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Knowing your defenses
Recognizing your knee-jerk defenses can help you red-flag them before
damage is done. Check out the list below for a dozen of the most
common defense mechanisms. If you can’t identify with any
of them, “denial” may be your personal number-one.
- Sarcasm
- Rigidity
- Blaming
- Shaming
- Teaching
- Preaching
- Catastrophizing
- Trivializing
- Endless explaining
- Withdrawing into silence
- Loss of humor
- All-or-nothing thinking
Turning red into green
When you feel yourself getting defensive, choose to turn your Red
Zone attitudes into “Green Zone” actions:
- Slow down. Pause. Take a breath or—even
better—take a walk. Deliberately slowing down your physical
and emotional reactions is a sure-fire way to defuse defensiveness.
- Detach. You know what pushes your hot buttons,
so cut off your usual response at the pass. Instead of shooting
a sarcastic comeback, ask a question. Instead of “brain
dumping,” shut up and listen. And, instead of freezing up,
open up and tell others how you feel.
- Stop dissing yourself. Pessimistic thoughts—“I
can’t do this” or “I look like an idiot”—only
make matters worse. Catch yourself when the self-talk turns negative
and consciously make it positive: “I can deal with this”
or “I can take care of myself.” Positive thoughts
really do lead to positive actions.
- Start over. When your personal early warning
system flashes “Danger: Red Zone Ahead,” minimize
the damage and begin again. Give yourself a “do-over”—a
second chance to ditch the defensiveness and move forward into
a friendlier future.
About
the Author
Jim Tamm, a workplace expert specializing in building
collaborative work environments, is vice president of Business
Consultants Network and co-author of Radical Collaboration
(HarperBusiness).
Website:
www.radicalcollaboration.com
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