Sometimes I self-sabotage in talking with others, especially those I do not know well, then feel badly afterwards. There’s no going back yet these four insights have helped me connect better with others… sometimes. Such as when I actually practice them.
1. Be the Same Person Around Everyone
“I am so used to having two faces,” observes Lee Daniels, the producer/director of Precious. “A face that I had for black America and a face for white America. When Obama became president, I lost both faces. Now I only have one face. But old habits die hard, and sometimes I can’t remember who I’m supposed to be.”
We tend to feel most at ease with people who look and act right – like us. Beyond “likeness” and context (what else is going on in a situation), you’ve probably noticed another factor that affects your behavior. Some individuals “make” you act grumpy, sarcastic, remote or otherwise difficult while others bring out your best side. Multiplicity
Useable insight
You may feel more congruent, authentic and face less conflict if you can be that “better side” of yourself no matter whom you are around. Plus people are more likely to like you – and that makes life easier.
2. Inspire Others by Your Passionate Belief in Their Best Talent Then Follow Through to Prove It
“One day, I was walking on Houston Street in Manhattan,” remarked Helen Mirren, “and because there were a lot of holes in the road, I was looking down at my feet. I got a tap on the shoulder, and I jumped. This mad-looking man with wild dreadlocks says, ‘I love you and I have a movie I want you to do.’ I thought, this is a complete madman, I’ll never hear from this person again.
Ninety-nine percent of the people who approach you this way are living in a fantasy world. But Lee (Daniels), due to his charm and belief, makes his fantasies real. He doesn’t hear ‘no.’ ” Daniels persisted in recruiting Mirren to act in Shadowboxer, and, after seeing his other movies and listening to his vision for the movie when he followed with her, she agreed.
Useable insight
Few things can inspire other’s allegiance that your recognition of their worth and your offer to let them use their best talent – with you.
3. Think Before You Speak
To say the right thing that can build a connect, first T.H.I.N.K. suggests Mark Beeson who believes that “The right thing said the right way at the right time has a chance of connecting… otherwise, we can expect to swing and miss.” In what you are about to say,
Is it True?
Is it Helpful?
Is it Important?
Is it Necessary?
Is it Kind?
Yet, despite your best intentions, “you’re not in control of others.They may not respond the way you want or expect. Keep casting your net… sometimes you end up connecting with an unexpected person. Perhaps, that’s where you should have been all along, says. Mark Meyer.
Useable Insight
Hold tightly to practicing connecting with others, especially when you want to scream and run away and hold lightly to the outcome.
4. Don’t Let Someone’s Misrepresentation Harden You Against Others’ Apparently Similar Actions
Yes, I admit that is a hard-to-follow headline. Yet what happened to Daniel Gilbert and his wife –and the lesson he took from it can help you maintain your compassion without feeling foolish.
“The man who was crouched on the sidewalk at 68th and Broadway in New York City was one of the most pathetic souls I’d ever seen,” wrote Gilbert, author of Stumbling on Happiness. “His limbs were twisted in what appeared to be arthritic agony and tears were streaming down his face. ‘Please,’ he whimpered. ‘Please, somebody help me.’”
“My wife and I stopped. The man sobbed. ‘I just want to go home.’ My hand needed no guidance from my brain as it reached into my wallet and extracted $10. ‘Thank you,’ he said as I handed him the money. ‘Thank you so much.’ My wife and I mumbled some embarrassed words and walked on.
We hadn’t gone a block when she tugged my sleeve. ‘Maybe we should have gotten him into a cab,’ she said. ‘He could barely stand up. He might need help. We should go back to see,’ so we went back to see. And what we saw was our horribly crippled friend walking briskly and happily up 68th Street, opening the door to a late-model car, getting in and driving away after what was apparently a short day of theatrical work.
I know two things now that I didn’t know then. First, I now know that my hand did what human hands were designed to do. We are hard-wired with a strong and intuitive moral impulse —- an urge to help others that is every bit as basic as the selfish urges that get all the press.
The second thing is that this was the most damaging crime I had ever experienced. Like most residents of large cities, I’d been a victim before – of burglary once, of vandalism several times. But this was different. The burglars and vandals had taken advantage of my forgetfulness (‘Why didn’t I double lock the door?’) and taught me to be better.
