- what can you do to be a source of trust to those around you? Just how trustworthy are you? How can you foster trust in your team?
- What role does apology and forgiveness play in conflict resolution and negotiation?
- How can you use it as a tool?
- This week, you read about the relationship between the amygdala and the frontal lobes. How can this information better equip you to handle conflict?
“
If I tell her something in confidence, she keeps it confiden-
tial.”
“When we disagree, she listens. She may not agree with me
in the end, but she listens. After she has made the decision, she
gets back to me to tell me what she agrees with and what she
doesn’t.”
“She looks out for everybody here. When someone needs
help, Tameka looks for ways to provide it.”
When I hear Paula talk, I think of so many other bosses I
know who dream of having the loyalty and commitment that
Tameka gets from Paula. The foundation of that loyalty and com-
mitment is trust.
Consider This
] Use a survey like the one below to determine the level of
trust within your own office.
1. My boss keeps promises and commitments.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
2. Co-workers keep their promises and commitments.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
3. My boss listens to me, even when he/she disagrees.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
4. Co-workers listen to me, even when they disagree.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
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5. My boss communicates with me openly and honestly
about significant information.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
6. My co-workers communicate with me openly and
honestly about significant information.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
7. My boss demonstrates confidence in my skills and
abilities.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
8. My co-workers demonstrate confidence in my skills and
abilities.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
9. In our office, we look for ways to work together
cooperatively.
Strongly agree Strongly disagree
5 4 3 2 1
The Dynamics of Trust
In the beginning of a working relationship, most of us give others the
benefit of the doubt. From there, trust builds slowly over time. For some
of us, trust is easily given. Others take much longer before they will trust
another.
We often think of trust as a savings account. Each time a commit-
ment is made and kept, each time a promise or a confidence is main-
tained, or each time information is passed on in a timely way, managers
are making deposits into the trust account. Each time a manager tips off
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an employee about a change that is coming, or gives staff credit for the
work that’s been done, or trusts someone to accomplish a task, the man-
ager adds to that account. The manager’s actions tell employees that the
boss is looking out for them, and that the boss values the work they do.
The manager confirms that this relationship and the staff’s contributions
to it matter.
Every manager will need to draw upon that savings account, at one
time or another. Inevitably, there are times when the manager will make
a mistake. If the account is strong, when there are fumbles there is that
buildup of trust to draw upon. Employees will forgive you and the rela-
tionship and the work will stay on track. They will continue to believe in
your intent and your ability. Communication will flow as before. Staff
can talk about those things over which you disagree. When they are con-
cerned about some new direction, or have a difference of opinion, they
feel it is safe to come to you to talk it over. Figure 7-3 portrays the trust-
building mechanism and a subsequent loss of trust.
Figure 7-3. The dynamics of trust.
Trust is built up slowly, over time. It can be broken quickly, howev-
er. If an employee believes that you have been deliberately misleading or
have withheld critical information, or have broken a confidence, the
trust between you and that employee, or perhaps the whole staff, can
plummet. But, as Figure 7-3 shows, it does not simply return to the level
at which the relationship began; it slips below that line where one
extended the benefit of the doubt to the boss. To return trust to that level
requires energy, effort, and attention.
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Trust can also be chipped away over time, not in one event, or one
day or one month, but through a steady piling on of disappointments and
broken commitments. When trust has been broken, communication is
damaged and may shut down completely. As noted earlier, when com-
munication tanks, trust sinks even lower. This downward spiral takes the
working relationship with it down into the vortex. Productivity suffers.
Informal communication doesn’t happen—there’s no more of the casual
conversation as people pass one another in the hall or in the cafeteria.
It’s easier and more comfortable to just walk on by. People sit in meet-
ings, withholding significant information. Phone calls are not returned.
Messages are ignored. When trust is low, people hide behind e-mails.
Rather than talking to that person, the thinking goes, I’ll just send her an
e-mail, even if her cubicle is ten feet away. (Chapter 16 has more on
electronic communication.)
The years I spent working with Jack and Howard were difficultones for all of us. They had had a falling-out that they didn’t
repair. When Jack saw Howard coming down the hall, he would
duck into my office to avoid any possibility of having to talk to
Howard. Here, the simplest communication was lost and even
basic information was not exchanged. In one instance, because
they were not speaking, Jack didn’t know that Howard would be
out of the office for two weeks on vacation. It turned out that this
information was critical. Jack was preparing a presentation, and
Howard had vital information that Jack needed but could not
include. They both looked worse for the omission.
