Secret: Communication is not my strong suit. I donāt like to upset people and I naturally assume that everyone (particularly my husband) can read my mind and know exactly what it is that I want or need. Secret: I like to be right and being wrong isnāt fun. Secret: I work on this every single day and I still fail. Secret: My husband kind of can read my mind and that might be one of the my favorite things about him (as well as another notch on his āheās the only reason sheās even remotely saneā belt). What Iāve learned about communication is that 1). Iām not good at it and 2). This advice really does help.
No More āYouā and No More Blanket Statements
If there are two things I fail at continuously when it comes to communication itās these. I tend to make a lot of āyouā statements, such as āYou werenāt listening,ā and āYou donāt understand,ā and a lot of blanket statements such as, āYou always doā¦.ā And āYou never doā¦.ā. This is not effective communication. This leaves people feeling blamed and defensive and itās a bad idea. Instead, Iām working on turning my āyouā statements into āIā statements. For example, instead of accusing my husband of not listening I say, āI feel that you arenāt listening to me,ā which leaves him open to admit that the game is more interesting than my earlier annoyance with the person who stole my vehicleās emblem off the trunk at the grocery store or to tell me that Iām mistaken. Furthermore, I try hard not to make blanket statements, because he doesnāt always forget this or that, he forgets once and it aggravates me.
Separating the Person from the Situation
Something Iāve learned about communication is that itās more effective when I separate the person from the problem. For example, the person who stole the emblem off my car is stupid (and I will not change my opinion about that…come on, who really does that?). However, when my daughter makes a mess she is not a messy person, she is not a slob; she behaves like a slob. When I remember that itās not about the person but about the situation, it calms me down. After all, Iām not perfect and I do stupid things, but that doesnāt make me a stupid person ā all the time.
Validating Feelings
In parenting, Iāve learned that I have to acknowledge and validate my childrenās feelings or risk eventually pushing them away. I cannot look at my 4-year-old and say, āNo, you are not afraid of the dark, youāre just trying to get out of going to bed on time,ā because Iām telling her that her feelings donāt matter. I have to remember that as illogical as I might find someoneās feelings, I canāt invalidate them. Instead, I look at my daughter and say, āI know the dark can be scary sometimes, but mommy and daddy are in the next room and you are safe.ā If need be, I will one day check for monsters and make a monster-hideout possibility check list we can go through before bed each night ā that hasnāt happened yet, but I like to be prepared.
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