The Tim Ferriss Show - #703: Sheila Heen — How to Master the Difficult Art of Receiving (and Giving) Feedback
Episode Date: November 9, 2023Brought to you by Nordic Naturals Ultimate Omega fish oil, Helix Sleep premium mattresses, and ShipStation shipping software. Sheila Heen has spent the last three decades worki...ng to understand how people can better navigate conflict, with a particular specialty in difficult conversations. She is a founder of Triad Consulting Group, a professor at Harvard Law School, and a co-author of Thanks for the Feedback: The Science and Art of Receiving Feedback Well (even when it’s off base, unfair, poorly delivered, and, frankly, you’re not in the mood), with Douglas Stone, and Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most, with Douglas Stone and Bruce Patton (with a newly updated third edition that was released in August).Sheila and her colleagues at Triad work with leaders and organizations to build their capacity to have the conversations that matter most. Her clients have included Pixar, American Express, the NBA, the Singapore Supreme Court, the Obama White House, and theologians struggling with the nature of truth and God.She is schooled in negotiation daily by her three children. You can find my first conversation with Sheila at tim.blog/SheilaHeen.Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by Nordic Naturals, the #1-selling fish-oil brand in the US! More than 80% of Americans don’t get enough omega-3 fats from their diet. That is a problem because the body can’t produce omega-3s, an important nutrient for cell structure and function. Nordic Naturals solves that problem with their doctor-recommended Ultimate Omega fish-oil formula for heart health, brain function, immune support, and more. Ultimate Omega is made exclusively from 100% wild-caught sardines and anchovies. It’s incredibly pure and fresh with no fishy aftertaste. All Nordic Naturals’ fish-oil products are offered in the triglyceride molecular form—the form naturally found in fish, and the form your body most easily absorbs.Go to Nordic.com and discover why Nordic Naturals is the #1-selling omega-3 brand in the U.S. Use promo code TIM for 20% off your order of Ultimate Omega.*This episode is also brought to you by ShipStation. Do you sell stuff online? Then you know what a pain the shipping process is. ShipStation was created to make your life easier. Whether you’re selling on eBay, Amazon, Shopify, or over 100 other popular selling channels, ShipStation lets you access all of your orders from one simple dashboard, and it works with all of the major shipping carriers, locally and globally, including FedEx, UPS, and USPS. Join the 130,000+ companies that have grown their ecommerce businesses with ShipStation. Tim Ferriss Show listeners get to try ShipStation free for 60 days! Just visit ShipStation.com/Tim!*This episode is also brought to you by Helix Sleep! Helix was selected as the best overall mattress of 2022 by GQ magazine, Wired, and Apartment Therapy. With Helix, there’s a specific mattress to meet each and every body’s unique comfort needs. Just take their quiz—only two minutes to complete—that matches your body type and sleep preferences to the perfect mattress for you. They have a 10-year warranty, and you get to try it out for a hundred nights, risk-free. They’ll even pick it up from you if you don’t love it. And now, Helix is offering 20% off all mattress orders plus two free pillows at HelixSleep.com/Tim.*[07:01] Conversations are the relationship.[08:12] How should we talk about feedback?[11:16] De-escalating the ask.[13:30] Addressing victim-blaming feedback for the new edition of Difficult Conversations.[28:48] How I’ve dealt with reader (and proofreader) feedback.[41:18] Making use of the three types of feedback.[49:05] Received difficult feedback? Phone a friend.[54:36] Discovering a good/bad match early in the dating game.[00:59:30] How I’ve traditionally handled conflict and stress.[1:07:50] The conundrum of feedback’s source.[1:09:03] Three triggered reactions to feedback.[1:12:09] The you plus me combination.[1:20:16] What does resolution look like?[1:22:52] The Gottman Institute.[1:29:35] Coping with a relationship’s unresolvable frictions.[1:33:41] The courtship of Sheila’s sister.[1:37:11] A thirst for vindictiveness and other deal breakers.[1:43:31] Learning from the comfort of our strengths.[1:45:43] Perspective from three positions.[1:47:09] How to extend positive reinforcement.[1:51:26] Giving feedback without starting a fight.[1:55:12] Asking “one thing” questions as a leader.[1:57:43] Are you aware of your need to receive feedback?[2:02:13] Parting thoughts.*For show notes and past guests on The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast.For deals from sponsors of The Tim Ferriss Show, please visit tim.blog/podcast-sponsorsSign up for Tim’s email newsletter (5-Bullet Friday) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissYouTube: youtube.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, Margaret Atwood, Mark Zuckerberg, Peter Thiel, Dr. Gabor Maté, Anne Lamott, Sarah Silverman, Dr. Andrew Huberman, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Optimal, minimal. At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking.
Can I ask you a personal question?
Now would have seemed an appropriate time.
What if I did the opposite?
I'm a cybernetic organism, living tissue over metal endoskeleton.
The Tim Ferriss Show.
Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of
The Tim Ferriss Show. And I'm going to skip the preamble. I'm going to keep it light.
My guest today, my oh my, do we have lots to cover. And I'm excited to dig in. My guest
today is Sheila Heen. This is her second appearance on the podcast. Sheila has spent the last three
decades working to understand how people can better navigate conflict with a particular specialty in difficult
conversations. God knows we need more of that expertise for all of our sakes. She is a founder
of Triad Consulting Group, a professor at Harvard Law School, and a co-author of Thanks for the
Feedback, the science and art of receiving feedback well, even when it's off base, unfair, poorly delivered, and frankly, you're not in the mood,
with Douglas Stone and Difficult Conversations, subtitle How to Discuss What Matters Most,
also with Douglas Stone and Bruce Patton, with a newly updated third edition that was just released
in August. Sheila and her colleagues at Triad work with leaders and organizations to build
their capacity to have the conversations that matter most. Her clients have included Pixar, American Express,
the NBA, the Singapore Supreme Court, maybe we'll talk about that, who knows, the Obama White House,
and theologians struggling with the nature of truth and God. She is schooled in negotiation
daily by her three children. You can find my first and very popular conversation with Sheila
at tim.blog.com. Sheila, nice to see you again. Thanks for making the time.
It's great to see you.
I know last time we spoke at length, I was in the midst of a very challenging chapter
in my personal relationship. And when my team and I reviewed the last conversation we had,
which I always do before a conversation like this,
so went through the entire round one
and there was a line that stood out for all of us
and it might be a paraphrase.
You can feel free to fact check this.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, I can't wait to hear what you're about to say.
Quote, it's not just that we have difficult conversations in our most important relationships.
Those conversations are the relationship. And I've been thinking about this a lot in the sense that
it seems like our most important relationships are defined and steered in large part by how we handle
the difficult conversations, how we handle things
when we are perhaps not our best selves. And to that extent, they are what define a good or a bad
relationship. So I just wanted to share that because it stuck out for everyone who reviewed
the last conversation that we had on the side of my team. How should we talk about, because we did discuss
a lot surrounding difficult conversations and we will edge into a lot of shared territory,
but how should we talk about feedback? For me, when feedback is incoming, part of what I'm doing
is scanning for what's wrong with it. We can circle back to this question because there's a great
set of things that are
typically wrong with the feedback, at least that other people give me. So it's a shift from, I have
to decide whether I agree or disagree and what's wrong with it. Before I decide, let me just
understand it. Let me just understand what they're trying to say. So if we go to what language does
that suggest, you can ask questions in one of two directions.
Feedback always has a past and a future.
So you can either ask more about where it's coming from, say more about what you heard me say, or can you give me an example of that?
Or tell me more about the impact that that had in the exchange. So you're asking questions of curiosity about what is it that you notice that is prompting you to say this to me?
The other direction that you can ask questions in is forward looking.
Where is it going to?
If I were to take your advice, what would I do differently?
What specifically are you suggesting or requesting?
If I'm feeling particularly defensive, that second
set of questions is sometimes easier. If I ask the backward-looking ones, it'll suck me into
an argument about why they misunderstood or misremember or that's not really what happened.
If I just go to, okay, if I were to follow your advice, what would that look like in practice in everyday life? And sometimes
they have an instant reaction and I realize, oh, you're just saying, drop you a note back to say,
I got it. I can do that. If I thought we were talking about, am I responsive in a fully human,
emotional way? You're just saying, just let me know whether you got my note.
You don't have to give me the whole answer, which is, of course, why maybe I'm not responding yet.
Because I'm like, oh, gosh, that's a big question. Let me think about it. I want to give you a good response. And you're just saying, just let me know you got it. You can give me the full response
later. So that's an example of, I now understand what you want. Sometimes a person doesn't know
what they want. But then that centers the conversation
on, okay, so I don't know how to change if you don't know what would tell you that this is better.
There's phrasing from the last conversation we had that came up multiple times, which was
help me understand dot dot dot, which I thought was very skillful because it is basically indirectly pointing the fingers
at yourself, if that makes sense, rather than explain yourself, help me understand, implies
a level of responsibility on the receiver that might help to diffuse things or deescalate
things. If someone giving feedback comes in hot, so the wording might be diplomatic, but the tone
is, listen, fucker, A, B, or C. Yeah. It's amazing how clear that message is.
Any thoughts for either how to deescalate or self-talk that you can use so that the person on the receiving end is just to name the surprise or the, this just came
out of left field. I'm totally knocked off my center. So just saying, wow, okay, sorry, this
is coming out of left field. So I'm just kind of on my back foot. So that you're just naming where
you're at in this moment. And sometimes just naming it can help you find your feet again because you're like,
okay, I've just accurately described where I'm at.
I can be in that space.
And now they know I'm in that space or just saying, okay, I'm feeling a little defensive.
And then you can move to a question, a question that I've been using recently that has helped
just quickly get to the heart of what's going on is, what do you feel like I don't get?
What is it that you feel I really don't get about whatever?
This situation, about how this impacted you, whatever they're trying to tell you that they feel like you're really clueless about, that's often going to cut through the noise.
So let's, if we could, just jump into a real life example and perhaps we could
examine painful feedback from the past.
Your own?
Well, we can talk about my own, but I thought we would, given my job as the inquisitor,
that I would ask about...
That will not protect you, my friend.
I know. It's not the flak jacket I always hope it to be.
Right, I know.
I came into this expecting that I would be opening the kimono per se, but you just finished
the third edition of Difficult Conversations, and you had to contend
with some reader feedback on an example in that book that got large reactions. Could you
elaborate on this? So there were a lot of things that we looked at fresh and rewrote and reworked
and changed about the third edition. And one of the examples that got the biggest and
most consistent negative reaction from readers was an example, a story in the chapter about
shifting from blame to joint contribution. And it's a sexual harassment example. Although it's
told as two characters, all the examples in the book are real or amalgams, but disguised.
That particular example was mine.
And it came from an experience that I had pretty early in my career.
I was in my 20s.
I was sent abroad to work on a project, international project.
It was bringing together consultants from
lots of different places. And simply because my organization was the one that was holding
the funding and in charge of the project in the collaboration, I got named as the team lead.