Trust is particularly challenging when a staff member is promoted
from within the office to a supervisory or management position. Others
can hold grudges about the decision. Additionally, sometimes there is
uncertainty about previous relationships—or lack thereof—that creates
distrust with the person who was promoted.
Wanda was one of several staff members in a small office.Two other women in the office were her good friends. They
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did everything together: they ate lunch together, took breaks
together; they talked about their weekends, laughing and joking
at each others’ desks. Others may have felt left out, but then
again they had their own circles of office friends.
Then Wanda was promoted to supervisor. She left the office
on Thursday afternoon as one of the team. When she came to
work on Friday she was the boss. Her circle of friends was
unchanged, but suddenly the distrust among the rest of the group
exploded. Others felt excluded. They watched for any sign of spe-
cial treatment for Wanda’s friends, keeping score and growing
more and more resentful.
In this situation, Wanda did not start off with the benefit of the
doubt. Trust was way below that line, from the beginning of her job as
supervisor. As a new supervisor, she didn’t recognize how important
rebuilding that trust would be to her ability to be successful in her new
position. We can’t blame her for that. Nobody ever taught her about that
part of her job. She knew what the office was expected to do—the tasks
to be completed, delivery deadlines, backlogs, and benchmarks. But
she’d never been given the skills for the much more difficult job: man-
aging the people she supervised. By the time her boss called for help, lit-
tle work was getting done, and the distrust had become a significant bar-
rier to any collaboration or cooperation.
The Manager’s Challenge
For staff members with no supervisory responsibility, trust is important.
With a healthy trust between co-workers, the inevitable conflicts that
arise may be resolved before anyone describes the situation as a conflict.
Disagreements are discussed and resolved without anyone ever thinking
there was a “conflict” at all.
For managers juggling relationships in all directions, trust is even
more important in resolving conflict. Sometimes I think of managers as
“the knees” of the organization. The older I get, the more I realize the
stress my knees take from the bottom up, as well as from the top down.
The manager has relationships to maintain with direct reports, between
staff, with bosses, and across departments. That manager is then bal-
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118 UNDERSTANDING THE DYNAMICS OF CONFLICT
ancing his or her own needs with the needs and demands of staff and
with the expectations and requirements of higher-ups. Maintaining trust
in all directions at the same time can sometimes feel impossible.
Sasha was caught in that squeeze with her subordinate,Harold. She promised Harold that he would be getting a big-
ger space when the new office opened. At least, that is what
Harold heard: “She said I’d get a bigger space when the build-out
was finished!”
From Sasha’s point of view, she promised to try to get him
bigger space. When Sasha took the request to her own boss,
she felt she did everything possible to secure the space for
Harold. The answer came back, “No. He’ll have to stay where he
is now.”
Sasha was stuck. To Harold, it looked like she had broken a
promise. But she needed to protect her boss, his authority, and
her relationship there. As far as her boss was concerned, Sasha
would have to take responsibility for this decision herself so that
he could maintain a positive image with the department. So, what
could Sasha do? At this point, she was caught between that
proverbial rock and a hard place. What might she do differently
next time?
To protect the trust between them, she could be very clear to
her employee, Harold, that she would recommend a change. This
often requires a clear inquiry: “Just to be sure we’re on the same
page, tell me what you are expecting from me.” Then, Sasha
could restate her intention to advocate for a change, and to clar-
ify what she could not promise at that point. That is a promise she
could keep while still protecting herself and her boss.
Fixing relationship conflicts requires energy and attention over time:
repairing and rebuilding trust, giving apologies and seeking forgiveness,
managing anger, and maintaining a sense of humor. The next four
chapters provide some tools that you can apply to these relationship con-
flicts.
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Consider This
] Think of various disagreements or conflicts you have faced
recently. Analyze them to determine their sources:
Information? Interests? Structural? Values? Relationships?
] With that understanding, what tools can you use to address
similar situations in the future?
Notes
1. Roger Fisher, William Ury, and Bruce Patton, Getting to Yes: Negotiating Agreement
Without Giving In (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1992).
2. John Burton, Conflict Resolution and Prevention (New York: St. Martin’s, 1990).
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P A R T I I I
Keys to
Resolving
Conflict
Between stimulus and response, there is a space.
In that space lies our freedom and power
to choose our response. In our response
lies our growth and freedom.
—VICTOR FRANKL,
MAN’S SEARCH FOR MEANING
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T
he evening news shows footage of the most recent earthquake.
