Posts Tagged ‘behaving badly’

Why Don’t Grownups Act Like Grownups?

May 21, 2012  |  Posted by Doc Robyn |  No Comments

You don’t have to look very hard to find people behaving badly in just about any walk of life.  I found five stories without even trying (CEOs, Baseball umps, “Regular People 1, Regular People 2, and Athletes).  If you spend more than two seconds on any news site or with the TV on you are bombarded with adults behaving badly.  Granted, it is disproportionally bad behavior that is broadcast because, well, it’s news.

But even in everyday life I see adults engaging in behavior that we shouldn’t even accept from children.  Just yesterday I witnessed an adult in a screaming match with a store employee over a return policy and in the same store saw someone cut in line because they didn’t think the person in front of them was moving fast enough.  What is going on with our society that being a grownup no longer means behaving like one?

This is the problem and how we fix it:

‘Feelings’ has become the new F word while the real f-bomb is dropped without a thought.  I can hardly be in public without having to hear it.  Sitting in traffic with my window open, waiting for a friend in a sushi restaurant, in a stadium trying to enjoy a double-a ball game, I have even heard it in boardrooms.  But say the word feelings or have the audacity to ask someone how they’re feeling and everyone looks at you askance.

I hate to break it to you but those emotional tirades people go on and use the f-bomb (a completely useless word that provides no meaning to the conversation what-so-ever) are driven by feelings.  In most cases, feelings that aren’t understood and that person has no idea how to manage: hence the explosion.

Speaking of not knowing how to manage our feelings – how are we supposed to learn what to do with negative feelings?  Who teaches this stuff?  I mean other than sport psychologists and executive coaches.  It seems that somewhere along the way we have forgotten to teach our young people how to have a disagreement without being rude, disrespectful and throwing a tantrum.  Now we have people who don’t know how to manage anger and disappointment raising children.  Somehow that doesn’t make me feel very good.

Why does it matter?  Well aside from general human decency (which I think is a pretty big issue), knowing how to use productive conflict and engage in a professional disagreement has been shown to lead to greater success.  And success leads to more happiness and higher income.  Need evidence?  See here, here, here and here.

What are we going to do about it?  Well I don’t know about you, but I am on a campaign to show people from junior high through CEOs how to understand what they are feeling and to use language powerfully to move toward resolution rather than epic meltdown.  You can call it organizational development, teambuilding, professional coaching or team psychology.  Whatever label you put on it the bottom line is this – grownups who are able to act like grownups are going to get further in life.  And I am not suggesting people suppress their feelings.  In fact I teach exactly the opposite.  We all can benefit by learning how to express ourselves productively rather than using the volcano method (push it down until the pressure is so great it explodes).

And while we’re at it, if we could tone down the use of the f-bomb it would make it a lot easier to focus on what people are trying to say rather than being distracted by their lack of vocabulary.

What is your most recent experience of someone not acting like a grownup in public? Share it here.

Dr. Robyn Odegaard is the CEO/Owner of the speaking/consulting company Champion Performance Development, the founder of the Stop The Drama! Campaign and author of the book ‘Stop The Drama! The Ultimate Guide to Female Teams’.  She specializes in showing people how to use language powerfully to achieve more from their potential.   You can invite her to give one of her funny, powerful, informative presentations and inquire about her other services at www.ChampPerformance.com and order her book from www.StopTheDramaNow.com

Good Person, Bad Behavior?

July 5, 2011  |  Posted by Doc Robyn |  No Comments

Last week we looked at the power of the mind and how internal dialogue becomes our reality.  But what happens when who you believe you are doesn’t match your actions?  We need to look no further than former New York representative Anthony Weiner or former California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger for extreme examples.  There is no doubt these men believed themselves to be good, upstanding men.  However, their actions did not match that belief.

Everyday people display the same ying-yang behavior.  Most people consider themselves to be honest and truthful.  But think nothing of telling a “white” lie to avoid an uncomfortable situation.  Doing things which are counter to who we believe ourselves to be leads to what psychology calls cognitive dissonance.  In order to alleviate this uncomfortable juxtaposition we justify the behavior as an exception to our own rule.

“I couldn’t very well tell the truth.  That would hurt her feelings and create a huge fight over nothing.”

It might seem like you are doing someone else a favor by saving them the discomfort.  In reality you are actually trying to ease the discomfort of your actions not matching your idea of self.

We know what happens on a large scale from Weiner and Schwarzenegger.  Doing things that don’t match who you believe you are and the person you show to others can cause your world to crumble.  It is hard to say, “That is not who I really am” because actions speak louder than words.  It would be more correct to say, “That is not who I believe myself to be.”

You maybe asking, “What does cognitive dissonance have to do with healthy communication?”  Actually, quite a lot.  If the person you believe yourself to be and lead other people to believe you are is not mirrored in all of your actions team performance will be damaged.  So you must ask yourself, am I honest – always?  Am I a good person – always?  Am I a team player on every occasion?  Do not be too quick to answer those questions yes.  It is all to easy to gloss over times when the answer is no because we are so very good at justifying.

Seeing behavior that doesn’t match the perceived image is easy in someone else.  Don’t wait until you have to try to justify something to others before you notice the things you do that aren’t who you want to be.

Is it possible for good people to engage in bad behavior or does bad behavior indicate a bad person?  Share your thoughts in the comments.

Next week we will take on a lighter topic – How to keep distractions from limiting your productivity.