And I was the youngest person on the team by a good margin. And part of what happened, of course, we're in a very stressful context on site
in a divided ethnic conflict. So the task that we have together, we have to come together,
build a team or set of team relationships that are highly functional and adaptive in the moment
as things unfold. And so the first couple of days are really spent
sorting out sort of how do we connect and how are we going to collaborate together as we
tackle getting ready for the project. Over those first couple of days, things settled down in terms
of people's reactions to me being the team lead. You know, I'm sure their first reaction was like,
really? Because you look like you're still in high school. And I had several
decades of experience, which was fair enough, honestly. There was one guy who was particularly
hostile to the idea and continued to be hostile to the idea. So I decide that the answer for this,
to win him over and sort out whatever's going on with his hostility to my leadership, I'll assign
us a piece of the next day to work on together
and then we'll just have to sort it out.
We'll work on it one-on-one.
So I did that and it worked beautifully.
I soon learned that it had worked a little too well
because he started saying things like,
I feel like in another world, we would have fallen in love.
He was indicating directly and indirectly romantic interest. And I was completely freaked out by
that. So I'd say, oh, you know, I'm married. He said, so am I. What's the problem? And oddly enough,
I felt totally paralyzed by it. And I'm not a shy person. I'm pretty quick to speak up. In fact,
that's some of the feedback I'm getting now, which is I'm a little too quick to speak up.
We can circle back to that. Now I just have the opposite problem.
And I felt like I'm sending the indirect signals and slightly more direct signals that I'm not
interested and it's not stopping. And I'm trying to avoid him, etc. He's always
like right there at any meal. He's right next to me. And so I felt paralyzed because I felt like,
gosh, I have to be sure that I'm right about his intentions, that I'm reading him correctly.
Maybe it's just a cultural difference between us. There was no HR to go to, and it wasn't a hierarchical thing. Some sexual harassment situations are really tough
because it's in hierarchy with a boss. Here, I'm actually in charge. And so the insight for me
was, oh gosh, I don't need to be sure I'm right about his intentions. I just have to describe the impact
that it's having on me, number one. And number two, and the reason it's in the contribution chapter,
is that it suddenly started occurring to me that I might have been sending mixed signals
by accident. In other words, I arranged for us to do this piece of the project together,
and maybe that was signaling interest. And so if I just change
my contribution, so my contribution to the problem was maybe inadvertently seeming like I was reaching
out to give him special attention because I was paying attention to what he was doing to try to
get him in our meetings, to get him engaged, win him over. And the other thing I'm contributing
is I'm not saying directly that I'm not interested. So I'll change those contributions. So that was a big aha
for me. We disguise it, we write it into the book. The reaction that we got was we had one student
of ours who told us when I got to that part, I threw the book across the room, which is not
really the reader reaction you're hoping for. I don't know about you.
What was the explanation behind that, if there was one?
You're blaming the victim. You're blaming the victim. You're saying that she,
the name in the book is Sydney, that Sydney is at fault for her own situation, that she should
deal with it alone. In other words,
she's got to figure out what she needs to change because she got herself into this.
And people also had strong views about what was really going on with him. They had strong
views about what you should do. Like, you should never have this conversation directly. It's
unsafe. You should go to HR. So it was a very clear set of themes in the reaction. By the way, what's your reaction
as you listen? My reaction as I listen is actually more a set of questions. For instance,
I'm very curious if the throw-the-book-across-the-room reaction is mostly American-born and raised readers of a
certain vintage. I'm wondering if that's something you have observed in readers from many other
cultures. I'm also wondering many other ages, because it strikes me as though that may be a
very contemporary industrialized U.S. response or North American response to things,
which is just a hypothesis. But that's what comes to mind for me from a curiosity perspective.
Totally. And what I particularly like about your curiosity is that, like me,
it allows us to locate the problem in them. It's just that you guys are either, and I have this reaction totally
too young. Like I was like, you'll get it once you're in the work world. A big reaction was like,
well, this just can't happen. This should not happen, which I don't disagree with. And it does.
So the goal is what do you do about it? So some people were upset that it was even in the book
because you shouldn't be talking about these things. And It's like, well, it's a book on difficult conversations. So
we want to be tackling the ones that actually happen.
We're not going to choose the easy ones.
We're not going to choose the easy ones. And if we don't have it, people say, well,
what about really hard situations like sexual harassment? You don't address that.
So I agree with you that that reaction was coming partly from, and it has morphed a little bit over the
years in terms of the generational sense of what should happen in the ideal world. I think when
we're in our 20s, as young adults, we come into the world with a strong sense of the way the world
should work. And then we discovered that that's not the way the world works in many situations,
and it's kind of outrageous.
And then we're like, why are we not changing this?
Why are you guys tolerating it?
And this is why revolutions are led by young people.
And I think as I've gotten older, what I'm noticing in myself is that,
okay, I address some things and don't
address others, but I also figure out how to navigate the world as it is. And then those of
us in leadership have been successful in the world as it is. And so we're like, don't worry about it.
You'll be able to navigate it. It's a lot better than when I was your age. But I think that's
partly why we get complacent, because we do see the progress that's been made, but then we can underappreciate the progress still to be made.
I will also say that I want to be fair to the other readers, some of whom were young women from other cultures who have had even more stressful, extreme, horrific experiences. And we're looking for guidance and feeling like
they were being told, well, you're on your own.
I was going to just say, before we unpack some of the macro and also the example that you're
about to give, which I don't want you to lose track of, unless I missed it, you didn't share
how you ultimately addressed the situation.
So I feel like that's a critical piece of the story.
So in the original edition, let's just say, how did you explain how you then handled that very uncomfortable situation?
So part of what was so powerful for me about realizing, oh, actually, there are a couple things that I have done that have probably contributed to this.
And those I have control over.
Those I can change.
And that was a relief.
That was liberating for me.
It was like, oh, okay, well, I can be even clearer about the fact.
And I don't have to know that I'm right about his intentions.
So I pulled him aside and said, hey, by the way, I may not be reading you right at all.
So I'm not saying this is what you intend.
And you have made a number of comments about having a romantic relationship or a personal relationship.
And I think I probably haven't been clear that that's not of interest to me.
I'm enjoying our working relationship.
And that's super fun.
And I think we're doing a great job.
But if I've been unclear, I apologize for that.
And that was kind of the end of it.
You know, we only had another week or so
of work to do together,
but I felt incredibly empowered.
And so therefore, when later readers are saying
you're blaming the victim
and you're saying it's her fault and that she's on her own, I felt really misunderstood because I was like, no, no, no.
We have a whole section of that chapter that's about like it's really important not to blame the victim.
And that a victim seeing some contribution also gives them back some control and power.
Sometimes it's not saying they did
anything wrong. You're not blaming them. They didn't do anything wrong. And it helps them have
a little bit of control over making sure it doesn't happen again, in many cases, which was
how it felt to me. So when we're getting this feedback from readers, I lost sight of what we're
trying to do in a book, which is that we're trying to put in stories that
resonate with people. We think of writing as a conversation with the reader's internal voice.
And if we're doing something that's creating a, wait a minute, that's not true. That's not the
way it was for me, or that's overstated. If we're creating a reaction, it's going to get in the way of the
conversation that we're having because a book is a one-way conversation. So we're trying to
anticipate what readers are wondering about or objecting to or confused by or feel is off base
and then address it right away in the book. So the good news was that we had an example that was
generating a lot of reader reaction that people
were bringing their own experience to. That's good. But the fact that then it tells the story
as if there's one way to handle it when this was a relatively mild version that didn't have power
differentials in the way that many people have faced meant that I suddenly,
because it was my example, was feeling defensive and like, well, you're misunderstanding me.
And so we did an interim fix where we tried to clarify there was no HR,
that this wasn't the only way to handle it. The interim fix totally didn't work.
So it wasn't clear in the original edition that
you did not have HR or some intermediary to go to, or it wasn't sufficiently clear.
Yes, we felt that it was clear. So that's the thing is, we felt that it was incredibly clear
and that other people were misunderstanding us. And we have a long list of all the things that
were wrong with their reactions and understanding. So we tried to get clearer and clearer with the example.
And it didn't work.
It didn't work. It didn't work at all. So what we needed to do, which what we finally did was say,
it's not about my experience, actually. It's about what the readers are bringing to their own life experience and the felt pain that they want
help with. And this example, the way we're telling it is not meeting them where they are at
and is a particular version, which is not universal. So eventually in the third edition,
we took it out. We replaced it with a different example that got to the points we were trying to make with it because we realized that we're just creating more noise than help.
Let me ask a question about that because the situation itself is outside of my personal experience, but receiving feedback on books and revising books is in my personal experience. So I'm very curious,
did you receive strong positive feedback on that particular example from other readers,
or was it pretty uniformly negative or confusion? Or did you also receive an equal amount or comparable amount of positive
feedback from readers? There were a couple of people who came forward to say,
oh, I actually really loved that example. It immediately helped me see situations where,
oh, I feel more empowered. I can see what I
would do differently. I, of course, remember those really clearly because I hung on to them so
tightly, right? They were definitely way outweighed in this case.
And you're raising something that's super common, whether you're a writer or just a human, which is you're criticizing something.
You hate this thing.
But actually, don't you understand, that's the best part of me?
That's what everybody else loves.
And so you get conflicting reader feedback.
Could you say more about that?
The part that other people like about you is that sort of contribution and reclaiming
of agency. Is that what you mean? No, that often the things that we get feedback about
from some people, our reaction is like, okay, well, that's just contradictory because everybody
else is telling me that that's one of the things that they love about me. So talk to me, by the
way, about reader feedback that you get, because I do think it goes into different buckets. Some is just people have different preferences. And so some people love
this part. Some people hate this part or wish it were different. I should say a few things. The
first is that I try to, in the case of reader feedback, which is different from proofreader
feedback, they're very different. Because when I reach out to proofreaders, I know the
sample size. If I reach out to 10 proofreaders, I can look at which responses are positive,
negative, neutral, 10 out of 10. But when you get negative feedback or criticism,
there's a selection bias. If you are operating a customer service hotline, chances are that people
who are thrilled with their experience are not going to be the ones who call in, or they're
going to be far fewer. So it's easy to sometimes perceive that something is being uniformly across
the board criticized when in reality, for instance, this has happened in the podcast where I've talked
about certain things that I've done or said that have come under fire. And then people come out of the woodwork to
say, hey, we are actually the silent majority who think it's great or totally fine, but we're not
the ones who are on Twitter yelling and screaming about it. So I just want to point out that sort
of selection bias that I try to be aware of. I pay more attention to proofreader feedback
generally than I do reader feedback. I pay attention to both. For instance,
I was just giving someone this example last night. The 4-Hour Workweek came out in 2007,
and there was a quote at the head of a chapter from Bill Cosby about breaking the rules that are set for you in
an industry. And thank God that a number of readers pointed out, maybe that should be taken
out for the next printing. And of course, I agreed with that and took it out.