Stunned crowds are wandering through the streets. The security
and safety they had once depended on is gone. The house that
protected them is not trustworthy. They are sleeping in the streets, fear-
ful that another tremor will bring the house down.
Maybe you have known that feeling of freefall when you discover
that someone you counted on has broken your trust. The earth has shift-
ed under your feet. You may have spent months or years developing a
solid relationship, and suddenly the things you counted on before you
can’t count on anymore. You are left wondering, Where do we go from
here? This changes everything. You become protective, and put up a wall
to keep from being hurt again. You become more cautious and circum-
spect. You find yourself looking over your shoulder, checking with others
to make sense of what has happened, and anxiously wondering what
might happen in the next day or week or month or year.
123
Building Trust
C H A P T E R 8
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The Components of Trust
Many authors have created models for understanding the dimensions of
trust as they exist in the workplace. Dennis S. Reina and Michelle L.
Reina, in their book Trust and Betrayal in the Workplace, describe three
components of transactional trust: contractual trust, communication
trust, and competence trust.1 In The Thin Book of Trust, Charles
Feltman divides trust into four components: sincerity, reliability, compe-
tence, and caring.2 Whatever system we use, thinking about trust in
terms of its various categories can help us understand better what builds
trust and what wrecks trust. And when we commit to rebuilding trust,
the discussion is more productive when we can describe the past
destructive behavior by putting it into a category, rather than making a
flat statement like, “I don’t trust you.” In this chapter, I discuss three cat-
egories of trust—reliability, competence, and caring—first showing how
they relate to trust, then considering how to wreck trust and how to build
trust.
Reliability
Reliability as a trust component is about keeping commitments. Building
reliability begins with clarity: being clear about the commitments you are
making, and being clear about what you expect of others. The circle of
reliability is completed by following through—by keeping those commit-
ments you make.
Warning! Dates on the calendar are closer than they appear.
Reliability also includes not making commitments you can’t keep.
Saying, “I’ll have that report to you by Friday” assumes that you can get
the information you need from another department by Thursday.
Sometimes it is easy to make one commitment on top of another, with-
out realizing there is simply not enough time in the day, the week, or the
month to keep all of them. Before making a commitment, check the
practical realities of fulfilling your commitment.
I speak here about the commitments you make. In building trust
within the team, however, you also need to be clear about the commit-
ments that staff makes to you. Those questions that are the journalist’s
friend are also useful for managers and employees.
> Who? Who needs the requested item? Who is responsible for
getting it done?
> What? As specifically as possible, what is expected? What is
requested?
> When? Every request, every project, every assignment needs
a due date. Let people know when you expect an answer or a
deliverable.
> How? Do people have the resources to complete the
assignment? Are there special concerns and requests that
need to be met?
> Why? Having an explanation of why the task needs to be done
can motivate a person to get the job done. It also demonstrates
respect for another’s competence to provide information about
how his or her contribution fits into the wider effort.
Reliability also refers to consistency in general mood and demeanor.
Employees look to the boss to provide stability. Being able to count on
that person being on an even keel increases their level of trust. In truth,
managers sometimes do not realize the effect their outbursts of anger
have on people’s sense of trust. She screams. He picks up a paperweight
and throws it against the wall. She bangs her fist on the table and
storms out. He slams the door to his office. Afterwards, their reactions
are: “Get over it; it’s just the way I am.” What they don’t realize is the
long-term effect this behavior can have on others. The flare-ups can be
for dramatic effect but they also can create a climate in which others
become wary, uneasy, and anxious about when they may happen again.
Trust erodes.
How do you deal with differences and disagreements among people?
How do you handle yourself under stress? As was stated in Chapter 5,
when your responses shift dramatically between calm and stormy, the
people around you are confused, surprised, shocked, or hurt.3 And then
they become distrustful. The behavior leaves others wondering when it
will happen again, and where and how.
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Competence
Competence with regard to trust refers to the ability to do the task at
hand. Generally in the workplace, we assume that people can meet the
established standards of performance. A person is hired based on her
knowledge, skills, and ability to take on a set of job responsibilities.
Sometimes a person is hired for one set of responsibilities and has
the requisite technical expertise to do that job well. He does the job so
well, in fact, that he is then promoted to a supervisor’s position. The
technical skills that served so well at the staff level are not nearly so
important in the supervisor role. Rather, what is needed at this level of
responsibility is people skills: the ability to provide leadership to moti-
vate effort, the ability to work with people to keep them productive, and
the ability to provide guidance and feedback when people need direc-
tion. For a new manager or supervisor, this is a completely new skill set.
