a
title that begins: _Miss_Manners'_Guide_ .
You'll enjoy them. :-)
Ann B.
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