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Hate drama? A guide to keeping things smooth.

peace is in you

I’ve just wrapped an eventful 10 days.

It started with my being on the receiving end of what felt to be a classist and racist judgment.  The crappy part wasn’t the judgment, but the realization that I hadn’t wanted to get into the situation in the first place but had ignored my intuition to help out a friend.

Then, hours later, at 10:30 pm last Thursday, I realized I had posted the mid-term exam I was giving my students the next morning as their study guide in our electronic classroom and not the actual study guide.  Exhausted from having spent the day grading papers to give back the next day, I realized I had to come up with a new plan for class the next day and rewrite the exam for the next week.

When I arrived at class to tell my students of my epic goof, I took off my jacket and discovered my dress was clinging, thanks to static, to my tights right at my waist line, a great look to show my students who had arrived early to study some more for the exam they were not about to have.

Then, after I broke the exam news to them, I put in the film we were going to watch (it was part of the next class’s plan and so I just moved it up) and when I walked to the back of my amphitheater classroom—a place I never really go—to watch the movie with them, I missed two steps in the dark, crashed into a wall and totally cracked back open an old hairline fracture in my foot.

Are visions of professor of the year dancing in your head?

Then, I traveled for a few days and when I returned home, our internet was out for three days, making my to do list almost impossible.  When we finally fixed it, relinking to the internet from my laptop somehow caused an epic email crash and I spent twelve hours on the phone with Charen and Robert in the Philippines rebuilding most but not all of it.   “I think we have to accept data loss,” Charen said.   There’s a parable in there, right?

In the midst of all of this, Happy had some low moments, as little boys sometimes do, and BF had a birthday that I tried to make sure was still fully celebrated and, of course, the rest of our worlds spinned madly on, not caring whether or not I had internet or email access to keep up.  Because stuff is going to happen in our lives.  We can’t always control that (although sometimes we can).  But we can control how we react to it.  And if we choose to do that, choose to keep stuff as an outside circumstance and not let it become an inside job, then we choose a course for ourselves that is so much healthier and happier.  We build our resistance while practicing perspective.

So, today, I am sharing some thoughts on how to reduce the possibility of stuff/drama/”data loss” in our lives.  Next week, I’ll be back to talk about what to do when the stuff happens so it doesn’t derail you.

Trust your intuition.  We all have it; a deep inner-wisdom that often knows what we should do before the clarity of it even reaches our consciousness.  If your gut is telling you know, even before you can articulate it, take it seriously.  It is when I ignore what I know to be the right thing for ME to do that I end up with regrets.

And a follow-up to thiswhen someone shows you who he is, believe him.  Sometimes, our gut doesn’t know enough about a situation and so we try something out with someone.  And then we realize, “oh, not my person, not a fit.”  Remember that.  Yes, people change.  But you will KNOW if that person has changed; you will see clear proof that she or he has changed.  It will be obvious.  If the person is inviting you back into the fold and you think, “maybe he’s changed” then it’s pretty clear that he hasn’t changed.  The change should be obvious, not a possibility.  It is not that you don’t want to hope for the best in people, it is that you have to insure that you are in the best possible situations for you to give your best to the world.

And another follow-up: do not engage crazy.  If there is someone who is toxic in your life, try to realign the relationship so that it is no longer toxic.  There are different ways to do this: create a finite amount of involvement in the person’s situations, become a super clear communicator, ask for more of what you need.  Whatever you do, find the right balance for keeping your life harmonious.

Watch your own energy.  Have you ever found that your reaction to something is what actually takes it to a whole ‘nother level.  Sure, you didn’t start it, but, boy, aren’t you ready to finish it?  I think it is important to take care of ourselves, but I also think that is possible without hyping things up with our own reactions.  If someone is inappropriate, really gauge what the right boundary setting reaction is and do that without taking it to a level that puts you in a bigger maelstrom.       