The wise new supervisor or manager recognizes the differences in posi-
tion, and acknowledges the need to develop new abilities. Then he finds
within the organization or outside the organization the tools and educa-
tion necessary to be effective in this new role. Demonstrating compe-
tence in this new role builds trust among staff that the manager has the
needed leadership skills to handle the task.
Caring
As a component of trust, care refers to having concern for the needs and
interests of others. Caring may be the most important component of
trust. If employees know that their needs and interests are important to
the manager, they will trust that manager to take action, to do what
needs to be done. In this way, managers need to demonstrate interest in
the work the staff is doing, their career development beyond their imme-
diate jobs, and to some extent their personal lives. Even when the man-
ager has to make hard decisions that may directly affect the staff’s work
or schedule or personal life, if employees trust that the manager cares,
they are much more willing and able to go along with those decisions.
Care in this trust context applies to the team and its work, as well as
to individuals. The manager who builds trust in this dimension is aware
of the priorities of the team and protects those priorities from the bar-
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rage of requests that may come from other departments or from external
customers. Having their backs in the face of conflicting demands is a
powerful trust builder.
Consider This
] Observe others you work with. Whom do you trust?
] Why do you trust them? What actions do they take,
what do they say, and what do they do that makes
them trustworthy?
How to Wreck Trust
Let’s see how you can wreck trust, turning those three components of
trust upside down. In terms of reliability, you can lie. You can withhold
the truth. You can break your word. So what if you are late for the meet-
ing? They’ll wait for you. Don’t bother making certain that you can get
something done before you promise to do it. Nobody’s perfect, right?
You can surprise them. It always pays to keeps them guessing—
they’ll never know what to expect or when. You can make vague com-
mitments. Then, when you fail to keep them, you can claim they just
didn’t understand you. And, you don’t have to follow through. Maybe
they’ll forget—after all, you know how easy forgetting is, you do it all the
time. And you can lose your temper. You can blow up when things get
tough—they’ll get over it. You are who you are. That’s not your problem,
right?
As for competence, you can wreck trust by accepting assignments
that you don’t know how to do—but don’t tell anybody you need help.
Fake it until you make it, right?
And as for caring, remember to gossip. Information is power, after
all. Having the scoop, the latest skinny on someone else, being in the
know, gives you power. And you can look better by making others look
worse. Talk behind people’s backs. Spend your lunch hour talking about
other people in the office. What do they know? You’ll be a lot more pop-
ular when they see how much you can dish.
Then there are some other ways to wreck trust. For example, you can
use other people’s work to get ahead. No need to give them credit for
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what they have done—you take the credit, take all the credit. Sure, it
was a team effort. Everyone on the staff pulled together to get the job
done. But you are the boss, so, ultimately, you are responsible. If it went
well, it’s because you did such a good job of keeping them all on task.
And don’t ever listen to your staff. Don’t spend the time getting to know
them. All they need is their next assignment. Give it to them as quickly
as possible and move on to the next task.
Ilearned a lesson in high school. There were three girls stand-ing in the hall, arms loaded with books, waiting for the next
class. Vicki told Paula, “That is a pretty dress you’re wearing.”
When Paula walked off, Vicki turned to me and said, “That dress
was really tacky. I just wanted to see what she would say.” As I
turned to walk on to my class, I wondered what Vicki would be
saying about me once my back was turned. In the workplace, this
scenario plays out again and again.
How to Build Trust
On the other hand, maybe you’d like to try using those same three cate-
gories to build greater trust. Building trust takes energy, effort, and atten-
tion, but the effort you put into building trust will be repaid many times
over when conflicts arise—which they will. With trust established, it will
be much easier to communicate honestly, to seek solutions, and to know
that you can count on others to keep their commitments.
Reliability
By demonstrating your reliability, you, as a manager, can establish and
build a trusting relationship with your staff.
> Be honest. Even in the best of times, as a manager you may
need to change course based on changing circumstances. If you have
demonstrated over time that you are as honest as you can be, when these
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changes happen, people are much more likely to believe you and accept
your best intentions.
> Keep commitments. Do what you say you are going to do when
you say you are going to do it. Even in the small things. If you will be late
for the meeting, let someone know. If you are bringing someone else
with you, let them know that, too.