Yeah, we hear it quite differently now.
Yeah, there's no upside to that. Only downside, It detracts from the point I'm trying to make.
And it's a distraction, not an addition. There's really no upside for the reader or for me in
having that in. With proofreaders, and this will tie into the reader feedback, I am sending,
say, a given chapter or chapters to professional writers who are friends of mine,
who ideally have different sensibilities,
also to non-professional writers. So let's just call them lay audience readers.
And I'm generally asking, first and foremost, what do you find confusing? Highlight anything
that is unclear or confusing. Second, highlight if I could only keep 20% of this chapter, what I should absolutely keep.
And then if I had to cut 20%, have to, which 20% would you cut? And my rule with the proofreaders
is if one person among my small selection I've selected for good reasons. If they love it, it stays in. And to take something
out usually requires a pattern. So if more than one person says, take this out, it's slow,
it's confusing, it doesn't pull its own weight, whatever that happens to be, then I take it out.
Those are my three biggest. I mean, if I added one more on, I would say, please
note in the margins or in the document
anywhere your mind starts to wander. So anytime you start thinking about your to-do list or your
email or something else, that's an indication that I'm not building sufficient traction and
momentum in the piece to keep you engaged. And I have to fix that. Those are the things I focus on.
Yeah. The connection is broken between the voice of the book and the reader. Yeah, exactly. It's just not compelling enough. So I pay attention to those
things. And there are some revisions that I've made over time where there's not enough value
and upside to the reader or anyone else to justify a counter argument on my part, right?
For instance, in the four-hour workweek, again, I used the word
retarded at one point. And it's not going to personally offend most people reading it,
but it is outdated. And it just wasn't necessary. It wasn't a critical piece of a story. I could
take it out. I didn't feel like I was compromising the integrity of the writing by taking it out,
so I took it out. But in the case of your example, I would love to know how you
personally feel about it, about the revision and the editing of that. Because, for instance,
as I think about my preparation right now that I am undertaking for a trip starting next week,
where I'm going to be off the grid in some very remote,
in some cases, possibly dangerous environments. I'm going with someone who's former military.
It's a long story that I won't get into, but part of our conversation, largely directed by him,
has been what we should wear, how we should pack, specifically to minimize the likelihood of being a target and different types
of behavior, different types of decision-making that are intended to minimize the likelihood
or reduce the likelihood of bad things happening. And it would be, from my perspective, it would be irresponsible not to have that conversation.
And I'm grateful to have someone on my team who has a lot of experience in these environments.
This is just a way to say, I could say, well, these bad things shouldn't happen, or these
aggressors shouldn't have aggressive behavior, but these things do happen.
They will continue to happen.
And so for me, it's a question of risk mitigation and of assuming some degree of agency so that we don't
feel like a piece of driftwood being thrown around in an unpredictable sea entirely. But how did you
end up feeling about making the revision? And by the way, I'm not saying you should or shouldn't
have made the revision. I'm just curious how it sits with you after the fact.
Mixed, of course.
On the one hand, relieved.
We wrote every different possible version to try to fix it as possible.
And it's just like, it's not serving our purposes.
And it might be too close to home, too personal, so that my sense of it is muddied and we really need to hear the, that it feels to me like a conversation about
all of the ways in which that feels painful and we can feel powerless and stuck, etc.
Feels like an important topic. And it's a conversation that I have with people a few
times a year who come to me to say, I need help with this situation. So I'm mourning a little bit that loss. And I'm at the same time persuaded
the use of that particular example in this context was not helping. So let's just let it go.
And let me think about what I need to learn about my own need to somehow have the particularities of my experience feel heard by readers,
rather than saying the purpose is to bring forward your own. So that's the point here.
And Sheila, you're missing the point. Can we circle to the proofreader feedback, right?
Oh, sure. And also, I asked you to bookmark something that we can come back to or not,
but you mentioned women overseas, maybe not solely women, but who have contended with much more extreme
examples of your situation.
So if we wanted to come back to that, happy to come back to it.
But yes, we can also talk about proofreader feedback.
So however you want to lead us.
Let's go to proofreader feedback. Because one of the things that I really love about how clear you are with your proofreaders
is that you are implicitly letting them know what kind of feedback you're asking for.
Yes.
This is one of the typical mistakes that we make, which is that we say,
hey, could
you take a look at this and give me some feedback? Do you have any feedback for me? It's an incredibly
hard question to answer. Yeah, very ambiguous. Very ambiguous. It's like, how honest should I be?
Should I have prepared, et cetera? And if these people are your friends, well, I choose my friends these days, I would say with one critical leg of the stool being
their ability and eagerness to give me what might be considered difficult feedback. Call my baby
ugly if need be to save me some pain later. But early on, and I'm sorry to interrupt, but just to offer a contrast, early on, I would ask friends of mine to read and give me feedback in just as many words. two other things. But I was not surgical in my request. So they gave me what they inferred I wanted,
which was a pat on the back and a pat on the head. And that's not actually what I was asking for,
but that was my fault. Yes. And I think that's a big thing that I have learned from the feedback
work. When you say my fault, what do you mean?
Well, yeah, I saw, I felt a little resistance there.
They could have, if they wanted to, if they had been more proactive,
they could have asked me to refine.
Or they could have taken a role in teasing out a more precise request.
So I don't want to put it all on me,
but I also fumbled the ball. So they could have picked it up, but I also fumbled it a bit.
I think you're exactly right, which is to have a rich and meaningful feedback conversation,
there's responsibility on both sides. And you're pretty clear and your friends have learned.
The ones who didn't learn didn't make the cut anymore.
So they have learned what you value
in terms of pretty candid coaching and evaluation.
And actually, may I add one more thing?
The people who are best at giving feedback
will actually ask for,
they will sometimes ask for further refinements
in my request.
Yeah, clarification.
Okay, well, when you say this,
is what you're really looking for this or this?
They will drill down until they're like,
yes, I can repeat back exactly what you're asking of me.
Great.
Deadline, next Monday, perfect.
And then they're on it.
Something like that.
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I'm sure you have this experience, which I also have, which is that other people hand me their
manuscripts. This was true two weeks ago. And say, could you take a look at this and give me some
feedback? And I have learned that I need to say more. Like, can you say more about what would be helpful to you at this stage?
And just to put a finer point on it, one of the things that has really helped me is to
understand that there are really three kinds of feedback.
And we need all three over time to learn and grow, but we might need different types at
different times.
And the first is appreciation.
And sometimes with a manuscript at the stage it's at, what you need the first is appreciation. And sometimes with a manuscript
at the stage it's at, what you need to know is like, is there anything here of value?
What do you like here? Because I just need a little encouragement to keep going.
And I think the appreciation plays a huge role in our willingness to stay engaged over time in
the relationship. If I feel like you really see me
and get how hard I'm working or there are things that you like and appreciate about me,
even in the midst of us having some struggle. The second kind is coaching. Coaching is anything
designed to help it be better, help me be better. You're being really clear with your readers,
like, tell me what's confusing.
Coach me on where I'm not being clear.
And coaching, of course, is the big engine for learning and change and improvement.
But you're also actually asking for the third kind of feedback, which is evaluation, like
rate or rank it.
And what you're saying is, there's a standard for what stays and what goes.
Tell me what must stay. Like, it well meets the standard for what stays and what goes. Tell me what must stay.
It well meets the standard for being essential.
Tell me what doesn't make the cut in your view.
And that's actually helpful to me.
So you're actually asking primarily for coaching
and evaluation in your request.
And when people are that clear about what they're looking for,
it's so much easier to respond.
So let me, if I could just bounce off of that a few things. The first is that I will also
frequently not ask someone to check all of those boxes.
Right. Often it's like one thing.
Right. When I'm asking professional writers, especially they have their own deadlines,
they have their own work. Reading my stuff is not their job.
So I'm asking them for a favor.
Very often, I will ask them to just indicate the 20% that has to go or the 20% that has
to stay or just indicate what is unclear or slow, where you start to think about other
things. And I'll make up for
the lightness of that request by adding more people. I'll just have more proofreaders instead
of more requests per proofreader. And I should also say, I want to give credit where credit is
due. So Steven Pressfield, incredible writer in his own right, and has written The War
of Art and many other books, talks about resistance. And he became an informal coach
slash therapist when I was working on fiction for the first time about, let's call it a year ago.
And I sent him some very early drafts and asked him for feedback, being, I think, in some respects, masochistic,
I asked him to just vivisect my work. And his response was, basically, I've read it,
I want to read more, just keep going. And what I gleaned from that was that he
said, that's great, kid. I recognize that you want me to tear this apart and that's not what you need
right now. So I'm actually going to give you the appreciation, not the coaching and evaluation.
I'm going to give you the pat on the back and the kick in the ass just to keep going because
actually that's what you need right now. And he was right. Of course, I'm speculating a lot about his inner experience,
but that's, I think, the intention behind the feedback that he gave me.
So how do people take this framework, the three kinds of feedback, and put it into practice,
I suppose? What are some ways that people might think about carrying that into their day?
They listen to this, they carry it into their day or their week.
One thing that helps is just to be clearer about what you're short on right now or what you're asking someone for.
Or if you're being asked to give feedback, to ask them and maybe not trust their answer. What I hear him saying is,
implicitly, we're speculating,
maybe I think what you just need
is the encouragement to keep going right now.
He could also be thinking,
in the early stages of any fiction,
there are a hundred things wrong with it.
You don't figure out what they are
until you're further down the road
and you are coming back and revising.
So you're just not at the stage that's a good match for specific coaching because you just
need to keep going. Once you see where this arc goes, you'll back up and see and figure out what
needs to change. Who knows? He's got some philosophy in his own head. In terms of getting specific
about things you can do with this framework of
types of feedback, they have different purposes. Easy way to remember them is ACE, A-C-E,
Appreciation, Coaching, and Evaluation. We need all three.
Could you just perhaps spend a little more time differentiating between coaching and evaluation?
Because I could see mixing those up. I could see personally mixing those up.
I think of coaching as part evaluation.
So how should we distinguish those two?
They often get tangled.
And often, I'm very clear that what I'm offering you is coaching.
For reasons that have to do with your personality problems,
you're hearing it as judgment or evaluation, right?
So there's often a mismatch between what the giver thinks they're doing
and what the receiver hears. Yeah, that happens a lot.
And partly that reflects the fact that packed into implicit in any coaching is a little bit
of evaluation. Because if I'm giving you a suggestion on how to do it better,
it suggests that you could be doing it better. And so we hear
that, which hits an identity thing. Okay. So is coaching the what and the how of improving,
whereas the evaluation is basically fail, pass, A plus. It's basically giving someone
a value judgment on their work. Good enough, not good enough.
And then the coaching is, here are the steps to take.
Yeah, so we have some set of standards for whether this manuscript is ready to go.