Slow down (and don’t multi-task).  Let me tell you how I ended up posting the exam in my electronic classroom instead of the study guide.  It was a cold and snowy week (love my nod to centuries-old fiction?), and Happy and I were both home-bound.  In between playing epic games of Uno, Memory, and Chutes and Ladders and eating snow cream, I wrote the test that was on my to do list for the week.  Then I wrote the study guide.  Then, while playing Chutes and Ladders, I posted the study guide in the electronic space.  Except I didn’t.  And you know why I goofed?  Because I was trying to do two things at once just so I could scratch something off my list.  Do one thing at a time.  And do it slowly.

Keep your perspective.  Don’t make anything dramatic that doesn’t have to be dramatic.  You know what I did when I saw that I posted my exam instead of the study guide.  Laughed.  Outloud and uproariously.  Because, seriously, it wasn’t the end of the world, and it was pretty flipping funny.  Look, I am hopefully changing people’s lives in Body Image class but I am not curing cancer and so while having to write a new test is a pain in the rear end, it’s not devastating.  When you can keep perspective about the size of the problem, you can keep your wits about you.

So, there it is. My starter version for not creating drama or shaking stuff up in your life.  What are your strategies for keeping things smooth(er) in your world?

The reality isn’t what you think it is

we have to change

“I watch reality television because it makes me feel better about myself, and I can just escape reality for a little bit,” my students often tell me.

As they see young adults start a fight in a bar, women break each other down over some man they are in a contrived competition over, or see people make bad choices over and over again in their lives, my students feel vindicated.

“I may not be that rich, but I would never make that decision.”

“I may not be that pretty, but I would never act so foolish.”

I may not have this or that or the other, but at least I’ve got sense, they tell themselves over and over again.

And that, to many people, not just my students, is the primary gift we get from these faux-documentary-ish reality television shows: the ability to believe that while we don’t have the trappings of that pretty life, we at least have these other things going for us.  And those things, we tell ourselves, really are what matter most to us.

But here’s the thing.

If you are sucked into a reality television show and what you feel while you watch it is “Oh, at least, I am not that much of a train wreck,” then I would argue that maybe there is a value conflict going on and maybe it really isn’t that good for your self-esteem at all.

Because when we need to compare ourselves to others to determine our worth, to have it vindicated and articulated, then two things are true:

1.  What the show has going on really does matter to us in some way because we are giving it some of our precious, finite time and our limited energy.  If I give the Kardashians 30 minutes of my time (I am assuming that a Kardashian episode is 30 minutes long; it could very well be longer for all I know) five days a week for 50 weeks a year (assuming you take a little bit of a vacation from the Kardashians at some point in the year), then you have given them 7500 minutes which is 125 hours (and over 5 days of your life) of your time.  I’m sorry but you can’t give away 5 days of your life accidentally without the thing that you are giving it to mattering to you in some way.  So, if you are voting with your time, you are also voting with your values.  You are saying, “This show and its messages matter enough to me that the trade-off is worth it.   It is worth 5 whole days of my life.”

2.  You are on a slippery slope with your self-acceptance.  Because here is the thing: if our ability to feel positively about ourselves is predicated by how we feel about other people and their choices, then we are always vulnerable to how we feel in a moment, what we see at any given time, who we are with at the moment of judgment, etc.  And none of that is rooted in our authenticity, truth, and depth.  At the end of the day, you actually do not feel better about yourself when you say, “At least, I am not that much of a train wreck.”  You actually feel like “all I have going for me is that I haven’t done that- yet.”

When a reality show- or anything or anyone else other than you- is your standard for your worth then you are vulnerable, malleable, dependent on someone else’s failures to articulate or even begin to recognize our own successes.  Our scale, our model, our measure isn’t ours and it doesn’t come from an empowered place.  It comes from an “at least” place and that’s never a place of power.

And so we need to quit fooling ourselves.  If we watch these shows and think, “well, I am better than that,” then we really must quit believing that these shows have no impact on us and are just for fun and we have to face the truth.  We have to come to understand that they are exploiting us by giving us low standards and slippery foundations and we can’t stand on either of those.

I am not saying that every reality show is bad or that I never watch them— I love the talent competition shows like So You Think You Can Dance, The Voice, and Project Runway— but I do know that if you are looking at some of those faux-reality shows to make yourself feel better then you are building your esteem on a house of cards.  Turn off the television and focus on who you are and how you want to be in the world.  Reality TV has destroyed many a life among its stars.  Don’t let it take you down, too.

it comes down to this…

anne lamott

What if I told you that you could only hang out with one friend for the rest of your life?