Commitments can be tricky things. When you, as supervisor, say,
“Sure, I think we can do that,” others are likely to hear, “Yes. You’ve got
my word on that. I’ll make it happen.” Don’t give your word if you can-
not keep it. To protect others’ trust in you, promise to recommend, then
check with your own boss before making any final commitments.
> Avoid surprises. For every move you make—even surprises you
think will be pleasant for your staff—tip them off first, particularly when
trust is low. When they are not sure they can trust you, your every move
and motive can be suspect. “What does she mean I can have the after-
noon off? What is she going to do while I am gone?”
> Be consistent also with your mood. Not many people are
bright and chipper all the time every day. But if your mood swings wild-
ly from day to day, others will be tiptoeing into the office, wondering
what kind of mood the boss might be in today.
HOW TO BUILD TRUST
> Be honest.
> Keep your word.
> Avoid surprises.
> Be consistent.
> Do your best.
> Demonstrate respect.
> Listen, listen, listen.
> Communicate.
> Speak with positive intent.
> Admit mistakes.
> Be willing to hear feedback.
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> Maintain confidences.
> Get to know others.
> Practice empathy.
> Seek their input.
> Say “thank you.”
Competence
Trust in others is built on recognition of their competence to do the job
at hand. Your employees will trust you to do your job competently if you
remember the following:
> Do your best. If you have been given an assignment that is
beyond your ability, admit it. Talk it over with the person who gave you
the assignment. Then get help. Look around for the resources that sur-
round you. Find others you respect for their knowledge and expertise.
Ask for their advice.
It often takes courage to admit that you don’t know everything there
is to know. Hold on to the confidence of knowing that you do have valu-
able skills and abilities. You were assigned this project because they
believed you were able to do it. To build your competence, look for other
resources as well: books, classes, online information.
> Learn new leadership skills. Building trust as a manager with
your staff depends as much on your ability to motivate and support
employees as it does on your technical skills.
Caring
Expressions of caring about others are critical to all relationships, but as
a manager there are particular things you can do to show you care for the
staff, thereby building trust:
> Respect the other person even when your views differ.
Consider that others think their views are well grounded, they want to
do the “right thing,” they can see things that you miss and miss things
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you can see, and they recognize that you may have different information
than they do.
Demonstrate respect for who they are, what they know, and where
they have been. Respect comes through the words you use and your tone
of voice, as well as your body language as you talk and as you listen.
> Listen, listen, listen. One of the most powerful skills you can
cultivate is the ability to listen well. (There is more information on how
to listen in Chapter 14.) Put aside your own thinking in order to hear
what is going on with someone else—whether it’s your own higher-ups,
or a peer, or someone you supervise. Take the time, expend the energy,
focus your attention on what they are saying, and that will speak volumes
to them about the value you put on your relationship.
> Communicate, communicate, communicate. As a manager or
supervisor, there are times when you have information that you cannot
share. That is a given, and one of the challenges of being a manager.
When you hear something from above of a sensitive nature that will have
a direct effect on your employees, talk to your higher-ups about what you
can discuss and what needs to be held closely. That said, there is a lot of
information you can give to people. In the busyness of your day, stop to
consider how people are kept informed, who is getting what information
and how they are getting it. Is everyone on the staff receiving the same
information? The more you can communicate in a timely way, the more
each of them will feel that they can trust you.
As Dale Carnegie famously said years ago, first you tell them what
you are going to tell them, then you tell them, then you tell them what
you told them. Find as many ways as possible to keep the information
flowing: e-mails, staff meetings, and one-on-one conversations. I can
hear the groans when I suggest another meeting, but telling people face
to face and to as many as possible at the same time give people a sense
that they know what is going on, of feeling included, and that they are
important enough to know what is afoot. Use the variety of electronic
tools at your fingertips: e-mails, voicemail, Facebook, and Twitter. (In
Chapter 16, I discuss some dos and don’ts of effective electronic com-
munication.)
> Speak with positive intent. This is the opposite of talking
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behind people’s backs. When you talk about others in the office, present
or not, find ways to acknowledge their contributions and skills.
> Admit mistakes. Nobody is perfect. You get credit for trying.
And being able to admit your mistakes goes a long way to being trust-
worthy.
