By Elayne Savage, PhD
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• maintaining comfortable closeness and distance.
• ways of connecting (some families connect through acts of caring while others connect through anger or nagging!)
• ways of coping with stress.
• respecting needs for privacy and personal space and boundaries.
• celebrations and gift-giving.
Some of you were curious about how these messages might contribute to difficult situations in the workplace, especially around feeling unappreciated, misunderstood and rejected,
I find it’s usually more a matter of not understanding cultural expectations of privacy and space.
For example, what if someone of German or Dutch descent is sharing work space with someone whose family originally came from Japan? German and Dutch houses tend to have thick walls and double hung doors, insuring quiet and privacy. What about doors in Japan? Yes. Paper sliding doors. Can you can see how there night be privacy issues her where one person may be more sensitive to intrusions then the other?
And then we can look for various patterns of abandonment, such as chronic illness or early deaths or sudden moves by parents.
When we did a genogram, one man discovered a pattern of disownings that took different forms throughout the generations. He’d had no idea such occurrences happened in his family. No wonder her felt so unappreciated and unsupported at work.
What Can We Do About This?
–– Work toward developing clear respectful communication, avoiding misunderstandings. Yes, even though I know it can be difficult, I encourage and coach my therapy and workplace consulting clients to practice asking questions to make sure they are clear about someone’s meaning.
These four questions help to achieve clarity if meaning is unclear to you:
“This is what I heard you say ____________________.
Is it what you said?
Is it what you meant?”
–– Try to respect differences rather then feel threatened by them.
–– If a meeting or discussion starts to feel weird or overwhelming, take a “time out” to collect your thoughts. Excuse yourself, saying, “I’ll be back in a moment.” Go down the hall, get a drink of water, take several deep breaths, and regain your composure and balance.
Counting to ten helps a lot. And taking ten slow deep breaths along with the count helps even more. Ten long seconds does a lot toward taking the charge off.
–– Separate the “then’ from the ‘now.” Try to remember to remind yourself that the person in the room with you is not really your Dad or Aunt Sally or Uncle Sam or your brother or sister or teacher or coach.
–– Try to keep one foot out of the quicksand. Stay in the present instead of letting the past swallow you up.
–– By “walking alongside yourself”and mindfully noticing you can be more objective about yourself and the situation. And ‘mindful’ means without judgement.
–– Ask yourself ”Do I want to continue down the same path or do I want to go back to the fork in the road and try out a different road to my goals.”
Changing behavior is pretty hard to do unless you can identify what the behavior is. By “walking alongside yourself” you are objectively noticing, and you can “make a choice to make a change.”
You can begin to notice small changes and learn from them. One of the most important questions you can ask yourself is, “What is different this time?” or “How did I do it differently?”
Let me know if/how I can be helpful to you in this process.
Elayne Savage is the author of ground-breaking relationship books published in 9 languages.
Both books are now available on Kindle!
To order DON'T TAKE IT PERSONALLY! THE ART OF DEALING WITH REJECTION
To order BREATHING ROOM -- CREATING SPACE TO BE A COUPLE
REPRINTING THESE BLOGS
You can use the articles in 'Tips from The Queen of Rejection'® as long as you include an attribution and, whenever possible, a live link to my website. I'd appreciate if you'd notify me where and when the material will appear.
The attribution should include this information: Elayne Savage, PhD is a communication coach, keynote speaker, and trainer, practicing psychotherapist and author of Don't Take It Personally! The Art of Dealing with Rejection and Breathing Room - Creating Space to Be a Couple.
To find out more about my speaking programs, coaching and consultation services visit: //www.QueenofRejection.com or call 510-540-6230 if you or your group can benefit.
Contacting Elayne
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