Is it ready to go out or not?
Standards for performance expectations.
In this role, here's what we would expect from you.
Grades, obviously.
Here's what I'm looking for
in terms of the
quality of your work. So yes, evaluation is rating or ranking against some set of expectations
or standards, how you measure up. So just asking, am I on track for what you expected
from me in this new role? So the question of how is this going in our relationship
is often, how are you feeling about whether this is still exceeding your expectations
or starting to feel wanting? That goes along with a whole bunch of coaching, potentially,
for what I wish you would do. So the two are very closely related, but we have the biggest
emotional reaction to the evaluation part because we hate being judged. It's hard. It's really hard
to feel judged. And so we're quick to hear it in anything. I was looking at some of the prep notes
and one tactic, or maybe it's more of a practice that I'd love for you to describe, is the phone a friend.
Because this seems like a low-risk, high-reward way to cultivate the ability to look at things from multiple perspectives and to receive feedback well. So the supportive mirror, the honest mirror.
Could you describe for folks what the phone a friend means here?
So part of the challenge of receiving feedback is,
as I think I mentioned a little while ago,
when feedback is incoming, formal or informal,
I'm scanning for what's wrong with it.
As human beings, we're very good at wrong spotting. What they're saying isn't true.
That's not exactly how it happened or that in the context that wasn't what was going to help.
Who is giving it to me? There's all kinds of problems. I don't like them. I don't trust them.
I don't want to be like them. They don't know what they're talking about, why I suspect they're
giving it to me. They've got their own agenda for how they want me to change. When and where and
how they gave it to me was outrageous and ridiculous. So if I can come up with what's
wrong with it, then I can safely set it aside and relax and go on with my life.
And the problem with that is that you're always going to be able to find something wrong with the feedback that you get. And it could be 90% wrong, right? But that last 10% might be just
what I need to be thinking about in order to change and grow. So for instance, what they
understood happened and why I did it doesn't make sense. And their suggestion for what to do instead wouldn't work.
However, maybe the 10% is that they're highlighting that this is maybe a bigger problem than I thought it was. I have my own diagnosis and I'll come up with my own solution,
but they're putting something on my plate that maybe wasn't as visible to me before.
So part of the skill of becoming a better receiver is not letting my triggered reaction and my wrong spotting be the
end of the story to throw it all out. But instead, to first work to understand the feedback, then I
can decide and sort what is right about it, what's wrong with it. Now, that's really hard for me to
do by myself for a bunch of reasons, in terms of sort of the challenge to see what the giver means
and the challenge to see myself accurately and all of that. And so I can phone a friend to help. And by the way, I'm going to phone a friend
anyway. When I get upsetting feedback, I'm going to go complain to somebody else about it, right?
Over a glass of wine. And we're going to make a big list about what's wrong with this other person
and all the ways in which they're wrong. So what I can do is I can reach out to somebody I trust,
which I'm going to do anyway. And I'm implicitly asking them to be what we call a supportive mirror, to join me in seeing what's wrong with it.
Because if I'm really devastated by it, I'm not in a place where I can learn anyway.
Like this one thing and this one mistake is the whole story about me, and I'm so knocked off balance.
Or if you're just annoyed enough that you're spun up.
Spun up and rejecting it and pissed off.
Absolutely.
This is just more evidence of what's wrong with them.
Yeah.
So I'm not in a great place and I need somebody else to join me in just getting myself back
to a place where I can maybe hear what might be right about it.
So asking a friend to really two questions, ask you two questions and help you process in two
directions. One is what we're doing naturally, which is be a supportive mirror. Join me in
asking what's wrong with this feedback. Usually we quit there and go home because now we feel
better. And in the meantime, our friend thinking, it's not totally off base.
And so we need to give them permission to then, when we're ready to shift and be what we call an honest mirror.
And to help us see what might be right about it.
What might be legitimate and maybe hard for me to see.
When we have a visual for the supportive mirror,
it's like a gold gilded frame.
Show me my best in flattering light.
They're wrong.
I'm okay.
I'm fabulous.
And we do need that.
It's important not to skip it. And the what might be right about it is more like black mirror.
It's like a black mirror.
The mirror that we often use
is actually,
you know that hand mirror
that you find in barbershops
or hair salons?
Sure.
And the reason,
also a black mirror,
the reason that that,
we use that shape of mirror
is because when the barber,
the hairstylist shows it to you,
they're showing you the back of your head.
Oh, right. When they walk behind you.
Yeah. They spin you around so that you can look in the mirror and see what you can appreciate
what an amazing job they did, but they're actually handing it to you to help you see
something that you can't see by yourself. So being an honest mirror is asking a friend to help you see
what might be right about this feedback. What do you think I should probably hear?
Okay. I definitely encourage people to do this. I mean, I naturally do this with a number of my
close friends, is ask them for that barber spin around, look at the back of the head.
Right. Right. Yeah.
So here's a question that is, it's not directly related, but it's certainly thematically aligned
with what we're talking about in this conversation. Also what we talked about in our last conversation,
things have changed since we last spoke. I am back in the singles arena. And one thing that has struck me is almost no number of dinners every one or two weeks
where everyone's on best behavior allows you to see what people are like in difficult conversations.
Unless it's heavily engineered, it's unlikely to come up organically.
Unless, who knows,
the waiter spills tomato juice on her dress and she freaks out and smashes a glass on the floor
and starts yelling at people. Okay, fine. You're like, well, thanks for the clarity.
I haven't yet architected something like that, but I am curious to know,
and I'll give a counterexample, actually. I'm not going to name names, but I was out to dinner with someone I know who last I saw him was actually, he was single, then decided he wanted to
find a partner and basically made a commitment. He had a one pager. He would show each person on
a date and he'd be like, what do you think of this one pager? This is what I'm looking for.
Oh my gosh. What is on the one pager? We have to know.
I don't want to dox him, but a lot of women opted, nothing crazy, but he wants a lot of kids as an
example. And a lot of women opted out and he's like, great, I don't want to waste your time.
And that was that. Some were like, actually, this is very interesting. And if he decided
that he wanted to give someone a serious shot, he would say, I can make a commitment to you,
which is in six months we'll either be engaged or we'll be separated. I won't drag this out for a really long time.
But his approach is then to spend a lot of time with that person, basically try to effectively
move in with them for two or three weeks and see what happens. I don't know if I'm ready to make
the jump to that end of the spectrum, but it does make some sense in so much as kind of fiddling around,
seeing each other intermittently, not really getting a good read of how someone handles
conflict or difficult conversations or life when they are compromised, like run down,
low on sleep. It seems like it could waste a lot of time. And you could just go on these
multi-month boondoggles without either side getting a super clear read of the other.
Do you have any thoughts on how to sort of figure this out sooner? I mean, I certainly have had the experience of, say, going on a week-long trip with someone and you see how they handle their
luggage getting lost or whatever it might be. But are there any other simple or elegant or
obvious approaches that I am just missing where maybe you could suss out a bunch
in a conversation over dinner and I'm just not finding the path of least resistance with
questions that really deliver. Do you have any thoughts about any of this?
First, I'll note the efficiency orientation toward dating.
Yeah.
Well, I'm not getting any younger, right?
I know.
I know.
Seriously.
I mean, I'm not actually saying it's wrong at all, but it's the lens.
Sure.
Right?
Yes.
You've named the lens.
The four-hour.
Guilty as charged.
The four-hour relationship assessment.
Yes.
Courtship.
Exactly.
That's your next book.
Maybe it's fiction.
Got a ways to go before I'll feel remotely qualified to write anything.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think you're exactly right, which is early in the relationship, we're all on our
best behavior, and sometimes not because it's hard, but because we're just excited and appreciate
and flooded with
all of the positive feelings. And so how we handle stress and how we handle conflict
doesn't come up for a while, at least experientially doesn't come up unless,
as you say, you happen to see it because something happens while you're together
with someone else who they don't have
this protective, positive set of feelings about, whether that's because you're traveling together
or something happens at the restaurant. And I would say that that's a big red flag, obviously.
If they freak out and start screaming at the waitstaff. Yes.
Yes. It's funny because sometimes it should freak us out when they don't address it at all, too.
Because that's not actually going to be good in the long term in the relationship.
Because it's like, well, that's great, but now you're not going to say something with me.
So some of it is that it's a topic. I mean, even when we are interviewing
teaching fellows, because we work together in a pretty intense January term where we're together,
you know, from nine to five, six, seven, eight, preparing for the next day, because it's an
intense three-week term, class all day, every day. One of the questions we ask is like, talk to me
about how you experience and handle stress. What stresses you out and what helps you and what doesn't help you. Similarly,
you know, talk to me about how conflict was handled in your family or in your past relationships
in ways that felt right to you or that have felt frustrating or dysfunctional to you. I mean,
it's a really interesting and rewarding topic
of conversation. Whether their espoused theory for what they think they do matches what they
actually do, sometimes they don't exactly. What we think we're doing is not what other people
actually see. However, it at least puts on the table what they think they do. How would you
answer those questions in terms of how you handle conflict and stress
and what helps? How I personally handle conflict and stress? I owe my ex a huge debt of gratitude
in the sense that I think on many levels she was and is very emotionally intelligent, very,
very, very socially intelligent. So I learned a lot through osmosis and through coaching. I was
not always the most enthusiastic recipient of said coaching, but nonetheless.
I'm sorry. I was not realizing that tend to like to address conflict openly. So we may come back to what you mentioned earlier where some people are giving you the feedback that you're too quick to speak up. I do, and this has been consistent for a very long time. We spoke about this in the last conversation, but timing of those conversations matters a lot for me. Late at night after a full day when I'm
getting ready to wind down and I already have issues with an overactive mind and onset insomnia
is not going to generally have the best outcome. So experimenting with other times,
shorter duration, start and end time type of quick check-in clearing conversations is very effective for me
i have found the book getting the love you want and some of the frameworks asking for redos
having a shared language that allows you to i suppose resolve things with shorthand
but agreeing up front that you're going to have that shared
language and those practices, at least for a period of time as an experiment, I think is super
helpful. So I feel like I handle conflict reasonably well. In my household, though,
to answer that part, I would say, hey, this may not be totally fair, but I think it's a decent read. I had one, maybe the term that you would use is a blame absorber in the form of my mom things tended to be taken very personally, tended to
get very heated, very defensive. Why is everyone always ganging up on me or fill in the blank?