The conference program had gone to print. Finally, we wereready to drop it in the mail to our mailing list of 5,000. I
opened my copy one more time and realized to my horror that the
conference fees were wrong. This financial section may have
been the most important piece of the printed program. My heart
sank. I called my boss. The last thing I wanted to do was to admit
that I had not caught this huge misprint earlier. The first thing
that I needed to do was to tell him about it so we could strategize
some solution. I felt embarrassed and foolish. Months later he
told me, “One thing I really like about you, Susan, is that I can
count on you to tell me when things are going wrong.” It’s a good
thing he valued that, because I was in a new position with lots of
responsibility but little experience, and I made more mistakes
than I want to remember.
> Be willing to hear feedback. Listen to others without inter-
rupting, without launching a counterattack, without becoming defen-
sive. Talk about a hard criticism—this one is a real challenge! (I’ll talk
about it more in Chapter 14.)
> Maintain confidentiality. As a supervisor, you have additional
responsibilities regarding confidentiality. Sometimes someone may say
“keep this confidential” and when they start talking, you realize you can’t
keep that confidential. It is better to avoid promising confidentiality until
you know more about the content. You might list general topics about
which you cannot promise confidentiality. If you realize the information
you have heard is something you must tell someone else, explain your
decision and your concern—and strategize with the person about how
you will share that information and with whom you will share it.
> Get to know others as people. Let them get to know you, as
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well. Maybe nothing demonstrates that you care as much as taking the
time to express a personal interest in employees and co-workers.
Managers and supervisors are generally strapped for time, so when you
read this, you may protest. I am not suggesting that you have lengthy
conversations with staff about the ins and outs of their lives. But if you
spend time finding out what their hopes and dreams and aspirations are,
as well as what they may be struggling to juggle inside and outside of
work, you can instill loyalty in them that will be well worth your invest-
ment of time.
> Be consistent. Treat all the people you supervise with equa-
nimity and fairness. It is inevitable that there are some people you will
get along with better than others. They speak your language. You feel
comfortable around them. You like their style, maybe because of the
skills they bring to the job, maybe for other intangible qualities. Know
that other employees are keenly, maybe jealously, watching the time you
spend with each of them. You don’t have to be perfectly balanced in
some mechanical clockwork fashion. You do, however, need to be con-
scious of creating some balance of your attention among those with
whom you work. You can be friendly without being friends.
> Practice empathy. Try to understand the situation from their
point of view.
> Seek their input. Provide ways for them to develop and learn
new skills.
> Say thank you. Thank people privately and publicly for a job
well done, an effort made even if it wasn’t successful. Sincerity is impor-
tant here—they must believe that you really mean it. And be specific
with your thanks: “Thanks for the extra hours you put into the Houston
project.” “I appreciate your response to that difficult caller yesterday.”
“We really needed the research you provided for that proposal. Thanks.”
A vague “Great job, Harry” leaves Harry wondering what you are talking
about or why you are saying it. And work hard to be inclusive—to
acknowledge positive contributions from each employee.
Here are a few extra ways to say thanks:
1. Acknowledge hard work during staff meetings.
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2. Catch people doing good. Sometimes we put more energy into
finding the mistakes and correcting them. Look for opportunities
to appreciate their efforts.
3. Keep a stack of note cards in your desk and make a habit of
writing thank-you notes each week to deserving staff members.
4. Leave a sticky note on someone’s desk saying thank you—be
specific.
5. Send thank-you e-mails—be specific. Consider copying your boss
on the message.
6. Create a “wall of thanks” in the office where you can post notes
for jobs well done.
How to Rebuild Trust
Rebuilding trust is a challenging task, but it is not impossible.
Remember that rebuilding trust will take demonstrated commitment
over time. Here are some steps to take if someone else has broken your
trust:
1. Before approaching the other person, ask yourself a few critical
questions: Am I willing to have a conversation about what has
happened? What might I lose if I don’t? What might I gain if I
do? What might I lose if I do?
2. Identify the specifics of what happened. Did the person miss an
important deadline? Does he or she miss deadlines frequently?
Did the individual make a commitment and not keep it? Did you
expect the person to have the skill to complete the project and
yet that person didn’t meet the standards you expected? Did he
or she talk to you disrespectfully in a meeting? Is this a matter of
reliability, or competence, or caring?
3. Set up a time to talk about it. Make sure that both of you have
adequate time to give the conversation your full attention.
4. Be clear before you get into a discussion about the nuts and
bolts of your concern and why being able to trust the other person
is important to you.
5. Talk about the incident or incidents that concern you. Be specific.
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Identify one or more of the components of trust—reliability,
competence, or caring—that has become a problem. It is much
more productive to talk about one of these components: “I didn’t
get your last three reports until I called and reminded you to get
them in each time. I am concerned about your reliability,” than it
is to say: “I don’t trust you.” Maintain a calm, businesslike, factual
approach with the focus on behaviors, not characterizations.
