Taking Responsibility for
Clear Communication
The meaning of our communication is based on the
response we get from the other person. It is pointless
to insist on a meaning that is lost on the listener,
especially when the response you get is entirely
separate from your intent.
In communicating with other
people, what matters more: what we intend to convey, or the
actual response we get? Who is responsible for your
communication? The meaning of your communication is not what you
think it means. The meaning of your communication is its effect.
For example, we might intend to
pay someone a compliment, and if they take it the wrong way,
what can we do about that? Would it make sense to argue that
they should just take it as a compliment and chill out? Perhaps
a better approach is to notice that for them to receive it,
compliments must be delivered differently.
Choice Is Better Than No Choice
If we become conscious of how we
produce responses in other people, we will have additional
choices. If we’re triggering an unintended response, understand
how it happens. The trigger may be as subtle as tone of voice or
a certain facial expression; these non-verbal cues say more than
our words. If the relationship is important, let the other
person know you want to understand what they are getting from
you.
To deal with this more
proactively, you might start by discovering what you do (or
don’t do) that leads to the other person’s your strong
reactions. This isn’t meant to imply that you are doing anything
wrong. It’s only about the response you get: use it as feedback.
Once you “own” how you influence an interaction, you can decide
to either continue doing the same thing (and hope that the
coworker or the circumstances change), or you can try something
different.
I Said, She Said
Many coworkers get into automatic
"calibrated loops"— similar to how "dysfunction" patterns get
set up in family systems — you say this, and they say that, and
you say... and the next thing you know nobody is listening and
there’s that all-too-familiar feeling again. So, what you can do
is remember your goal, and look for alternative ways to get
there. Does it make sense to wait for them to change, to act
more cooperatively, to notice how inappropriately they are
behaving?
Sharing Power in Communication
Communication, like driving in
traffic, is a cooperative system. Contrary to what you might
expect, the person who has the most flexibility in a
communication situation will generally have the most control
over that situation. How flexible are you? If there’s a behavior
you cannot generate — for whatever reason — there’s probably a
response you won’t be able to elicit from that other person. And
if the meaning of your communication is the response you get,
that behavior might be exactly the one you need to produce.
Try Anything Else
If you’re having a tough time
influencing someone in the direction you want to go, trying
flexing over to their world and first "meet them where they
are." If you’re producing an unintended result, remember your
goal, and then get some feedback about how you are getting that
result. With that feedback, you can plan out different ways to
move with the other person toward your desired outcome.
There’s a saying: when what you’re
doing isn’t working, try anything else. When you maintain a
state of curiosity, you can try doing something — anything —
different, perceive the response, and learn from it. Did you
move toward your goal? Ask for feedback. Keep experimenting.
  
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