And to that extent, I had an easier time interacting with my mom than my dad. But both
of those coping mechanisms or strategies I have found myself
using and neither of them works very well. The deflecting for reasons that are perhaps more
obvious, the blame absorbing, I would say oftentimes because if I want a conversation to end,
if the ask isn't clear, if for instance, I'm being given coaching,
but there are no examples that can be provided and I just see no resolution in sight,
I am inclined to apologize just to make that conversation go away because I don't see it
going anywhere helpful. But then if I find myself doing that repeatedly, and this is true for a lot of
people, not just me, having a stewing resentment that develops because the apologies aren't really,
one could say sincere, one could say not really deserved possibly in some instances, right? It's
a way to take the exit ramp off of this highway of
fruitless conversation or debate or argument. So I would say I did not grow up with great models
in the household. However, I would credit my time in sports and having coaches I really respected with helping me to accept coaching quite easily, including very harsh
kind of old country style feedback. Jersey Gregorick comes to mind, who's this former
world record holder in Olympic weightlifting, who's an incredible coach, incredibly good at
rehab and addressing injuries and his style
of feedback to give you an idea. At one point, we're having a conversation early on
over black tea. This is the intake conversation in California long time ago. He was looking at me
sort of narrowing his eyes as he drank his black tea and he reached across and he kind of
pinched my back, like grab my, almost grabbed my nipple, like gave it a pinch
and he leaned back and he said,
you are too fat.
But the guy has the bona fides, right?
He's a real performer.
He has an excellent track record.
And I was like, okay,
let's call a spade a spade.
Yeah, I could probably do
without like the late night pizza binges
after having maybe one or two glasses of wine that I shouldn't
have had. Yeah. Okay. I could put up a fuss, but this guy is very straight. He's not exaggerating.
His tone is very matter of fact. He's not saying it in some kind of finger wagging,
holier than thou way. It's just a statement of objective fact. So fine. And so I would say that I feel very
fortunate that in a sports capacity, and also why I think mandatory sports are an excellent,
excellent idea for youth in general, I became very comfortable with fast, direct feedback
in those settings. So the way that I navigate conflict and feedback is very context dependent.
And I would say that over the last five years, the way that I am able to metabolize comfortably
feedback and elicit feedback in my intimate relationships or personal relationships,
let's say, has become much closer to what I'm able to do in the sports or skill acquisition arena.
Because I can do that with language and other things as well.
It's not just physical sports.
So that's the long story long, I guess.
I'm happy to keep going though.
If you want to keep me in the hot seat, I kept you in the hot seat for a while.
So certainly if there's more digging we can do, I'm happy to do it.
Well, so one of the things that strikes me, a couple of things that strike me,
one is your experience with him.
With Jersey.
With the coach.
Yeah.
And also the guy that you're going to be traveling with who's coaching you on what to pack and what
to wear and how to stay under the radar.
You are hiring them with that specific job in mind. You're hiring them because
you believe that they have expertise and you are eager to hear their coaching.
It's not always easy to hear, but the role is clear.
The friend is just a friend who happens to come with the benefit of being someone,
A, I really, really respect as an operator in the world, which is important to how I, very relevant to how I receive feedback, who's better than me in so many departments, more skilled than I am, more practiced than I am in so many capacities, that it's very easy for me to receive his feedback, which is also very brief, very understated,
very direct, says it with a smile. It's not just the content, but the tone also is very matter of
fact. So yes, but it's part of my expectation in those relationships that that type of feedback is
something I value very highly. Yeah. And so that's one of the conundrums of feedback is why is it that
sometimes we're so eager for it? And even when it's rude and surprising with the pinch,
we're grateful for it a little faster. We're like, okay, fair, fair. I'll take that on board.
When other times somebody else does the same thing.
But if I run a second date and I'm really into subject and she reached across and pinched me and she was like, wow,
you are too fat.
I don't think I'd take it as well.
Yeah.
No to future dates.
Just cross that off your list.
Very unlikely to happen, but like the exact same feedback, different person, different
place.
Yes.
Yeah.
I would, I would feel very differently about it.
Absolutely.
So this is one of the conundrums, by the way, of feedback, which is, why is it that sometimes I actually, it does feel like a gift and I'm grateful for it.
And other times it's like, yeah, screw you.
We're done.
You're dead to me.
You're dead to me.
And I don't even, we don't even need to finish dinner.
And speaking of sexual harassment, stop pinching my pec.
So we're going to come full circle here.
So I'll maybe make a general observation, and then I want to go back to your parents a little bit too. But the general observation is that one of the things that we start to notice
is that when we have a reaction to feedback, there are sort of three kinds of triggered reactions we
have. So one is what we call a truth trigger. What you're saying isn't right, wouldn't work,
good, bad advice. It's all about evaluating the quality of what the person is telling you
would help you. The second is what we call a relationship trigger, which has everything to do
with who's giving you the feedback, whether you trust them, whether you like them, whether you
think they know what they're talking about, whether they really have your best interests
in mind or their own agenda. We often have a bigger reaction to the who than the what.
And then the third is what we call an identity trigger, which is partly the story we tell about
who we are and whether that feels threatened or not. But also,
in the course of the feedback work, we uncovered some evidence that suggests that in terms of
sensitivity to feedback, how upset we get and how long it takes us to recover, that can vary by up
to 3,000%. Can you say that one more time? who's the problem, which one of us is the problem, and which one of us needs to change in many cases, that how long it takes us to recover can vary by up to 3,000%. And so that
is just the way we're wired. Some of that is past experience, something around trauma that gets
tripped, that changes your sensitivity. So part of the challenge is understanding, like, I am having a triggered reaction to what's happening, whether that's feedback or conflict.
And in what ways is that making it harder for me to hear what might be right about what you're saying and see what's important. So to circle all the way back around to the dating question,
part of what you're trying to figure out when you're dating is, well, who are you? What's different or cool and or complimentary about this new person that I'm getting to know a little bit?
And it's really hard in the wake of a breakup because the baseline that you're comparing to
is someone that you know incredibly well and have a ton of history.
And it's really hard to close that gap when that person is the baseline.
I'm curious about your reactions to that.
Another question is, who am I in this relationship as it's starting to develop?
Do I like the way that I am in this relationship?
That's a big one for me.
The way I'm showing up?
Yeah. Right. Does this person help me to be a better version of myself? Or is this person sort of
summoning the demons of my lesser self? Yeah, exactly.
That's a real thing.
It's a real thing. And I'll name the third thing and then we'll come back to this thing,
which is just, okay, what's the you plus me combination? How authentic and honest are we being with each other?
Do I know what to expect?
Do I know how you feel?
Do you know how I feel, et cetera?
And how do we handle the inevitable friction that we're going to have?
Because in any combination of two people, you've got lots of things that are complementary
and some things that are going to have some friction just because you have really different
preferences and habits and interests and whatever.
And in how we handle that,
does it bring out the better part of me
or the worst part of me and vice versa?
And does it feel fair also?
Or does it feel like one of us
is always the one who has to apologize or to change?
And so say a little bit more about
bringing out the better parts of you
and the worst parts of you. Well, let me preface that by saying I did a Q&A with some of my audience
yesterday. And if my talking about relationship stuff on the podcast could be a Rorschach test,
holy shit, do I get a lot of stuff projected on me. There were so many questions like,
Tim, why can't you hold on to a partner?
Why can't you learn the lesson about this, this, and this? All of these things. And I would just say just briefly that I actually, if you were to talk to my last few exes who I'm still on good
terms with, they would, I think, all say that I'm a really good boyfriend. I'm not perfect, but I talk about this in the same way that I might if I had an expert on language learning on.
I would ask them how I could improve in language learning, even though I think I'm pretty good at
it and have a demonstrated track record. I would still want to be better because I know there's
room for improvement. So I just want to set the table a little bit so that I maybe stem the flow of, Tim, why can't you figure anything out in
relationship type questions in my open Q&A sessions that I do every once in a while.
I'm going to interrupt you for just one second to say you're naming that that's really,
why can't I figure out? Because it's easier for me to see you not figuring something out,
but partly my seeing that is motivated by in my own life. Why can't I figure out what's going
wrong in my own relationship or where I'm stuck? Or it might be, I was stuck for a long time and
gosh, I want to help you, but a lot of it is people vomiting their own stuff.
Totally. It's totally the Rorschach. So I just wanted to...
Yeah.
So yes, yes and yes. And two, I would say that more than almost any of the questions or
criteria you mentioned, the one that gives me a clear signal is,
do I like who I am around this person?
That's it. And some matches work better than others, obviously. Some combinations are better
than others. And sometimes there are massive trade-offs. Maybe you have excellent chemistry
with someone, but it's also so combustible. And the communication is probably sort of handicapped in some way that's
going to be disastrous ultimately, right? So the read that I ask though, because it's something
that I can confirm myself. If I ask a question about someone else, or I make an assumption,
for instance, that based on how they're interacting in a first or second date,
I think they're going
to be really bad at de-escalating conflict. They seem to interrupt and step on top of me a lot.
I might say, it seems like X, and they say, oh, wow, well, you said I hated or loved X. And I've
said, well, actually, no, that's a very exaggerated version of what I just said, but those are not my
words. And getting this taste test, I might infer that they would be bad at de-escalating conflict,
but I can't really know that for sure based on a first date.
Maybe they're just nervous.
Maybe they had too much coffee.
Who knows?
I can assess, though, how I feel, hopefully, with higher fidelity.
I pay attention to that because I think it's a more reliable, knowable, defensible feeling or assessment.
So I do pay a lot of attention to that.
Is someone dredging up all the stuff that I haven't had to deal with for a while?
It's not to say I can easily point to causality.
Maybe there are other things that are happening that day or that week or that month that have set the conditions.
Or do I feel at ease? Are we laughing easily together, etc? Am I feeling good about who I
am with this person is very much at the top of my list. Yeah. And part of what I
love about that is that you're paying attention to what is being called forward.
And years ago, I was in one of those on again, off again, break up, get back together,
terrible relationships that I couldn't quite see my way out of at the time. And my mom, who doesn't tend to say much explicitly, my mom gave lots of generalized
coaching and instruction to us as kids, but she wouldn't tend to comment on something specific
happening in the moment. She'd give general advice. It was up to you to figure out, oh,
this is one of those things. Yeah. One of those things. So she wouldn't, she'd give general advice. It was up to you to figure out, oh, this is one of those things.
Yeah, one of those things.
So she wouldn't, she'd kind of leave it alone in the middle of it.
But in the middle of it, she said to me one night, you know, at this stage, I don't know that it's supposed to be this hard.
And somehow that was like the light bulb that was like, yeah, actually, it's not supposed to be this hard this early.
So I was so appreciative at the time and it was just an observation so i'll also then observe that the focusing on gosh where is this
i'm really enjoying the conversation this is really bringing forward my best self then sits
in tension with and what happens when we get in conflict
because then it doesn't test that sometimes so what's your experience with that well i would
say that there's someone trying to make you feel good it's not that hard if we just go with like
the heteronormative thing for a second right if if a woman laughs at your jokes, you feel great. So it's not hard for a woman to realize that and
play that hand very well. There's someone trying to make you feel good. And then there's just
how you feel from a state perspective, being around them, being exposed to them. And so I would say it doesn't show you the play-by-play of how something
will unfold in conflict. And if someone is over-the-top cheerful all the time, that is
definitely a yellow flag for me because that isn't reality. When the pendulum swings really far in
that towards the mask of everything is always great.