6. Listen. Ask, “What happened?” Give the person time to think
about what you have said and to respond. He or she may have an
explanation that clarifies what has happened. The person may
apologize.
7. Describe specifically what the person can do to improve the
situation.
If you have broken another’s trust and want to rebuild it:
1. As soon as possible, set up a time to talk about this particular
issue. Again, make sure that both of you have adequate time to
give this conversation your full attention.
2. Express your concern for the importance of the relationship and
your positive intention for the conversation.
3. Ask if the person has concerns and then listen. Give the person
time and space to think and to talk. Avoid becoming defensive. If
the person is able to express concerns, all you need to do is say,
“Thank you for telling me.”
4. Apologize. Take responsibility for your part in the situation. You
may want to take some time to think about what you have heard
before you respond. (The next chapter, “Apology and Forgiveness,”
discusses this further.)
5. Explain what steps you plan to follow so that what has happened
won’t be repeated.
Consider This
] How trustworthy are you?
1. Sincerity: Do you explain to people what values and
principles are important to you? Do you demonstrate your
commitment to those values and principles in your actions?
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2. Reliability: Do you keep the commitments that you make?
What do you do when you realize you have made a
commitment you can’t keep? Do you clarify commitments
and promises so that others know what you expect of
them? How? Do you clarify commitments and promises so
that you know what others expect from you? How?
3. Competence: Make a list of the areas where you feel you are
competent. How do you demonstrate to those you work
with, manage, or report to that you have the competence to
handle job requirements? How do you ask for help or
training when you are given a job that exceeds your
experience or competence?
4. Caring: How would the people you manage finish this
statement: “I know my boss really cares about the team
because …”? Do team members know that you support
their efforts and are working for the good of the team?
How? If there is a problem in the workplace, are people
willing to raise the issue? If not, why not? If so, how do you
know? Are you comfortable receiving help from others?
Review your responses to these questions. What steps will you take to
improve your trustworthiness among your subordinates?
Notes
1. Dennis S. Reina and Michelle L. Reina, Trust and Betrayal in the Workplace:
Building Effective Relationships in Your Organization (San Francisco: Berrett-
Koehler, 1999).
2. Charles Feltman, The Thin Book of Trust: An Essential Primer for Building Trust at
Work (Bend, Ore.: Thin Book Publishing, 2009).
3. Ron Kraybill, Style Matters: The Kraybill Conflict Style Inventory (Harrisonburg, Va.:
Riverhouse, 2005), p. 12.
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A
pologize? We don’t need to apologize! They are the ones who
made the mistakes.” This was what I heard from a group of
managers at a large corporation. I stood in front of the room in
amazement. I knew the company had high standards for employment
and promotion. I didn’t know that being perfect was one of the neces-
sary qualifications. I assumed that because they were human, they also
would sometimes make an error.
Wherever people are interacting with one another, working with or
alongside others, there will be times when conflicts arise, egos are
bruised, and damage is done to one another or to the relationship. Key
to moving through these difficult moments is your willingness and abil-
ity to apologize and to forgive—two sides of the same key. That is, apol-
ogy and forgiveness are often—but not always—inseparable. A sincere
apology makes the ability to forgive much easier. There has been an
acknowledgment of the harm experienced. The gift of forgiveness makes
the sacrifice of apology worthwhile. Because we can be forgiven, we can
admit our errors and make amends.
There are times when we apologize without any expectation or hope
of forgiveness. The apology itself is a cleansing experience. When we
137
Apology and
Forgiveness
C H A P T E R 9
“
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take responsibility for our actions, we can begin to forgive ourselves for
our actions even if others do not or cannot. There are also times when
we forgive without hearing an apology. We move through the process of
forgiveness for our own benefit, not for the other person. We forgive to
let go of past injuries and move on with our lives. But let’s consider both
sides of that key to successful conflict resolution.
Apology Offered
Often, the best thing you can do when you make a mistake is to apolo-
gize. Sometimes it’s also the hardest thing you can do—to admit that you
have not done the right thing. It might be an unintentional oversight, an
honest miscalculation. You got busy with several office distractions and
now you are embarrassed that you forgot the lunch appointment you set
last week. You thought others already knew what you had been told; you
didn’t realize the information was confidential. You started the project
without checking that others were also working on it.
