The walk-in medical clinic was about to close for the day when Susan
Biali got a call from one of her longtime patients. Could the doctor
please hang in a bit longer? The caller was feeling very ill and needed
to see her immediately. An exhausted Biali extended her already
burdensome day and waited for the patient to arrive. Some time later,
the woman sauntered in; she was perfectly fine. She just needed a
prescription refill.
"She totally lied to me," the Vancouver doctor recalls. "Afterwards, I
was so upset that the degree of my reaction troubled me. I'm a general
physician with some training in psychiatry. Yet I couldn't put my finger on exactly why I was so bothered. I thought it was a flaw in myself."
Eventually, she identified what set her off: "You think you're in an
innocuous situation—a typical doctor-patient encounter. But the woman
took complete advantage of my compassion. Then, not only wouldn't she
acknowledge the lie, but she looked at me blankly and demanded, 'Can't
you just move on and give me my prescription?' She made me feel that I
was the problem."
Ever wonder how an encounter goes so quickly awry? Doubt your own
perceptions? Feel thrown totally off balance by another person? Find
yourself acting crazy when you're really a very nice person?
Manipulation comes in many forms: There are whiners. There are bullies.
There are the short-fused. Not to forget the highly judgmental. Or the
out-and-out sociopath.
But they often have one thing in common: Their MO is to provoke, then
make you feel you have no reason to react—and it's all your fault to
begin with! Feeling deeply discounted, even totally powerless, while
having to jettison the original aim of an interaction is a distressing
double whammy of social life—and
a cardinal sign you're dealing with a difficult person. No, it's not
you. It's them. And it's the emotional equivalent of being mowed down by
a hit-and-run driver.
It doesn't take a sociopath; anyone can be difficult in a heartbeat.
"To a great extent, the problem is in the eye of the beholder," says
Topeka, Kansas, psychologist Harriet Lerner, author of the now-classic Dance of Anger and the just-released Relationship Rules.
"We all come into relationships with hot-button issues from our own
past. For one person what's difficult might be dealing with someone
who's judgmental. For another it might be a person who treats you as if
you're invisible." That said, she adds that there are certain qualities
that make people persistently hard to handle—hair-trigger defensiveness
that obliterates the ability to listen, meanness, and a sense of
worthlessness that leads people to bulk up self-esteem by putting down others, just to name a few.
Experience motivates most of us to avoid or minimize interacting with such people. But sometimes that problem person is a sibling, a boss, a coworker. Even your mother. And managing the relationship by distancing yourself or cutting
it off altogether is impossible or undesirable. The goal, in such
cases, is to prepare in advance for an encounter, knowing it will take a
special effort to hold onto your own sense of self, and to stay calm.
Although it is typically disturbing to be in the presence of such
people, remaining composed in the face of unreasonableness helps you
figure out exactly what species of difficulty you're dealing with.
Therein lies your advantage. It allows you to predict the specific
emotional trap being set for you, which is your passport to getting your
own power back.
In the Hothouse at Home vs. Tough at Work
In dealing with a difficult person, the setting is everything.
Handling difficult people at work is not quite the same as coping
with problem people in family life. The goal is to get the work done,
and that requires great caution and considerable strategizing. "It's not
like a marriage, where the dailiness of living will allow you to repair a lot of interactions gone wrong," Lerner observes.
In a marriage, she says, it's often advisable to exit a conversation.
Of course, there are a variety of ways to do that. A common one is to
scream "I hate you" and slam a door behind you. Better, she advises, to
say something like: "I love
you, I want to be here for you, I want to hear your criticisms, but I
cannot listen when you throw them at me rat-a-tat-tat. I need you to
approach me with respect. So let's set up a 15-minute meeting after
breakfast and start over." The difference is clarifying a loving
position versus escalating things further.
The Hostile
Telltale signs: High, sometimes explosive, reactivity. Frequently disagreeable. Cynical. Mistrustful. Does not like to be wrong.
Where you'll find them: Corner offices. The Internet, often under the cloak of anonymity.
Call in the wild: "I am going to come and burn the f**king house down."
Notable Sightings: Mel Gibson. Mike Tyson. Naomi Campbell. Chris Brown. Russell Crowe. Courtney Love.
People very low on the personality dimension of agreeableness
typically express themselves with irritability, hostility, and
noncooperativeness. They have a short fuse and are commonly cynical and
mistrustful. They are not able to look at themselves, and they are
hyperquick to blame. Placating others is not a skill in their
repertoire, nor do they endorse such a possibility. The trouble is their
responses run to the intense side, and their reactivity and intensity
breed more of the same in those who must deal with them, says Lerner.
And so, not only are these people angry but you may be suddenly on the
receiving end of criticism that feels extremely unfair. The hostile
person will not be thinking clearly and is probably not taking in
anything you say. "It takes a great deal of emotional maturity to deal
with someone who is very intense and angry," she notes. "The reactivity
is contagious and you are likely to get reactive yourself."
One common manifestation of hostility, especially in the workplace, is the bully
boss. Such people misuse power. They humiliate you in front of others.