One friend is all you get to see you through everything—the birth cries and the death cries, the celebrations and the losses, the laughter and the tears.  One friend.

Choose carefully.

And, now, what if I change your understanding of both the rules and the reality of this situation.

What if I tell you that this is really true? Not just a game or a fun dinner time “answer this question” type deal.  There really will be just one person that walks alongside you throughout your whole life.  There is going to be one person there for everything.   And she has already been chosen.

She is you.

Do you treat yourself as well as that friend you chose?  Do you give yourself as much self-respect and patience and care as that friend gives you, as you give that friend?

Do you matter to you as much as much you matter to that friend?

Because the truth is—and, look, I know this is a hard truth, I know it is an uncomfortable truth but both those things do not make this any less true- that, in the end, you will be all that you’ve got.  But way before that, even, you are the only one who is alway with you.  You are the most immediate person you’ve got.

And you should have your own back.

You should believe in you, respect you, care for you, treat yourself well.

You should matter to you.

Because, really, what could be worse than spending the rest of your life with a bully, a mean girl, a troll, an insensitive or disrespectful drag?

I really can’t think of anything.

So, I want you to realize that you are all that you’ve got in any given moment, in every given moment.  Let the truth of that shift something in you.  Let it bring you home.  To you.

We don’t have the kind of time left to keep being mean to ourselves.

We don’t have armored souls that make those barbs not matter.

We don’t have the luxury of doing the type of damage in minutes that will take years, decades, a lifetime to undo.

What we have are these beautiful spirits, longing to be free.  And they can’t be free- really free- until they know that they will be safe in the world.

Make your soul that promise.  Welcome its authenticity into the world.  And then relish in it, make up for lost time, and move forward inspired by your newfound loyalty and reverence.

** I am on the road for a couple days (seeing long-time girlfriends) and so I am reposting this one from March 6, 2013.  I knew that I wanted to post this one after just wrapping up Shine and I couldn’t believe that I am reposting it almost a year to the date it first showed up here!  

10 Things I Loved in February 2014

photo

At the end of each month, I take stock of the previous month.  What went well?  What did I learn?  What brought me a simple joy?  These monthly reports are a way to encourage myself to take delight in the littlest of things.  I find that Ten Things I Loved allows me to always see the silver lining, even when there are hard moments in a month.  And taking joy in the simple things is paramount to how I want to live, making 10 things an invaluable tool for me.  Here’s this month’s simple pleasures.

1.  ACUPUNCTURE.  After a ragging sinus infection in early December, another one hit me in mid-January, requiring two rounds of antibiotics to wipe it out.  Sinus infections are my thing (well, my thing used to be sinus infections, tonsillitis, and bronchitis all at once but I had my tonsils taken out about six years ago, and so now just sinus infections are my things.  Note to self: when the ENT suggests concurrent sinus surgery while he’s taking out your tonsils, perhaps you should give it consideration).  Anyway, I am crazy determined to not have sinus infections be my thing any more so I’ve been on this big wellness kick all February that has many factors (thanks to all of you who offered incredible suggestions and support– from smoothie-ing to oil pulling, I’m giving everything a try!) including acupuncture.  One thing I really like about acupuncture is just the quite hour in a dark room, resting, listening to peaceful music.  I’ll like it even more if I go a period of time without a sinus infection.

Katie stops and smells the roses during Run Big Dream Big IV.

Katie stops and smells the roses during     Run Big Dream Big IV.

 

2.  Run Big Dream Big Kick Off.   Every spring, Circle de Luz supporters, our participants, and some of their family members all run a 5k together.  This year, we are celebrating Run Big Dream Big V.  While the run isn’t until the end of April, we kick-off our training season with a day at Run for Your Life  where all of our girls are fitted for running shoes.  Then, we do a little run/walk workout and finish up with lunch.  It’s always so fun to see the girls pick out their shoes and feel excited about again training for the run.  From year to year, they often remember their times and often try to finish ahead of the past year’s time.  We also use Run Big Dream Big as a fundraiser for Circle de Luz and typically raise about 10% of our yearly operating budget with this fundraiser.  I’ll definitely share more about our work and Run Big Dream Big later this month!

