Sometimes it's the small things that count. I have a client who recently transferred to a
new group with a "mentor" who was making him miserable. In listening to him, the causes and solutions
became clear.
The cause? She raced
along at breakneck speed, such that Michaelangelo or Einstein couldn't have
kept up - and used an exasperated tone of voice when anyone asked a question or
even asked her to slow down. You can
understand his pissossity at the meta-communication that he was an idiot. You can understand why he wanted the basic
respect that he deserved as a highly-regarded professional.
I started by getting him to reframe the situation from anger
to an understanding that this young thing just didn't know how to teach. When he was sure that no sane person would
actually think he's an idiot, he was able to hear that, and shift his energy
from defense to commiseration. Who
doesn't remember what a jerk they were when they were 20-something?
Getting angry at a jerk is usually a "weak" response. Realizing that your respect and integrity will never be diminished, in discerning eyes, by the actions of a jerk gives you the emotional space to take a breath and make a non-attacking response. Truly, emotionally realizing that the jerk is incompetent, not powerful, defangs the attacker in the eyes of your reactive limbic system. This is easier with a hypnotherapy journey, which my client used, but if you devote time to it, you can reprogram your deep heart and soul on your own. [Call me. It's shorter, more fun and more comprehensive if a pro does it with you.]
Then I got him to manage her - with praise. The first time
he thanked her and praised her for her knowledge and thanked her again for her
efforts (all very sincerely), he saw the first smile he'd ever seen on her
face. "She walked away with a
spring in her step," he marveled. A
month later, he has no trouble interacting with her. She will probably continue to not know how to
teach anything – and not be motivated to learn! - but the exasperated bad
manners are gone. In any case, my client
knows how to interpret her bad manners.
Reframing it as her incompetence at
teaching [“these young folks,” he tells himself] allows him to genuinely
praise the things she does well and ignore her incompetence.
His stress level (and all the bad effects that brings) is
way down, so it’s another example of how healing minds heals bodies as well. Call me for a free Getting Unstuck session.
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