F*ck Feelings (8 page)

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Authors: MD Michael Bennett

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In any case, there are ways you can achieve your goal even if you don't have the ability to persuade. One is to follow a commonsense procedure for weighing decisions as if you were the person you wish to persuade. Instead of pushing their emotional buttons, pretend you're a coach or adviser responsible for reviewing all the reasons for or against a decision, taking into account consequences and your clients' values.

Whether you're trying to sell them a car or sobriety, use plainspoken expertise, not flash, to explain the risks and benefits you believe they face. Know the pros and cons well enough that your confidence in your knowledge shines through, and if you still can't close on the sale, you won't feel the urge to keep nudging, or to reproach your own unpersuasiveness, since you'll know you did your best.

So don't despair if you can't summon persuasive powers. You may long for the unique pleasure and power of being a wheeler-dealer or orator, but assuming that your main interest is in getting the job done, there are other ways to do it and feel good about your accomplishments instead of desperate about what you just can't do.

Quick Diagnosis

Here's what you wish for and can't have:

• To get people other than your mother to pay attention and take pleasure in listening to you

• To get people to do what you want for financial, sexual, or generally selfish benefit

• To win people over with the natural charisma you do not have

Here's what you can aim for and actually achieve:

• Offer people a fair summary of the pros and cons of a possible decision

• Persuade people that you're more interested in enhancing their choices than imposing your own opinion

• Be a knowledgeable, good listener

• Keep your emotions to yourself

• Take satisfaction in meeting your own standards rather than moving others

Here's how you can do it:

• Develop due diligence procedures for listing the risks and rewards of any decision, including purchases, partnerships, and partying

• Do your research and gather information about decisions you wish to influence

• Present yourself in terms of your interest in finding a good solution, rather than forming a close relationship or winning a contest

• Learn to present information accurately and concisely, even if you're boring and not funny

• Judge yourself on whether you've followed your procedures, rather than on whether someone did what you wanted them to do

Your Script

Here's what to say to yourself or a skeptical relative, client, or customer when you're trying, and failing, to sell your point.

Dear [Me/Suspicious Client/Stubborn Relative],

Regardless of my own opinion, I'd like to help you [make a decision/spend a lot of money/pass an exam/get your head out of your ass] by giving you a brief rundown of the [pros and cons /fact and fiction/details I know backward and forward]. If you happen to have strong [insert emotional noun] about this situation, I hope you will weigh them objectively while considering their likelihood, and add them into your overall equation.

Good versus Bad Things upon Which to Base Your Self-Esteem

Good Things

Bad Things

Sticking with a job you need even though your boss deserves an ass-kicking you can't provide

Quitting and telling your boss to go fuck himself because nobody tells you when you can and can't take a day off to see the new
Fast and Furious
movie

Biting your tongue when you'd rather bite someone's head off

Getting the last word when that pregnant lady tried to steal your seat on the subway

Finishing last, knowing you gave all you had

Being the thinnest woman in your spin class, especially after finding a bike next to the fattest

Taking care of business when you feel like a total loser

Getting higher than Pluto for an entire weekend shift without getting fired or even pulled over

Working your hardest and finishing in a day what used to take you an hour

Having a gold iPhone. It's so shiny!

Standing Up to Bullies

Another big reason people put confidence on their wish list of missing and much-desired attributes is the wish to face down intimidation and humiliation in personal relationships, whether it's from a boss, parent, or spouse. While calling such intimidators “bullies” seems like an awkward thing to do once you've graduated beyond the school bus and playground, the title still seems fitting even if in adulthood the wedgies and swirlies are strictly psychological.

No matter how old you are, when someone insults and intimidates you, you think long and hard, over and over, about what you could have said or done in response. Unless you can also think of how to make a time machine, however, this mental exercise just makes you feel more helpless and less prepared for next time.

Like any animal under attack, you may respond instinctively and say or do something before you have a chance to think. For instance, you may go out of your way not to show fear because it might expose weakness and encourage further attacks, or you feel responsible for defending yourself if you're criticized for something you didn't do. In any case, being bullied makes you yearn for strength, verbal ability, and  . . . confidence! And probably a gym membership.

The fact is, however, that many people get relatively inarticulate when they're anxious, and very few people are good at the art of speaking up in the face of authority without getting into trouble. Nevertheless, they imagine they could stand up for themselves if they had more self-esteem, like the movie hero responding with a condescending smile to the bad guy's sneer and pointed gun.

In reality, standing up to intimidation and facing down bullies is a bad goal. It would feel delicious if you could do it (which is why we love to watch such scenes on TV), but retaliation carries all the risks of road rage: losing your original purpose and direction and risking injury, guilt, and punishment for the unintended harm you cause. You've got other goals and obligations to pursue, and fighting battles with people you don't like and aren't going to change seldom makes sense, even if they're smaller than you.

The truth is, fighting back isn't the antidote to humiliation and intimidation; it's more often an accelerant. Instead, give thought to values and consequences.

Ask yourself whether the fight is worthwhile and winnable by considering risks and worst-case scenarios and keeping your mouth shut to give yourself time to think. Nobody likes to be bullied or humiliated, but once you're out of the school yard, the consequences for standing up to bullies are much worse than detention and a black eye, like, say, fines and prison.

So strengthen your resolve, not your muscles, and learn to beat bullies by remembering what's important, and that humiliation isn't.