It, in my experience, tends to swing very hard back in the other direction, equally
into the darkness.
So I'm cautious around that.
But I would say if someone can make me feel physiologically calm and relaxed, and that
is a byproduct of their personality, not necessarily the words they say or
how they laugh at my jokes, that that often I think is a foreshadowing of having a more easeful
time in conflict. If I am less activated by the combination of our two personalities in general. When things are heightened, I will
probably be more heightened, but maybe not DEF CON 5, in which case I will just be able to speak,
listen, pause, suggest we table things for a while and come back to them when we're a little
de-escalated more effectively. At least that's how I suppose I'm thinking about it now that I
have to put words to it. And you're reminding me of something that we were talking about
last time and that you've mentioned today as well, which is working something through
to resolution. And I'm curious about what resolution feels like or looks like.
In other words, I think in lots of interactions and relationship,
someone is saying, hey, you did that thing again.
And by the way, I just want to note, I'm annoyed right now because fill in the blank.
Noting it helps me actually say like, and we don't have to talk about it now, but I just needed to name it so
that I don't instead act passive aggressively annoyed about it and pretend I'm not. And then
can we live in that space? Can we hold that space and we don't have to totally unpack it right this
very minute? And sometimes that's enough. You know, it's a chronic thing between us, you know, and I'm just noting it.
And can we live in that space, both of us?
Do we feel equally comfortable or does one of us say, well, now that you've said you're annoyed, we've got to stop everything and spend a couple hours unpacking it.
And what's our preference there?
It's my nightmare.
Yeah. nightmare. Yeah, I mean, I kind of feel like a lot of processing, just like a lot of presentations,
fail from too much information, not too little information, in the sense that,
what does resolution look like to me, if that's the question? I would answer that I think the simplest way to achieve resolution is to have some agreement of what that looks like in a shared
framework,
like something out of one of your books or something from Getting the Love You Want,
where there are actual triage tools that have determined endpoints, right? Whether the endpoint
is, I just want to say this right now, we don't need to address it. I'm not asking for processing, but could we schedule a time to talk about it? Great. Like episode complete, right? I'm not
saying that is the one and only tool. The tool could be some version of nonviolent communication
where when X, Y, and Z happened, I felt this. The story I make around that is this. Could I ask you blank? Having a
clear request and agreement and then episode complete. So I think it's just having a mutual
agreement as to what those exchanges look like. And I mean, a question that I want to ask, because this came up in a
number of places in our last conversation, but we didn't dig into this one piece in particular.
It's related to a line that I'll read, and there are a few different versions of this,
but given Gottman's research, about two-thirds of our conflicts in long-term relationships are not
really resolvable. The task isn't to resolve them once and for all, it's to figure out a way to handle them or navigate them and manage them together
that feels okay and good. To zoom out, I do want to ask you about that. And specifically,
is the only way to figure that out to basically be with someone for six months
or a year? But broadly speaking, I'm wondering what you think of the Gottman Institute. They
get cited all the time because I'm sure people have heard, and I'm going to get the specifics wrong here, but that the founders of the Gottman Institute could look at five minutes of video footage of a couple and with 95 plus percent accuracy predict who would be divorced within the next three years or whatever it might be. People have heard these anecdotes. What is the Gottman Institute and what do you think the strengths and weaknesses are
to the extent that you've been able to glean either of those things?
I think that the work that they're doing is fascinating and additive and there just aren't,
particularly when they started, there weren't people really studying marriage and long-term relationships,
good, bad, and everything in between. So there might be talk about why did things break down,
but you weren't also looking at what was working for other couples. And from my point of view,
of course, they're focused on what's most important, which is that they are inviting
couples in. They're inviting them to talk about a topic that is of course, they're focused on what's most important, which is that they are inviting couples in.
They're inviting them to talk about a topic that is stressful.
So they're inviting them to have a difficult conversation.
And they're hooking them up to heart monitors and all of that. the couple and noticing what correlates with either self-reporting being happily married
and doing that over time. Because sometimes people will self-report being happily married
and then they divorce and then they're going back and saying, well, actually, I wasn't happily
married, which may be revisionist memory, but also maybe it was good enough for me to be happy, but then we weren't talking about
what we needed to talk about. Right. The good was good enough, but the bad wasn't being addressed.
Right. Exactly. The bad wasn't being addressed. So it felt like, well, we never argued about
anything. Well, it's because one of us wasn't speaking up to say the things that were bothering
us because it was good enough. So I think that the work that they're doing is incredibly valuable and it's very descriptive, meaning it's identifying what are the variables.
So, you know, eye rolling is one of the things that is most closely correlated with the relationship fraying and divorce, partly because eye rolling
is just an external indicator of internal, here we go again, I'm not really listening anymore,
what they code as contempt. I'm not aware of a single culture where eye rolling has a positive
indication. Right, right, right. Exactly. Exactly. So what they're doing is that they're identifying and
describing what correlates with a relationship ending or seeming to have staying power.
What I love about that is that it lines up so nicely with the prescriptive work that we do,
the diagnostic and prescriptive work that we do to take a look at,
well, what's really going on that's getting us stuck? Why am I rolling my eyes? Because I feel frustrated, unheard. We're falling back into our usual pattern where I don't expect there to be a
resolution and I'm exhausted by that and I don't know how to get out of it. So it lines up nicely
with our observations about what gets people stuck and
also then what helps. But it gives us insight through another lens about the longer term
impact of that. The fact that about a third of the conflicts tend to be temporal,
you can say that they're resolvable or they just just we move on because we had to decide where to live and
we decided and now we're in a different... Transient.
We're not arguing about that anymore. We needed to figure out how to parent young
children. We no longer have young children. Now we'll just have conflict about how to parent older children.
So...
Two-thirds are just reflective of the particularities of you plus me and where we're going to have some rub.
And the question of are we able to notice that, note it and hold it with some humor and affection for each other in the midst of it, even as we're honest and direct about you're doing that thing
again? And do we feel like I feel seen and heard and it's a relatively balanced sense of, you know,
sometimes you get your way, sometimes I get my way. And we're slowly, it's getting to be a less
loaded topic rather than a more loaded topic. What's your experience with the loaded
topics and eye-rolling maybe? I have very low tolerance for eye-rolling. I just don't have
time for people who behave that way. So that's a one strike you're out kind of situation. There
are too many amazing people in the world and there are too many people who don't do that also. There
are plenty of people who don't engage with that. Let me preface. I'm going to ask a clarifying question about your question, but I will say that I was thinking
about it a bit as you were discussing the Gottman Institute, that I don't say this much,
but I've probably said it a half a dozen times, observing couples at dinners or at weddings,
where I'm like, they will be divorced within three years.
100% accurate thus far.
Yes, yes, yes.
Yeah.
You should just be deputized to let people know.
I don't think it...
Honorary degree from the Gottman Institute.
That's right.
I honestly don't think it takes Poirot or Sherlock Holmes to figure it out.
I mean, to me, a lot of it seems pretty obvious.
But the eye-rolling, making jokes that are at the expense of the other person where
you observe one person laughing who made the joke, the other person clearly not laughing,
any type of emasculating, which can go both ways, but any type of cutting down in a group environment
seems so obviously a recipe for disaster. But when you say the loaded topics
or how I relate to that, could you phrase that a different way? What do you mean by that?
The topics that are chronic irritations between us or differences, and then we make meaning out
of that. The fact that you know this drives me crazy
and yet you still continue to do it.
Or this is something we disagree about
and it's still not feeling settled or good.
Yeah, I suppose there are different, of course,
different species of chronic unresolved
or maybe unresolvable friction.
I would say that I, certainly in my last
handful of relationships, it's not like I've had a ton. I mean, I've had a few long relationships.
We come to a truce, I would say, on a lot of those things if we can kind of laugh at them
together. And sometimes they drive one person or the other crazy, but there are these sort of manageable differences that can be more often than not laughed about.
I would say for me as someone who has always battled chronic fatigue, and I do think that
could be explained partly by multiple documented infections with Lyme disease.
But there are, I'm sure, other contributing factors.
The problem for me is not generally the problem, unless somebody really betrays trust or something
like that and does something that from the outside would be considered terrible, clearly
terrible.
I would put up with more of that when I was very young,
like a lot of people. The exciting person was worth all sorts of drama. I'm just no longer
at that place in my life. I don't deal with those types of situations really. But I would say the
problem for me is frequently not the problem itself, the situation that is sort of under
discussion. It's the method of discussion and the duration of discussion.
So for me, if constant processing becomes a defining feature of the relationship,
that is a meta issue for me that is very difficult to metabolize, which doesn't mean I don't talk about problems. It's just like we should have a toolkit that allows us to, and also a degree of
independent resilience and interpersonal resilience,
whereby it's like, if someone dropped a piece of gum on the floor and they don't do it all the
time, just pick it up and throw it out. It's not a big deal.
Right. Accommodate the other person.
Does not require a conversation. So I would say that for me, most of the issues,
at least those that are coming to mind right now, are not big in and of themselves. But if the
discussion ends up feeling like it's just going in circles upon circles upon circles,
then I do struggle with it. That I struggle with, which is certainly not unique to me.
Every couple I know has some version of this. But certainly my hope is that with someone I'm with long-term, the majority of time,
it does not feel like heavy lifting. Like your mom said to you, like at this point,
I'm not sure it should be this hard or something like that. And the couples I've talked to who I
really admire who have been together 15, 20 plus years generally all come back with some version of that. It shouldn't be hard all the
time. However, I find them all very difficult to model because almost without exception,
they met when they were very young. Neither person had anything. They were young and stupid and
loving life. And they met through complete luck of the draw circumstance, it would seem,
oftentimes very early. And sometimes it's like high school or college.
And their lived experience is just very different from mine.
Yeah, right. My life doesn't lend itself to as much of that now as it would when I was 16, 17, 18, 20, early 20s.
So I'm not sure how to model what they've achieved, in other words.
Part of what you're making me think about is a conversation that I had with my youngest sister,
who I got married young. I mean, I look back now and I'm like,
why did I think I had any business getting married at 26? So I'm one of
those people who have been married forever. And I think my husband, John, I grew up together
in so many ways. My youngest sister got married at 37, 37, 38. And when she met her husband, well, at first she friend-zoned him and he wasn't a contender.
And then suddenly she had this epiphany of like, oh, the right person is standing right in front of me.
He was like, I can wait.
I have the patience of an insect as one of the praying mantis will wait.
That's right.
That's right. That's right.
We actually commissioned a custom song for their wedding, and it was all about Stacey's big epiphany and how patient Dan had been.
I know you will come around.
Good for Dan.
Yeah, exactly.
Good for both of them, I guess. Good for both of them. And in real time, it didn't take that long. It felt like forever to him.
But he then proposed quite quickly.
So it was, my parents were visiting.
My sister also lives in Boston.
