Assertive,
Not Aggressive
By: Hara Estroff Marano
Summary: How to be a force
without using your fists. Assertiveness means standing up for yourself in a
nonaggressive way.
Power is a constant player in interpersonal relationships. And the path to power
is not dominance over others but the ability to speak up for oneself. The key
distinction is the difference between aggression and assertion.
Bullies don’t just pick on anybody. Oh sure, in kindergarten they do.
But very early on, by about the third grade, bullies learn to target their attacks,
singling out specific people to prey on. They engage in a kind of shopping process
to find people they can control.
Research has shown that those who are victimized by bullies radiate a certain
kind of vulnerability. They lack the ability to stand up for themselves. One
reason bullies get away with their abuse of power is that they choose those
who are unable to assert themselves or defend themselves even when picked on.
The tragedy is that no one comes to their aid because the inability to stand
up for oneself makes everybody very uncomfortable. Self-assertion is a basic
skill in life.
Assertiveness means being able to make overtures to other people, to stand up
for oneself in a nonaggressive way, to speak up when others make demands, and
to make suggestions or requests to others in a group.
For some people, assertiveness requires overcoming psychological traits such
as extreme passivity, sensitivity to criticism, anxiety, insecurity and low
self-esteem.
The real first step toward assertiveness is self-confidence. You develop self-confidence
only one way—through the experience of effectiveness in the world. You
have to rack up some successes all your own, in specific domains of experience.
These commonly encompass friendships and other social relationships, academic
or work achievements, appearance or style, the cultivation of physical or athletic
ability, and moral and ethical rectitude. Competence in any domain is not a
given. It takes work at developing skills.
It is also necessary to develop basic communication skills:
• Leading, offering positive suggestion to peers or colleagues (“I
have a fun idea.”)
• Asking questions in a friendly way (“Can I get to speak first
in the next unit meeting?” rather than “How come you never ask me
what I think of our proposal?”)
• Supporting, making explicitly positive statements to peers about ongoing
activities (“Wow, we’ve got a really strong action plan for the
next meeting, don’t we!”)
Above all else, expect that overtures sometimes will be met with failure. It
happens to everyone. The trick is to not shrink into a corner, but to collect
your wits and get right back into the game. It is not the fact of rejection
that distinguishes popular from unpopular people, it is how they deal with rejection.
Whenever a suggestion of yours or a bid for action is met with failure, pick
yourself up, dust yourself off and generate alternative responses. What are
some other things you can say the next time that happens? The more ways of responding
you can come up with, the more successful you will become.
Reprinted from Psychology
Today
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