3.  Preschool Mom’s Night Out.  One of the preschool moms arranged a little dinner out for the moms of the kids in our preschool class and it was just great fun. I had to miss the first one because of a big ole’ stack of grading so I was happy to go to this one and get to know these great women.  They are really special and absurdly funny.

4.  Snow!  I am over winter.  Like totally, totally so done that I curse under my breath when I walk outside and I am assaulted by the continuing cold temperatures (I know I am preaching to the choir for most everyone in the US), but I do feel like if we have to put up with unseasonably cold temperatures, we should at least get a little snow so the mid-February 8 inch snow dump was awesome.  BF had to work extra during that time but Happy, Lola, and I had a ball.  And two of us ate snow cream for breakfast.

5.  Childcare Trade Off.  We started trading off Friday night dinner time play dates with another preschool family (one night at each family’s house a month) which affords each set of parents an on the early side, childless dinner once a month.  The boys are thrilled to play and have dinner together at each other’s houses, and the adults are thrilled to have an uninterrupted, non-babysitter rate dinner together.  Win-win.

6.  Kettleworx.  I haven’t been great about strength training of late (and I really like strength training) and so I pulled out a DVD set of Kettlebell workouts and have been doing them several very early mornings a few times a week before my cardio.

7.  Passion. Purpose. Plunge retreats.  I love these retreats/sessions, and I am so glad that I introduced a 90 minute option this year.  One client and I are working together 90 minutes every month as she transitions into a new professional life for herself.  I love seeing people very deliberately create the life they most want to be living and it is my great honor to have the chance to support those efforts!

8.  Family movie night.  We decided to try and make the last Friday of every month family movie night (barring no other activities going on) and started this month with a family viewing of Mary Poppins.  I had never seen it before and did really love it (except it was crazy long- just under 2.5 hours!).  Now, Happy and I are singing along to the soundtrack as we drive around town.

9.  Three Tales of My Father’s Dragon.   Oh my goodness- what a great trilogy to read to your little one.  Happy and I love these tales of Elmer and Boris the Baby Dragon.

10.  The Husband’s Secret.  I really loved What Alice Forgot and The Hypnotist’s Love Story by Liane Moriarty so I was excited to pick this one and while it is much heavier than the other two books, it is pretty riveting. I just had to know how this story was going to turn out.

So, what did you love in February?

Upcoming Workshop: Spark Your Systems!

begin with intention

Are you loaded with inspiration but dogged by organization?

Is your greatest limiting factor not your ideas but your execution?

Are you ready to create the world of your imagining but needs the tools, systems, and approach that will help you get there?

Then Spark Your Systems is just what you need!

In this workshop, we’ll examine how you can organize your life for inspiration and efficiency.  We’ll make sure that you have room for both your dreams and your responsibilities.  And you’ll design a system for managing your life while incorporating your dreams-and you’ll put that system into place during the workshop.  Participants will leave with clarity about their priorities and passions and with a system in place to help them embrace and achieve more of what they want in their lives.

Dates:  

Spark Your Systems (in person) Wednesday, March 12 9:30 am until 12:30 pm Triple Play Farm in Davidson, NC  $50

Spark Your Systems (virtual) Thursday, March 13 12 to 2 pm EST on your phone   $40

What do past workshop and retreat participants have to say about their experience?

Attending Rosie’s visionSPARK retreat was a fantastic and impactful beginning of the year.  At the retreat I chose a word to embody my upcoming year. I am finding that I think of this word several times per week.  This word comes into play when I am making decisions about how to give of my time and as a result give of and to myself.  I am feeling energized, yet peaceful and calm as I move forward in this very intentional manner.

~Amy Combs

I did a person Passion, Purpose, Plunge retreat with Rosie because I’d attended several of her VisionSPARK events and the outcome was always more than a good feeling. Time spent with Rosie is warm and supportive, but it’s also PRODUCTIVE. I knew I would leave my retreat with a clear action plan, timeline, and clearly articulated goals, not to mention fresh motivation to accomplish them. Rosie quickly and precisely narrows down what someone needs to be successful in personal or professional endeavors and then draws a map for how to get there. A retreat with Rosie was an investment in my success and happiness with immediate and measurable results.