They are verbally abusive. They overcontrol and micromanage. They don't
just differ with you, they do so contemptuously and lob unfair criticism
at you. If bullies are technically competent at the jobs they do, they
feel immune to punishment.
As a result, there tend to be high rates of turnover among their
underlings. In performance-oriented companies, getting rid of bullies
may not be high on the agenda, no matter how much damage they do. Like
bully kids, bully bosses do not see themselves accurately. They often
view themselves as better than others, and they are not sensitive to the
feelings of staffers. They misuse power to deliberately hurt those of
lesser status.
It is possible, and often necessary, to confront a bully directly.
But do so calmly and professionally, and never in public; this is an
activity for behind closed doors. The bully will never back down in
front of an audience. You must declare the bully's behavior
unacceptable, specify exactly what behaviors are at issue—"You may not
demean me in front of my staff or others"—and instruct the bully,
succinctly, on how you wish to be treated. "I need you to support me in
the presence of others. Any issues you have with my work we can discuss
civilly in private."
An all-too-common variant of hostility is passive aggression,
in which the hostility is covert, expressed in nonobvious, underhanded
ways—dragging one's heels on a project, failing to respond to a
meaningful request. It's often difficult to pin down the hostility, but
the effects are usually clear—your goals and dreams
are sabotaged. A colleague briefs you on events but leaves out critical
information you need for getting your job done. Your spouse belittles
you in front of others—and then insists he was "just kidding" as you
seethe with rage and humiliation.
Sarcasm is a common tool of passive aggression. And frustration is a
common response: You may find yourself getting upset and angry but can't
be entirely sure it is justified. Over time, it becomes difficult if
not impossible to trust anything offered by a passive-aggressive
person.
The Rejection-Sensitive
Telltale signs: Constantly scanning for slights real
and imagined. All slights deemed intentional. Becoming unglued at the
hint of disapproval. In extremis, stalking (primarily by males).
Where you'll find them: Your inbox (most likely in
an email demanding to know why you failed to respond to a note,
overture, etc.). Backstage. Poetry readings. Call in the wild: "Are you
annoyed with me for some reason?"
Notable sightings: Marilyn Monroe. Princess Diana. Michael Cartier. Liza Minnelli.
With a hair-trigger reaction to any indication that you don't like
them or, in fact, disagree with them or didn't do what they asked, the
rejection-sensitive walk around with what seems like a perpetual chip on
their shoulder. They interpret everything through the lens "You somehow
disrespect or dislike me." That's difficult, says Duke University
psychologist Mark Leary, because you have to walk on eggshells around
them and make sure that everything you say or do doesn't push the
imaginary button where they feel they're being devalued by you.
Threats lurk everywhere for these people, who are constantly scanning their environment
for signs of being excluded. You didn't call or send an email right
away because you were bogged down in deadlines, and then your eldest was
sent home sick from school? The resulting drop in self-esteem
experienced by the rejection-sensitive begets an overwrought response to
slights real and imagined—all of which are presumed intentional.
They will dredge up evidence, citing lapses in your actions that defy memory.
The irony is that, over time, the irritability, negativity, and
self-doubt of the rejection-sensitive do in fact drive others to avoid
them. And the rejection-sensitive don't act irrationally only in
response to perceived slights; they expect rejection and anticipate it,
and react automatically when reflective and strategic behavior would be
in their better interests.
Rejection or the expectation of it makes them hostile. Their reactive
aggression is more likely to manifest in passive rather than overt
aggression, although stalking behavior is a form of aggression thought
to result from rejection-sensitivity.
Unfortunately, the rejection-sensitive are present in increasing
numbers. Many observers find that the psychological fragility that
underlies rejection-sensitivity is on the rise. Common mood disorders
such as depression
are typically accompanied by hypersensitivity to rejection, and a whole
generation of overpraised children, preoccupied with evaluation, has
grown up and brought its overtuned rejection radar into the workplace as
well as into personal relationships.
Fear
of rejection tends to paralyze the afflicted. In the workplace, it can
keep people from taking on new tasks or new assignments of any kind;
instead they offer a host of irrational explanations for why each new
project or new hire is a bad idea. Such a colleague may be unwilling to
ask for needed help or direction for fear of rejection—and then fault
you for not providing it. Competitive environments bring out the worst
in them.
The Neurotic
Telltale signs: Anxiety. Pessimism. Obstructionism. Naysaying. Shooting down the ideas of others.
Where you'll find them: Online medical chat rooms. Political blogs. Doctors' offices.
Call in the wild: "Yes, but..."
Notable Sightings: Larry David. Woody Allen. Harold Camping. Chicken Little.
What you might experience as a minor frustration is, for the neurotic, a hopeless difficulty. Neuroticism
is typically displayed as unhappiness, anxiety, and ease of emotional
arousal. "These people don't realize they're being difficult," says
Leary. "But they quickly get on other people's nerves. They are
demanding, and they worry about everything. They think they're only
trying to be helpful and not creating problems."
What makes them especially difficult in work environments, he
explains, is that they tend to be obstructionists. "They're so worried
about something going wrong that they disagree with others' ideas. They
are naysayers." And in dredging up so much negativity, they stir up
residual doubts in others and erode confidence in novel ideas and projects.