And she left the room and he suddenly turned to them and said,
I just wanted to let you know how much I am in love
with your daughter and I want to ask her to marry me and spend the rest of my life with her.
And my mother's like, well, I have some follow-up questions. My father's like, be quiet. He said to
me later, I wanted to leap across the island and kiss him. Yes, we love you. We think you're
awesome. Which reflects something about each of my you. We think you're awesome. Which, you
know, reflects something about each of my parents. But Stacey, in the meantime, was out of the room.
And so she then walks back in the room. This is a completely out of the blue topic of conversation.
Secret caucus complete.
Yeah. And suddenly it's like, well, okay, I'm going to run down and get a bottle of champagne
kind of thing. So they weren't officially engaged yet, but it was on the table that they were, more or less.
And they had been dating for less than a year.
How long had they known each other, though?
About a year.
Oh, all right.
A year before that or a year?
No, no, no.
It was a year total.
Yeah.
Well, they probably met through a mutual friend at a party.
The friend had called Dan to say, you need to break up with whoever you're going out with because I'm going
to introduce you to someone tonight. Wow. I hope they get a bouquet of flowers every year.
Yeah, they have milked that for all it's worth.
As they should.
As they should. And they knew each other for a few months before she figured it out.
And then they were dating in earnest.
And then this is probably nine months after that.
So after all the toasts, she and I went for a run together.
I said, how are you feeling?
And she's, you know, amazing.
And I can hardly believe it.
And also, I'm just, I'm still waiting to find out what's wrong with him.
And my reaction was, well, five years from now, you're going to have a much more robust
answer for that question of what's wrong with him.
But the real question is, are they going to be deal breakers for you?
And what would the deal breakers be?
And so, Tim, I'm curious, given your experience, partly what you're listening for in the early
stages of dating is, are there deal breakers here for me?
Not because I'm judging this other person, but because I just know that that combination
is not going to work or whatever.
And so one of them sounds like it's endless processing.
Yep.
Endless processing would be one.
And I want to own my part, obviously, in some of this in the
sense that I'm sure I contributed to situations that were uncomfortable enough for my significant
other that she felt the need to process. However, I do think she also sort of leans that direction
in terms of communication. So yes, endless processing or a primary project being processing, that is
expected to be a dominant feature of the relationship. Necessary, for sure. But a
dominant feature of the relationship, no. I think that it shouldn't feel that hard.
And if it does, chances are there are things that are probably irreconcilable differences.
So that would be one deal breaker.
Other deal breakers, if somebody throws sharp elbows,
that's what I'm very wary of for a lot of reasons.
But if somebody throws sharp elbows,
if they are vindictive,
if they speak in a really aggressive, upset way about their exes,
those are all red flags for me. Not yellow. Those are red. And it's astonishing what some people,
and I'm grateful they do, but what some people will volunteer on first dates in terms of like,
oh yeah, my ex did this. And I showed him by taking a torch and doing this
and this and this. And I'm like, okay. Hope you enjoyed your chicken salad because this has been
swell. Thank you. And the sharp elbow is somebody who's in any way vindictive, is a deal breaker.
I would say if someone is a monologuer, that's also deal breaker. I want somebody who is a deal breaker. I would say if someone is a monologuer, that's also a deal breaker.
I want somebody who is a good listener, good asker of questions. I think men tend to do this
a lot more than women, the monologuing, but I've seen some exceptions. So monologuers, overtalkers, people who step on me or other people when they're amid thought to interject or one-up, that gets exhausting.
So, those would be a few that come to mind.
I mean, I'm sure there are others, but those are a few that immediately leap to mind when you ask? Well, and part of what you're describing is
something that the Gottman Institute would reinforce, which is that what are our implicit
rules about conflict? And that the couples that have staying power tend to have boundaries.
No matter how upset I am with you, there are some places that I don't go.
Because in a long-term partnership, you know each other so well that you also have the capacity to
really hurt the other person. And part of, because you know what would hurt them.
And you secretly think it sometimes, especially when you're frustrated.
And that even in those moments, you don't go somewhere that is
gratuitously that sharp elbow or vindictiveness or meanness.
Yeah. You don't turn into a Quentin Tarantino action sequence, right? It's not kill Bill.
Kill Bill. Exactly.
All of a sudden. Yeah.
Suddenly you didn't know it, but I was wearing that yellow suit.
The yellow jumpsuit.
Jumpsuit under my pajamas tonight. So I think that the boundaries that we each assume on how
we handle the hardest moments, those being shared boundaries, feels like a wise guideline to have
for yourself. The other thing that I was thinking about,
about your processing point is that for me, it feels like, boy, there's a long period during
which where we're bumping into each other and where there's some friction between us,
processing it to understand it better. Like what was going on with me that I did interrupt you,
which by the way, interrupting is one of the things I feedback. I give my husband cause he's a big interrupter,
which makes me crazy, crazy. And that means in part, see, I'm blaming him for this,
that I am an interrupter because if I don't get my word in edgewise, I'm not going to get in.
And I think as a woman and a professional in some of
the spaces I'm in, being willing to speak up to get into the conversation when there's a moment
to do so has in many contexts served me pretty well. And in other contexts and other relationships,
I'm doing to other people exactly the thing that he does to me, my husband does to me that makes me so want to kill him. The kill bill comes to mind. So I think the question of
understanding, gosh, what's going on with me? When does it happen? What's going on with him?
What does it happen? That kind of processing can be helpful. And then there's a point where we've talked about it a hundred times. We've dissected
it a hundred times. We're back doing the thing that triggers the reaction. And it just is.
It just is. So there's a point where you have to decide. And for me, the switch is he's changed as
much as he's going to change, or I've changed as much as I'm going
to be able to change. I do it maybe less often or he does it less often. I still do it sometimes
and misstep. So if I assume this person is not going to change, can I live with that?
Can we each live with that? And if so, then it's easier to have the,
let me just note, you did that thing again.
Oh, you're right.
I apologize.
We can talk about it later if we need to.
And we can move on because we don't need to reprocess something that we have already processed.
And we're at the limits of how much each of us is going to be able to change sometimes,
like in some moments.
What occurred to me as you're talking also is that people like to do what they're good at. So the big strong guys like to go to the weight room.
The flexy people like to go do yoga. The debaters like to debate. And the people who
are on some level good at, say, emotional processing, like to emotionally process.
Yes. So if that is part of their identity, then you are signing up for that.
And I think I somewhat knowingly, somewhat unknowingly probably signed up for that.
And she is very, very good at it.
I just, it was, I think, a constitutional, meaning personal constitution, mismatch of sorts.
It's a national constitutional issue. Yeah.
Yeah. I'm not talking about the second amendment here. Relax everybody.
Yeah.
But yeah, people like to do what they're good at. And I need to be cautious about that too,
because my response to some of that would often be to try to kind of put her in a cattle shoot
to get her into this like logic puzzle where I knew I would be better. And I try to kind of put her in a cattle shoot to get her into this like logic puzzle where I knew I
would be better. Right. And I tried to steer her into some labyrinth of spreadsheets and analytics
because I'm better at that stuff. And that wasn't helpful. It was hugely counterproductive. I'm sure
at many different points, but that's what I'm good at. So more and more,
I've tried to cultivate an awareness of what I do because I am good at said thing, whatever that is,
which applies to some, not just relationships, but also how you structure your day and your week and
choose your projects. Like, are you choosing these things because they're truly the most important?
Or are you choosing these things because you happen to have some skill
and therefore it's comfortable for you to do these things? I think about that a lot.
I just want to make an observation about what you just said, which was so
insightful and where you feel comfortable and what you're good at. Because for some people,
I don't know if this is true of her, but for some people, part of what makes them feel safe or secure or reassured in a relationship is
to rock the boat. I've had some relationships like that. And rocking the boat so that we have
something to process helps me feel connected to you. It's redemonstrating that you care.
And that processing, emotional processing processing goes to a place that feels
comfortable to me and feels reassuring to me. In that place, if we go back to the three positions,
which is just, there's my perspective, which is obviously correct. Then there's the other
person's perspective, the second position, and they're inside their story and their world and
why they think they're correct. And then either or both
of us could step to the third position. What would a neutral observer say about what's going on
and what might help us get through this? She's in the place where like, I want to be connected
with you. We need to be ourselves connecting in the first and second position. And the place where
you go, because you feel more comfortable, might be the third position to step out, to be analytical about it, to say, well, let me just step back to understand what's happening here.
Because if I can understand what's happening here, I need to know.
Then I have advice for myself about where to go.
And she's like, don't leave me here.
Like you're disconnecting to go to the balcony or the third position.
You should do this for a living.
So that's the way in which that processing also was not serving its purpose for her and was not where you felt you wanted to be or what she was asking of you.
That resonates as very on point. And I would further say that I contributed to that for most of our relationship being very weak in terms of her love language of words of affirmation that one could be male, female, doesn't matter,
would want to rock the boat to elicit that type of connection in processing to get those
words of affirmation.
So I think I almost certainly contributed to that very directly in that way.
Yeah, I have that same profile.
That's a weakness for me also.
And I see it
showing up in my personal relationships as well as my work relationships. Giving words of affirmation.
Yeah. My family was not a super demonstrative family to feel the need to say it out loud.
Yeah. Same, same. It's changing. So how do you work on that? I'm curious. I mean, I have improved.
I'm still very much on training wheels, but I have made
substantial improvement, I think. How are you working at it? What have you found helpful
to work on giving words of affirmation, positive reinforcement? Because I did not grow up with
a whole lot of that and very much learned to do without it in, say, sports as well and in skill development.
Kind of trained myself not to really require it and to be intrinsically motivated.
So I then expect that of most people, which is an unfair expectation.
It just doesn't map to reality very well.
So how have you worked on it?
You know, some of it is just with conscious reminders to myself to do it.
Like a timer on your phone, an index card with five lines that you can pull out and be like,
hold on, John. No, I'm kidding. That's the kind of thing that I might do.
Honest to God. Yeah. I mean, and it's also trying to get better at noticing in myself when I do feel
grateful for something somebody did,
like I get an email that I'm just like, oh my God, that is so helpful. Just to remember to say it
out loud. The other thing that I'm to just shoot them back a note to say like, thank you so much
for taking the time it took to send this to me because it's incredibly helpful. And that's all it needs to be. I also noticed that I'm better at it in writing than I am verbally.
So that's okay.
Cause that's where the training wheels are to remember to just text,
to say when I noticed something specific,
that's something we didn't talk about,
about appreciation,
which is to seem genuine,
like great job.
Isn't very genuine.
Compelling.
Being specific.
Yeah, compelling.
Doesn't sound necessarily sincere.
Being specific helps.
So also just like, hey, I particularly appreciated your note
or I thought your whatever was particularly had a really big impact on me.
I think the more I can just notice the small things that are specific,
the better. And that's helped me. I don't know. Do you have other tips? Because I could use them.