~Michelle Icard

On a crisp cold NC blue sky day, Rosie lit up the room with her warmth and spirit! It was a wonderful experience to listen to her words and to the words of the other women who shared this workshop with me. Rosie has a nurturing touch which guides others to see the real uniqueness that each person has to give to the world. I left with a peacefulness and knowledge of actions that would help me travel through my 2104 journey.

~Laura Mulkeen

Having the opportunity to spend some time intentionally setting my focus for the new year through this workshop was a gift. Not only was the actual workshop time valuable, but the prep time also made me realize that Rosie’s mantra of organizing your thoughts around who you want to ‘be’ (instead of what you will do) will truly ground you in your specific purpose going forward. Having Rosie as our ‘Vision Guidess’ was ideal- she has an intuitive way of knowing exactly how to help you zero in and boil down your thoughts and ideas into that one main important point on which you will focus. Would highly recommend this workshop!

~Donna Scott

Shine Day 11: Take away the conditions

shine-big

What do you want more of in your life?  I love to ask- of friends, retreat clients, workshop participants and even here on the blog.

I want more laughter in my life. 

I want more affection.  

I want more collaboration.

These are just a few of the answers I have heard to that question in the last year.

And here’s the funny thing.  It wasn’t until those things were claimed out loud that the speaker was able to get herself to move to the next place.  To the place where she isn’t just mourning that it’s not there, palpable already in her life, but where she’s consciously asking herself, “What can I do to get more of that very thing I want in my life?”

You know what I’ve noticed about human nature (my own and others).  That we can fairly precisely identify and claim what we want more of in our lives, but that we can sometimes apply conditions to how we might receive it.

Take affection for example.  We identify that we want more affection in our lives.  I don’t know when was the last time I kissed my partner, we might think.  And so we decide that we will deliberately kiss our partner back the next time he or she offers us a kiss.  A start, sure.  But why not just decide I am going to offer a kiss today.

We do this in so many ways– I will be more kind when she is kinder to me.  I will be more generous when I am met with generosity.  I will treat my body well when it has lost five  pounds.

Oh, the conditions.

What if nothing was conditional any longer?  What if how we practice our self-acceptance was by identifying what we want more of in our life and taking the first step to getting it by offering it?  If we want laughter, we bring the funny.  Love, we bring the affection.  Collaboration, the magnanimous spirit.  Body acceptance, the peace of process and kindness.

We can create what we most want, but it begins by our deciding to offer that very thing to the world.  What is it that you want more of in your life?  What is keeping you from offering it to yourself and others right now?  How can you begin to offer it today?

 

Shine Day 10: You have a responsibility for your body (and mind and soul)

shine-bigA few years ago, I was speaking at a school about self-acceptance when an audience member raised his hand.

“Doesn’t self-acceptance just breed unhealthiness?  Aren’t you just giving people the right to neglect their bodies when we all know that there is an obesity crisis in this country?”  He asked.

This is a question I hear a lot in various iterations because people honestly believe that body shame is what motivates us to action.  Body shame is what changes our choices.  Body shame is what inspires us to take better care of ourselves.  And, maybe for a few people that’s true but what I have found is that body shame is no motivator.  Body shame is, for many people, a paralyzer.

Self-acceptance is not saying that we have no room to grow or change anywhere—whether we are talking about our parenting approach, education level, or physical or emotional wellbeing.  Self-acceptance is rooted in our decision to not have an adversarial relationship with ourselves, and it is practiced by understanding that we do not have to be different to have worth.  We have worth simply because we exist.

That said, to get the most of life, to really enjoy what life has to offer, we have a responsibility for our total wellbeing.  And by total wellbeing, I don’t mean what we look like.  I mean how we feel emotionally, how we grow intellectually, where we feel connected spiritually, and how we feel and function physically.  It is not that we need to LOOK different in order to be healthy.  It is that we need to be making choices that empower us to do what we want to do in this world.  Some of those choices are about getting enough rest. Some of those choices are about how we refill our well.  Some of those choices are about how we fuel and move our body.