Here are signs that a face down is not a good idea:

• You're not a black belt . . . or you are a black belt

• He's richer, stronger, better connected, and has better lawyers

• You have better things to do, like get through the day and not ruin your life

• You know that your confrontation won't change anything in the long run, except maybe your employment status or the shape of your nose

• You're throwing around terms like “send a message,” “unfair,” “can't let him think that,” etc., and you're not a Blood or Crip

Among the wishes people express when they want to avoid or end humiliation are:

• To be as amusingly insulting as Dorothy Parker and Winston Churchill

• To be as good at verbal self-defense as their bully is at humiliation

• To control anxious or deferential feelings that cause helpless paralysis

• To get someone to back down

Here are three examples:

My neighborhood was a happy place for twenty years until a crazy guy moved next door and posted No Trespassing signs on the fence between us. He accused me of dumping leaves into his yard and glared at my kids, who are careful not to bother him. He would point a video camera at them and my wife whenever they played in the yard. At first I tried to reassure him, but recently I've told him he has to stop, and he's gotten even weirder. The police tell me they can't do anything unless he physically threatens us. My goal is to get him to back off and not have to worry about him all the time.

My boss is often nasty and demeaning, though he thinks he's just being professional. He'll call me out during a meeting because something wasn't done, even though he either didn't tell me he wanted it or didn't give me enough time. If I protest, he treats it like I'm giving him excuses or he just changes the subject. When I've tried to discuss his leadership style with his boss, I get told that's just his way and I shouldn't be so sensitive. I feel trapped and intimidated. My goal is to stop my boss from being abusive.

My husband is a know-it-all who gets overbearing when he's drinking, but never admits it when he's sober. He's a good provider, and I don't want to break up our family, but we all tiptoe around him when he starts to drink, and it's oppressive living with him. My goal is to figure out how to stand up to him so I don't have to feel like a mouse.

Sadly, not all protest is effective, and if you've witnessed most recent American political protests, whether they involve hats with attached tea bags or giant puppets, you know that protest can have unintended consequences, like making you look ridiculous. If this were a fair world, a brave protest would expose every bully to appropriate ridicule and/or cause him/her to reexamine and correct bad behavior. In this world, however, protests often strengthen and empower your enemies, especially if somebody takes your picture.

Your goal then isn't to stand up to trouble, but to determine what, if anything, you can say or do that won't stir up trouble even more. Whether a bully is crazy or just touchy, criticism is more likely to trigger irrational attack rather than thoughtful dialogue.

In the case of a crazy bully, you may have no choice but to accept an ongoing risk of being humiliated, intimidated, harmed, and/or fired and knowing you can't stop it. That said (and your tears wept, and chagrin spat out), think of your other options.

Knowing that you can't reduce these risks should motivate you to look elsewhere to live, work, etc. If you try too hard to fight a battle you can't win, you'll be too worn-out to leave. Instead, if you know the battle is unwinnable, smile politely until you're gone.

Of course, every now and then you'll discover that you actually have more power than you think and the bully's power rests on nothing but hot air and your own fears. Most times this happens, however, you can't celebrate a simple victory by telling the bully to get lost because s/he is stuck in your orbit (close family, neighbor, etc.) and both your celebration and new power must be wielded quietly to encourage good behavior.

It's not fair, but if you've been alive long enough to own books with “F*ck” in the title, you know that not much is. Besides, if it's any consolation, a truly crazy bully doesn't even know why he's coming after you in the first place, because that's the nature of crazy. You can always move on, but he'll always be stuck in his own insanity.

Aside from considering departure options, the other way to protect yourself, especially if a bully is irrational, is to wall off your negative, helpless emotions and feel proud of your ability to make the best of tough situations. Whether you're getting zapped by your boss at a job you can't afford to leave or by a husband under comparable circumstances, stop sharing how you feel and start negotiating, beginning with whatever you're accused of doing wrong.

Talk proudly about whatever you've done right and positively about whatever your bully, if he or she has flashes of reasonableness, does right. Regret disagreement, conflict, or disappointment and express hope that it will get better, without apology or blame. Look confident and stand proud, regardless of how you feel. Build a boundary that lets the bully know that you value his opinion, but still judge yourself by your own standards, which, in this case, you've met. As long as you haven't let fear and anger compromise your behavior, you can disagree without having to defend, persuade, or continue conversations that you think are destructive.

Unfortunately, as you know, many bullies, due to some combination of physical, financial, and psychotic strength, can't be stopped, in which case winning means doing what's necessary to survive until you can get out. To others, it may appear as if you're bowing to intimidation, compromising your principles, and giving in to weakness. What you know, however, is that you have more important priorities
than avoiding humiliation and that you have the strength to tolerate humiliation whenever you think it's necessary.

As long as you haven't let fear and anger compromise your behavior, you can disagree without having to defend, persuade, or continue conversations that you think are destructive. Whether or not your protest is heard, you know where you stand, and you've kept your pride intact.

Quick Diagnosis

Here's what you wish for and can't have:

• Victory over unfair aggression

• A fair outcome (forgive me for using this horrible f-word)

• Freedom from undeserved criticism

• Control over your reputation

• R-E-S-P-E-C-T

Here's what you can aim for and actually achieve:

• Keep your cool under fire

• Learn to choose your battles

• Respect yourself regardless of disrespect from others

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