But the actor on 68th Street had taken advantage of my helpfulness and taught me to be worse. The hand that had automatically reached for my wallet had been slapped, and once slapped was twice shy. I’ve never again given money to a stranger without scrutinizing him for the signs that distinguish suffering from its imitation. And because I don’t know what those signs are, I typically just walk by.”
Useable Insight
When you react against someone’s words or behavior take a moment to consider that this person may have a different reason for his actions than a badly-behaving person you encountered in the past who did something similar.
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Having just written a note to my little sister (forty-five) about the frustrating experiences and choices we have and, sadly, don’t have in trying to care for our aging mother who either may or may not have Alzheimer’s AND, who drives us both totally INSANE with her passive-aggressive criticism, Devil fearing, enabling/co-dependent blindness of addicted sons and right-wing propaganda influences, it was totally refreshing to end the night on a positive Living Lightly With Others note. I, myself, had just focused my sistEr note on the idea that we post a collaborative list for the GOOD things Mom has taught us, said to us, and represented throughout her life. After all we inherited her feminique sensuality (add partners and positions), culinary courage (plus Sushi and veggie burgers), and Southern belle naivete’ (sans the virginity) . Though we grew up in a small unincorporated town in the Piedmont of North Carolina, mom made sure the 5 of us could explore whatever our interests–music, sculpture, reading, hang-gliding, pole-vault, diving, reading, journalism, both go-go and modern dance, sewing, reading, camping, etc. Just as long as we attended church every Sunday and Wednesday, did our chores, met curfew, helped cook dinner, minded the little ones, washed our feet before going to bed (never mind brushing teeth), then freedom rang.
We must remember the things we love about Stella. Everyone else does. Their pallettes have a different color scheme, lacking shadows and dark spots. We must inject ourselves with humor and optimism or else she’ll leave us all tattered and torn. We are sisters of the truth. Our emptiness is as much a part of life as our fullness. Missing is the one who broke us all in. Too much tobacco and her little brothers STILL SMOKE! Her little sisters hate cigarettes. Dad won’t be at the table this Thanksgiving. Is he better off gone too?
We have not snapped but are broken in places.
Somehow, logging off Vibrant Nation I wound up here on Living Lightly With Others. Do you ever find that path without having looked? I plan to wake up to this post and read it again first thing in the morning with a fresh cup of strong coffee, Half n’ Half NOT milk, and Dixie Crystal or some other REAL sugar or maybe a dollop of cream and sourwood honey. Life is indeed better with a little genuine sweetness, and It really doesn’t even take that much.
Liza
What a brave, unvarnished set of reflections you offer – part of the richness of this growing Vibrant community. I must admit, parts of your story sound familiar… you deserve every bit of genuine sweetness you find or let you give yourself. I hope I get to keep reading your insights and hard won ability to make smarter choices for yourself out of life’s sometimes worse and worser options
On the wallet and donation – while I could see the “once slapped, twice shy”, it should not hinder people from helping others. There are so many out there who legitimately need others’ help. There will always be those who take simply because they can. Just like a robbery – someone stole from you. That doesn’t mean everyone is a thief.
It would be much better to continue to reach out and make a difference than to shun everyone who needs help because you got taken for ten dollars once. Yes, it makes you wince to have been taken in by the performance. But, would you still feel it was a waste if he had legitimately needed help? You’d probably feel like a hero.
Perhaps if we could all get past weighing our own feelings (how will I feel when I have done this?) and just be compassionate towards others as much as possible, we’d have a much happier life too. I can only think of one instance in two decades of giving where I’ve regretted giving. I’d have lost a lot of happy years if I had stopped simply because of one charlatan.
Besides – in the course of my 50-some years, I’ve found the biggest hurts are not from strangers we’ve helped, but from family. It would seem that those who are closest to us have the ability to hurt us the most.
We’ll continue to reach out to others who need help as we can. We’ve had some health setbacks in the last couple of years (and subsequent financial setbacks that accompany that). From that, I have gained an entirely new perspective on people who need help. After having been on the giving end for so many years, I’ve found myself on the needing end from time to time, and it isn’t too pleasant!
Whether judgment from someone deciding what I did wrong to need the help (nothing – just lived long enough to need it), or having to go without basic needs because there is no help to be found, I have a lot to say for both sides for the giving transaction.
Yep I sure agree about the biggest hurts – and how we can get in the familiar habit of letting it hurt each time it happens. But somehow writing about it seems to be the first step towards change