What I have seen in my world is that the more respect we have for ourselves, the more grace we give ourselves, the more willing we are to make choices that perpetuate feeling good.

We have a responsibility for our bodies, and that responsibility is so much easier to embrace when we have done the work of accepting ourselves.  When we do that work, we fully understand what it is we have to offer the world and we further understand that feeling crappy- emotionally, mentally, spiritually, or physicially- hinders us from giving our gifts to the world and that is far more inspiring than body shame could ever be.

Want a tool to help you honor your emotional, mental, spiritual, and physical wellbeing?  Try writing (and following) a wellness prescription.  

Shine Day 9: Remember beauty is subjective.

shine-bigOn the first day of each new semester, I have my students get into small groups and introduce themselves.  Along with sharing some details about themselves with their classmates, they have to share these two details: what they find emotionally attractive in a person and what they find physically attractive about a person.

After all the groups have completed the exercise, we share our observations with the large group.

What do you find emotionally attractive in a person?  I ask, and hands shoot up.

Humor.  Confidence.  Kindness.  Passion.  Compassion.  A sense of adventure.  Intelligence.  Hard working.  Perseverance.  Selflessness.

The answers come rapid fire.  And easily at least 25 different ideas are shared.

What do you find physically attractive in a person?  I now ask.  When I first asked the groups this question, a silence had fallen over the room.  “Is it okay to say that something catches your eye while in Body Image class,” my students wondered until I told them that it would be silly for us to just pretend that nothing physical ever catches our eye.  And so, relieved by the fact that they aren’t bad people for sometimes being visually stimulated, they share.

Eyes.  Lips.  Chins.  Hands.  Curly hair.  Big eyes.  Full brows.  Dimples.  Cheekbones.  Dark hair.  Red hair.  Light hair.  Facial hair.  Jawbones.  Tall.  Short.  Wide shoulders. Freckles.  Imperfect teeth.

What are your thoughts about those answers?  I ask.  And there are usually two pretty sudden realizations.

First:  the answers are so different.  Not everyone is attracted to the same thing.  Attraction is so incredibly personal.  And as the class continues to share, there are always people in the class who are struck by the fact that someone else has shared that they love something that he or she detests about him/herself.

“I cannot believe you like freckles,” one student will whisper to someone in her group.  “I hate my freckles!”

“Oh, I love them,” the person will answer.

Second:  The answers almost never includes the beauty standards that we have been fed by the media.  I cannot recall anyone saying I like a tiny waist or strapping musculature.

And my students notice that.

“No one said any of the things we see in the media.”

And that’s both the beauty and irony of this exercise.

The media projects standards to us.  Standards that will keep us on the “chasing beauty standard bus” forever if we buy into them.  Why forever?  Because the standards they feed to us are deliberately unattainable.  It’s not just that less that 5% of US women have the body type reflected in the media (that body type is chosen on purposes because it’s an exclusive body type that most of us cannot attain but will spend mad money in our attempt to attain it).  Then, those very models with that rare body type are airbrushed into something other, something not even real, fully rendering the aspiration impossible to physically achieve.  Because if it is impossible to achieve and, yet, we desire to get as close to it as possible, we get on a consumption bandwagon that keeps us spending and our power small (because our focus is elsewhere, a focus that gives millionaires banking on our insecurities even more money to vacation on).  So we fall in love with the media’s standards for ourselves.  We chase them with fervor and shame.

And, yet, what we want for ourselves is not really what we expect of other people.  What lights our fire is usually purely personal.  It comes straight from our heart, not influenced by what Men’s Health or Vogue told us we should want, but by what our soul tells us is right for us.

Suddenly, we see that what makes someone else beautiful to us is often of our very own creation.  And, yet, we don’t use that standard for ourselves.  We don’t have to be so disparate in how we approach things. We can go on a journey that will allow us to see ourselves the way we see others.

As my students prepare to leave class that day, I encourage them to have this conversation over and over again with their friends.  What are your favorites books, movies, songs?  Who are your favorites actors and actresses?  Who lights your fire?  What do you find emotionally attractive in a person?  What do you find physically attractive in a person?

