Stick-Up-for-Yourself Strategies for Women One people-pleasing, overcommitted, boundary-bereft writer gets some coaching on how be more assertive.
The first thing to do, says Randy J. Paterson, PhD, author of The Assertiveness Workbook, is nothing. Or nothing outward, at least. âGo through a week, and donât try to change anything,â says Paterson. âJust record every difficult exchange you have with another person.â
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Documenting the details of the situationâwhat they did, what you did, and which communication style you usedâwill help you become more aware of how youâre presenting yourself in tough situations. Most importantly, it will give you a chance to Monday-morning quarterback constructively. Ask yourself what you would do differently next time to be more effective.
2. Donât go at this backwards
We all know women who emerged from the womb kicking butt and taking names. Theyâre confident, and that confidence allows them to stick up for themselves. Right?
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Wrong! Orânot necessarily. Nicole Kalil, author of Validation Is for Parking: How Women Can Beat the Confidence Con, says one of the most surprising, and inspiring, things she discovered is that the relationship between confidence and assertiveness is more complicated than we tend to think. âSo many people think you need to be confident in order to stand up for yourself.â says Kalil. âBut actually, you need to stand up for yourself and that will help you build confidence.â
âSo, fake it till you make it?â I ask.
âI prefer âChoose it until you become it,ââ she replies.
3. Donât kneecap your sentences
You know what this is. Instead of âThat bothers me,â you say, âThat sort of bothers me a little bit.â Instead of, âI need to reschedule,â you say, âI may need to maybe reschedule, if thatâs okay.â
âWe have a tendency to soften our bolder statements,â says Kalil. âDonât do that. Donât kneecap your sentences.â
Iâm embarrassed to admit it, but I do this, big-time. When Iâm nervous, I enfeeble my sentences with a flood of maybes and a littles and kind ofs. I am Tonya Harding and my sentences are Nancy Kerrigan.
Kalilâs hack to be more assertive is to write out what you want to say beforehand. That way, you can cut the softening words, leaving your sentences lean and muscular, kneecaps fully intact.
4. Never have to say youâre sorry
Okay, weâve come to a pain point for me. I am a pathological apologizer. In fact, Iâm tempted right now to apologize for the Love Story reference I just made.
First of all, Paterson says, letâs forget instances like âIâm so sorry your cat died.â Thatâs not an apology; thatâs empathy. âTake a knife and cut those two apart,â he instructs me. Heâs aces at being assertive, so I do.
Moving on. âThe moment you apologize to someone,â Paterson explains, âyouâre saying âIâm doing something wrong right now.ââ
Since itâs not wrong to assert yourself, itâs not appropriate to apologize for it. Simple as that.
5. Donât wait for the mic drop moment
The most critical thing to remember when speaking up for yourself, Kalil says, is to actually speak. Donât go along with something you donât agree with or donât want to do just because youâre not ready or prepared to issue a rejoinder: âStop waiting for the mic drop moment, the right and perfect thing to say.â
Instead, she suggests having some simple responses in your back pocket. If someone says something insulting or offensive, a simple âI donât agreeâ or âI donât see it that wayâ works well. Or ask questions that make the other person explain themselves and, in the process, hear how theyâre sounding, like âI donât understand. What do you mean by that?â
Remember that clumsily speaking your mind is a helluva lot better than staying silent.
6. Aim at a target
âAssertiveness is about effectiveness, not self-expression,â Paterson says. âThereâs a change you want to take place in your life. Youâre aiming at that change.â To that end, you want to beware of hooks, which are little diversionary tactics that your conversation partner might employ to pull you off track.
So, letâs say youâre telling your husband youâd like him to soak the pot after he cooks oatmeal in it and he replies, âYouâre criticizing me for being messy? Oh, thatâs rich! Have you seen the shower after you use it?â
That shower comment? Itâs a hook! Donât swallow it! If you do, youâll cede control and let your emotions yank you off course. Paterson suggests saying, âWe can talk about the shower later, but right now, the pot.â Ready, aim, fire.
Kalil agrees. âWe donât want to ignore our feelings,â she says, âbut we donât want them to run the show, either.â
7. Let it get awkward. Let people get mad
âOne of the principles of assertiveness training,â Paterson tells me, âis that it will feel unnatural and clunky because it takes you out of your comfort zone.
So, just as it is with squats, if you feel the burn, youâre doing it right.
A little rehearsal in front of the mirror can somewhat lessen the discomfort and make you feel more prepared. But at the end of the day, it will feel weird, and thatâs okay.
Itâs also okay if (or when) people get mad. âWe have been taught as women that we should care a lot about what other people think,â says Kalil. âIt requires a level of courage to risk someone thinking something negative about us.â
Itâs scary to stick up for yourself, she says, for all kinds of reasons âyou donât want to get fired, or lose a friend, or be thought of as a ânasty womanââbut, when you stop and think about it, itâs scarier to be a doormat.
âJust because someone gets mad doesnât mean I shouldâve stayed quiet,â Kalil says.
Paterson agrees. âIf you canât be assertive, you are not in charge of your own life,â he says. âAnd whose life is it, anyway?â
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