A hallmark of this type of difficult person is a pessimistic thinking
style, a concern with "what's going to go wrong next in my life?"
Although these people are innocently difficult, says Leary, it's still
hard to deal with them because they are always going to say "Yes,
but..." They'll find the cloud in any silver lining, discourage you from
taking that solo cross-country trip or starting a new business.
It's futile to talk naysayers out of their misery. They are often
immune to outside influence. The best you can aim for is to understand
their perspective without endorsing it: "My experience has been totally
different," for example.
The basic challenge in dealing with difficult people of any stripe is
to remain a calm presence in a highly charged emotional field. "You
have to get your own reactivity down, even if it means deep-breathing to
calm yourself," says Harriet Lerner. "That enables you to listen well
and understand what the other person is saying, and to respond with
clarity, rather than participate in a downward-spiraling conversation."
There's a temptation to write someone off as a difficult person. Resist
it. "Once you label someone as impossible, you are likely to miss all
the good points the person might be making," Lerner observes.
The Egoist
Telltale signs: Own interests come first, last, and
always. Takes everything personally. Unable to compromise, ever. Insists
on being seen as right by everyone.
Where you'll find them: Reality TV shows. Congress. Art school.
Call in the wild: "It's my way or the highway."
Notable sightings: Donald Trump. Kanye West. Chris Christie. Paris Hilton.
Our culture devalues stoicism and rewards overreacting to every little thing, especially on reality TV.
This is a group of people—Leary sees their numbers increasing—whose
ego is far too involved in anything that happens. As a result they take
everything personally. What makes them difficult is their fierce demands
coupled with their inability to compromise. They frequently "lose it."
Mention a problem to them and they immediately assume you are blaming
them. "On top of the tangible problem, they add a layer of symbolism
that makes everything about them," says Leary. "They live their life
according to the symbolic meaning as opposed to solving the problem."
Leary argues that both egoic and egocentric individuals view the
world through a self-centered lens, but the egoic are especially
inclined to respond strongly when their desires are not satisfied.
(Egotism, by contrast, refers to an inflated sense of one's positive
qualities.)
Leary, who has long identified problems of the self, says, "This type
hit me when I saw Congress discussing the debt ceiling. There was so
much posturing—'I have to show everybody I'm right'—rather than movement
toward solving the problem." The egoic person is convinced his ideas
are 100 percent right—and must be seen as right. Further, he feels
entitled to have things happen his way. "A person who is convinced his
perspectives, beliefs, and values are right cannot tolerate any
conciliatory conversations. It's 'my way or no way.' " Politics is not the only home of the egoic. "These people wreck relationships, work, even societies," observes Leary.
There are times, he adds, when anyone can be egoic. "Something pushes
a button and we get ego-involved and lose perspective." But with the
truly egoic, such a response is independent of the stimulus.
With his Duke colleagues, Leary is currently investigating individual
differences in how egoic and hyperegoic people tend to act. "The more
egoic, the more difficult a person becomes."
It's thoroughly natural for people to put their own interests first,
Leary observes. No animal can survive unless it does. "People have
always been egoic about personal well-being," he explains. Today,
however, he sees egoicism on the rise because many traditional
restraints on behavior have been removed.
"It used to be that anger was viewed as a character defect. People
now fly off the handle at the slightest provocation when others disagree
with them. We no longer value the stoicism by which we tried to keep
anger in check." Leary thinks reality TV shows of the past decade have
helped breed egoicism "because they are based on people overreacting to
things that have no or minor consequences for them."
7 Ways to Defuse a Difficult Encounter
Having learned the hard way, Vancouver physician (and PT blogger) Susan Biali offers concrete steps for dealing with unreasonable person.
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Minimize time with problem people. Keep interactions as short as possible.
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Keep it logical. Communications should be fact-based with minimal
details. Don't try to connect and reason with difficult people. Their
response will often only make you more upset.
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Focus on them in conversation. One way to avoid being the
target of demeaning comments, manipulation, or having your words twisted
is to say as little as possible. They are a far safer subject of
conversation than you are.
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Give up the dream that they will one day be the person you wish them
to be. There are people in our lives who have moments when they seem to
be the parent/partner/spouse/friend/whatever
we've always wanted. Yet they end up disappointing or hurting us.
Accepting the person as is can be a remarkable relief.
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Avoid topics that get you into trouble. Before any interaction with a
difficult person, mentally review the topics that invite attack and
make an effort to avoid them. If your in-laws always demean your choice
of career, change the topic immediately if they ask how your work is
going.
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Don't try to get them to see your point of view. Don't try to
explain yourself or get them to empathize with you.They won't. And
you'll just feel worse for trying.
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Create a distraction. Play with a pet if there is one handy. Plan
the interaction around some kind of recreational activity or
entertainment. Or get the other person to do something that absorbs
their attention (taking it off you). Just don't use alcohol as
your distraction of choice. It will only make you more likely to say or
do something that will set you up as a target or make you feel bad
later.
Facebook image: A and N photography/Shutterstock
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