Ask these questions, I tell them, and realize how incredibly subjective the world is.

So many of us strive to achieve one beauty ideal when people don’t perceive things in the same way.  Everything is so subjective.  It is impossible to please all people with just one aesthetic or sensibility so we should not try to make ourselves over into someone else’s version of ideal.

We chase an ideal because we think it will make us more desirable.  But what we don’t realize is that we don’t need machinations or modifications to be lovable- we simply need to be who we are.  We are already lovable.   If you want to be partnered one day- and you certainly don’t have to want that- what I want you to see is that you don’t have to be any different from who you are right  now for that to happen.  You are perfectly poised to light someone’s fire right now, I say to them.  But the first person’s whose fire you need to light is your own.

The Happy Sheet: walking each other home

 

walking each other home

Shine Day 8: You have to teach people how to treat you.

shine-bigHave you ever noticed one person in your life treat you one way but treat someone else an entirely different way?

“What’s that about?”  We think.

And while there are some caveats, for many people, we treat people in whatever way is easiest for us unless we realize something different is needed.

For many people, the easiest way includes general kindness and respect bestowed to everyone but that’s not true for all people.  Some people’s easiest way is to be an asshole.  Unless they learn that they cannot be.

So, today, we’re talking about setting boundaries, teaching people how to treat you– especially those people we talked about on Wednesday who are taking their crap out on you– so that you don’t have to deal with as much assholery in your life because we all know that’s not fun.

Boundary work is really rooted in this essential truth:  You have to teach people how to treat you.  

Now the thing about setting boundaries is that we never really know when we might need them.  Aunt Edna is sweet as pie 75% of the time but, every now and again, she likes to get in a real zinger.  And while we think that we’ll just deal with it when it happens, the truth is that it is so surprising when it happens, that we are immobilized if we did not bother to prepare for it beforehand.  So today is all about preparation.

What do you sometimes hear from family members, friends, co-workers, etc that results in a little (or big) wound?

“Are you ever going to finish that degree?”

“Isn’t it time to start dying those grays?”

“That baby is five years old; shouldn’t you be rid of the baby fat?”

“Did you really think it was a good idea to wear that to work?”

Now, before we go any further, I want you to take a deep breath and remember those comments are not about you.  If someone feels the need to comment to you about your looks, your station in life, anything, really, it is not about you.  Those comments are a mirror into that person’s life and the challenges he or she has with the issue being mentioned.  I promise.

After you have an idea of the stuff you hear that you don’t want to hear from folks any more, I want you to come up with two comebacks.

#1  The comeback that would most satisfy you if you could just say whatever you wanted to say which might look a little like this:

Your mom:  ”Honey, don’t you think you would just be so much happier if you just lost 20 pounds?”

You:  ”Mom, don’t you mean that you would be so much happier if I just lost 20 pounds?”  or “I would actually be happier if you didn’t always think my body was up for grabs.”

#2  The comeback that you can legitimately stomach giving– one that will set a boundary, one that will teach the person how to treat you, but one that will not send you to the bathroom for the duration of the get-together because you are so nauseous over delivering it.

Your mom:  ”Honey, don’t you think you would just be so much happier if you lost 20 pounds?”

You:  ”I actually don’t think you have to lose weight in order to be happy” or “This isn’t a productive conversation for us to have.”

Sometimes, comeback #1 and comeback #2 are the same but what I have found is that if you are a person who has spent your life receiving these barbs, it is very hard to go from receiving them and not saying a word to really strongly zinging the person the next time he or she says something.  Moreover, a big zinger isn’t the key difference maker.  Just identifying the boundary for the person you are interacting with and letting he or she know it has been crossed and you won’t be quiet anymore usually goes a very long way.  Very rarely does it take more than just a handful of times of setting that boundary before the person leaves you alone and either chooses to deal with his or her own stuff or moves on to, unfortunately, another victim.

Boundary setting is hard, hard work.  But it is important work.  Not just because it teaches other people how to treat us, but because it also shows us that we can take care of ourselves.  And when we begin to understand that, everything changes.