So I was exaggerating a bit with the index card, but for a while, and I could probably use with
doing more of this, I would literally put in a calendar reminder.
Yes.
Say something nice to this person, this person, this person.
Yeah.
And there's always something I can think of that is specific.
And I just, for whatever malfunction or being a little nicer to myself, conditioning through
my upbringing, neglected to mention, then I would mention, I literally put it in my calendar.
Yeah.
And I found that helpful.
I did find it helpful. And I also am appreciating, I literally put it in my calendar. Yeah. And I found that helpful. I did find it helpful.
And I also am appreciating, I'll say it right now, I'm appreciating your connecting this to
maybe what was going on that caused the, hey, we need processing, I need reassurance because
I'm not sure where I stand or I felt overlooked or not seen, etc.
Which part of what I'm learning is that when I have somebody who is frustrated or upset,
it is often that they are also feeling underappreciated. And that's on me.
So let me ask you a bit about giving feedback instead of receiving. And I know we've
touched on this indirectly and maybe
even directly in this conversation, but for people who are in the supervisor boss, or it could be
a significant other, but we've spent a bunch of time on the personal. Let's talk about the
professional, even though they're two sides of the same coin. If you are giving feedback to someone who tends to be sensitive,
I'll just set the stage. This is not actually really the case for me right now in any capacity,
but it has been at various points with employees, with significant others.
What are your suggestions for giving feedback and how to open that door, hopefully in a way that doesn't immediately
provoke or exacerbate a really defensive type of kickback. One foundation thing is
have the two of you had a conversation about how they prefer to get feedback. And that can be one of the most helpful and powerful things to do,
which is to sit down and talk about, hey, what makes you feel appreciated? Because some people
need to hear the words. Other people don't really care about the words. But the fact that you come
to them for advice with some of your toughest problems or you would like their input on your
proofreading tells them they're valued, right?
So what makes you feel appreciated? If I have coaching for you, what's your advice to me on when and how to give it? Do you have pet peeves about feedback generally? We all have pet peeves.
That's a really interesting conversation to have. When you're triggered by feedback, how can I tell? How will I be able to tell? And it might
be totally obvious, but sometimes people shut down and I can't tell whether you're
taking it in or arguing in your head. And when you are triggered or feeling defensive,
what advice do you have for me on what will help? And we have a
little template that's like how to get the best out of me that each of us can jot down some thoughts
too and then talk about. How to get the best out of me. Is that a template that is available online
or that we could put in the show notes? Yeah. On the Triad Consulting website, triadconsultinggroup.com, we have a nav called Help Yourself.
And it's got a bunch of templates, exercises, etc.
So just having that conversation up front means I don't have to guess at how to give you feedback because you've already told me and
hopefully I've taken some notes, which I keep handy to remind myself. And so I can refer back
like, hey, I had a couple of thoughts about the presentation last week. And I wonder when it would
be helpful to chat about it a little bit or whatever, right? The second thing is that really
the fastest way to change a feedback culture and to help people be more receptive is to become a good receiver yourself and be soliciting and eliciting feedback from others and to assume every conversation, even when I think I'm pretty clearly the giver here, I'm probably going to end up being a receiver.
Because what they're going to say is, well, the reason I did that is because you were so unclear about what you wanted or whatever.
So I have to assume there are things I've contributed to the situation that are going
to be part of the conversation, even when for me, the primary purpose is to tell you what I think
you could do differently or better. There's a question that we use a lot that I think is
incredibly helpful just in building a habit of integrating feedback into daily life,
which is not, hey, do you have any feedback for me? Which we've talked about as a terrible question,
well-intended, but terrible. Particularly from a leader, because giving feedback up
feels very risky and fraught. So if you are in a position of leadership,
you are impacting more and more people
and fewer and fewer of them
are going to take the chance to tell you about it.
So you've got to actually have some pretty advanced skills
in receiving feedback and inviting it.
And one way you can do that is to ask,
what's one thing?
What's one thing that I'm doing or maybe failing to do that you think is getting in the way?
Or what's one thing that if I could change it would make a difference to you?
Or what's one thing that in our Monday morning meeting, we could change to make it more efficient?
Because I know people are flagging, their energy is flagging.
That's a question that you can toss off while you're walking down the hall and it the stakes. It's very clear. You're asking for coaching. You're looking for something
to improve and you're also signaling. And by the way, I expect you to be receptive to coaching
also because I'm going to demonstrate. I value it. I assume I'm still learning and I expect that
you're still learning too. One thing. What's one thing? One thing at a time, put in sequence, how much
that can do. Is there anything? Because if you ask, is there anything, people are like, oh no,
you're great. We love working with you. You have to assume there is. Yeah. That's kind of like my,
if you had to cut 20%, what would you cut? Yeah. Yeah. That's one of the reasons that's
such a great question. Yeah. It's forced. It applies some very clear constraints constraints right they like the
option of not naming something is not implicit in that question that's fair do you get people
who ignore the question anyway no because they make terrible proofreaders so generally
my friends know i mean these are people i've known for a while typically so they know exactly
what they're signing up for and they know what type of feedback I have given them in the past.
Right. So it's reciprocal.
Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah. For sure. So they have a very good idea of exactly what I'm looking for,
and they'll ask clarifying questions if need be. But the what is one thing, dot, dot, dot,
is a really useful heuristic for getting the type of feedback, but that may not
be forthcoming, especially if you are at the top of the pyramid or in the hierarchy in a leadership
position. Well, Sheila, we've covered a lot. What have we not covered? Is there anything that you
would like to discuss before we begin to wind to a close, if we neglected anything that pops to mind, we've
certainly gone through a lot of different scenarios. We've gone through the interpersonal,
we've gone through intimate relationships, we've gone through professional environments.
Is there any particular point that comes to mind or anything you'd like to add before
we begin to land the plane? What's in my head is maybe a follow-on
to what you just said about the one thing
and being in leadership, which is,
so when we were working on the feedback book,
part of the challenge is that the need to give feedback
is a felt problem.
Like I have feedback for you. I'm carrying it around with myself because I don't know how to give it to you. Or I've tried to give it to you felt problem. Like I have feedback for you.
I'm carrying it around with myself
because I don't know how to give it to you.
Or I've tried to give it to you and you're not taking it.
So if there's a book that would help me do that,
I would buy that book and could use some help.
The need to receive feedback from other people
who are carrying it around and not giving it to us
is not necessarily a felt problem.
I'm oblivious to it. I have mixed feelings about it.
It's like carbon monoxide, the invisible killer.
That's right. It is the invisible killer. That's actually a very good metaphor for it.
So do I want a carbon monoxide detector? I do. I know I should.
You do. I know I should. And it's also moving from a push model of learning.
I decide what you need to learn and I push you to learn it to a pull model of learning,
which is I'm curious what you think I have to learn or could improve, which is very much your
stance, Tim. It's very relaxing to be with someone who
has that stance, right? It's also, and I think your book does a great job of this. I mean,
it is a learnable skill. I learned this through skill acquisition where, for instance, I would
need to have to turn lay people, non-coaches into coaches. And to do that, you have to elicit with lots of very
specific questions and very well thought through questions. For instance, if you want a native
speaker to help you learn your target language, that is actually a very big ask and very challenging
if they are not trained teachers. If you go up to a native
English speaker and you're like, tell me the difference between anything and something,
or like, when do you use and versus the when it's a new person being introduced to a sentence?
Most native English speakers would fail the test of English as a foreign language or do very poorly.
It would be so confusing because what is reflexive is not something they can explain. And so I think I've developed that stance
through a lot of repetitions with mostly different skills. And it is not something that came
intuitively, but it is something that you can pick up very, very quickly with the right toolkit. And with that toolkit, you become an incredibly skilled and fast learner. And I think that's a
big aha for me, which is, oh gosh, I can learn from anybody. They don't have to be a skilled
giver because I can help with that to hear and understand what they're trying to tell me. And
then I can figure out what to make of it and what I want to take away and leave behind.
The last thing on this front is that as leaders, sometimes people will say, well, I don't really know what I should be working on.
And my answer to them is like, well, you know who knows?
Pretty much everybody else.
Everybody around you has a list of the things you
do that make it harder for them to do their job. And it's a list they pass amongst each other
about you. So it becomes the sort of conventional wisdom about you, what's great about you and
what's hard about working with you. But if you want to know what's on that list, you have to ask
and you have to ask in a way that persuades them that you actually want to know. And you'll take it seriously. You can't promise
that you can change it or you would change it. But at least listening for the themes that you
hear from different people at different times will help identify the things that, oh, yeah,
that's probably something that's not helping in this context.
Yeah. And this topic of feedback, thanks for the feedback, the science and art of receiving feedback. Well, it's a bit of a Trojan horse for a bunch of things, as you mentioned, right? If you
want to be a super learner, it doesn't just apply to interacting with your boss at work. It doesn't
just apply to your direct reports at work. It doesn't just apply to your direct reports at work. It
doesn't just apply to your significant other. It actually applies in a million different contexts.
How can you elicit the feedback that will most help you to take constructive next steps? I mean,
it applies to everything. And to that extent, I mean, it's a very meta skill that is transferable across a
million different disciplines. Sheila, people can find the Triad Consulting Group at
triadconsultinggroup.com. And I also did go to the Help Yourself. You have all sorts of tools
and links available on the Help Yourself portion of that website. So people can go there.
Is there anywhere else you would like to point people?
I've been trying to get better at social media and LinkedIn. Triad has a LinkedIn page and I
now have a LinkedIn page and I try to post occasionally and get more than occasionally.
So I think that the question of where do I get help
with this? We also have a list of what's on our shelf. You do too, Tim. We have a lot of overlap
in the kinds of things that you're reading and thinking about. And this journey is such a
central one that there's lots of different resources out there. I'll double
check to see if our latest list of resources, things that we would recommend is up.
Great. So we'll link in the show notes then too. Certainly, thanks for the feedback,
the book and books, Triad Consulting Group, and then to the respective LinkedIn pages for people
who would like to
explore. And we'll put those at Tim.blogs.com slash podcast as per usual. Any last words before we go?
I'll say thank you very much for the time. As always, I've enjoyed the conversation immensely
and taking copious notes. I am thinking about your dating project and journey. I'll be interested to hear how it goes and also what you find that cuts to
the heart of what do I want to understand about this person and about myself in the way that we
show up together that is either super energizing and rewarding and fun, which is how it should be
or anxiety provoking and draining.
Yes, I would strongly prefer to lean heavily in the former grouping instead of the latter. So I'll
keep you posted on my progress in that department. And thank you so much for taking the time.
Always such a pleasure. And to everybody listening, you've heard this before. Until next time, be just a bit kinder than is necessary,
not only to others, but to yourself. Know thyself, as the sign would say over the Oracle at Delphi.
Part of that is learning how to elicit and metabolize good feedback. So take a close look at it. And until next time, thanks for tuning in.
Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just one more thing before you take off. And that is Five Bullet
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