Or, it might be an action you took guided by one of your lesser
angels: maybe your desire to look good to your own boss or the work
group, or to have more, or to grab control, or to get even. Maybe you
flew off the handle at a member of the staff and recognized in hindsight
that she really didn’t deserve that sort of treatment. Maybe you inten-
tionally let slip a piece of information because you thought it made you
look good. Maybe you didn’t include the names of others who made
important contributions on the report when you submitted it to your
boss. Apologies are particularly hard when you feel guilty or embar-
rassed or ashamed of your behavior. And yet we all find ourselves in that
place at one time or another.
An apology can make the difference between moving forward and
not. There are times and places when the other person cannot let go of
his or her resentment or hostility until the person hears a sincere
acknowledgment from you about what you did wrong and your stated
intention not to repeat the behavior. That’s the beginning step toward a
resolution.
Acknowledgment
An acknowledgment is often the beginning of an apology. You may
remember the story of Tre, the CFO, and his senior management team
in Chapter 2 of this book. One of the senior managers had presented
Human Resources with a long list of complaints, ending with “Either he
goes or I go. And, by the way, the other SMTs feel the same way.”
What followed that disclosure was a series of challenging meetings
over several weeks, as the SMTs spelled out to Tre all of their frustra-
tions, built up over the years. It was hard for Tre to listen to that, to lower
his defensiveness and let go of his ego long enough to hear what they
were saying. The day he walked into the meeting room and acknowl-
edged all that they had said to him as true was a dramatic moment for
everyone. In fact, you could feel the tension drain from the room. One
of the team members said, “This has been life changing for everyone. We
had kept our resentment from Tre for all this time, for fear of his reac-
tions. Now that we have walked through this together, and he has
acknowledged his part, we are stronger as a team than we ever were
before.”
Because sincere acknowledgment can be such a powerful moment,
here’s another example. Several years ago, I mediated a dispute in a large
federal agency between a relatively high-ranking manager, Carl, and his
boss, Angela. Carl had filed several complaints against the agency and
was demanding $1.5 million to settle them. He talked. Angela listened.
He described a series of events during his career when he felt he had
been wronged. She was thoughtful and still. Then she spoke carefully,
“Carl, there are things that have happened here that should not have
happened.” It was as close to an apology as she could get. He heard her.
I watched the face of this robust and angry man soften, his eyes rimmed
with tears. “Nobody in this agency has ever said that to me,” he said qui-
etly. Within minutes, the discussion shifted from “$1.5 million” to “what
can we do now to fix this situation?” In this case, an outright apology
could have been construed as an admission of guilt by the agency—and
managers are trained to avoid any such admission for fear of legal liabil-
ity. For Carl, her acknowledgment was enough—to hear that someone
inside the agency could hear his story from his point of view and want to
make amends.
It Takes Two to Tango
In resolving a conflict or addressing a difficult issue with an employee or
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a co-worker, consider the part that you played in the event. It takes two
to tango. A careful reflection will almost always reveal that both sides
had some role in the situation’s going badly.
When he didn’t get the project completed on time, maybe you
didn’t make the assignment or the deadline clear, or you did not priori-
tize the tasks that employee was juggling. When she barked a curt
response to your question, maybe your own tone of voice sounded disre-
spectful. Did you provide enough guidance so that he felt able to per-
form adequately? Were you so anxious about the task or his ability that
you hovered over his desk, micromanaging his every move? Are you more
comfortable with the work you once did as a member of the staff than
with the assignments of your new position, so that you now interfere
with a subordinate’s ability to complete a project? Or might you have for-
gotten a commitment you made in a meeting and failed to provide the
information you said you would send later?
After identifying your own role in any difficulty, it’s time to sit down
with the person and give feedback on what he or she did wrong. If you
start by acknowledging your own part with a simple apology, the conver-
sation will take a more positive direction. A caution here: Be clear with
yourself before you start the discussion. You are only owning one piece
of the interaction. Avoid allowing the conversation to shift and become
all about you and what you did or didn’t do.
Sally, I want to talk to you about the Hinkelman account.Henry called me yesterday and said he was still waiting for his
payment.” The boss pauses to hear what Sally has to say.
“Gosh. I have been swamped with end-of-year requests. I can’t
do everything at once, you know.”
The boss acknowledges his part, “I realize I may not have
been clear with you that this was a priority. I’ll accept responsi-
bility for that.” And then he goes on, “I count on you to handle all
of these accounts. Customer service is vital to our success.
Turnaround time for these payments is two days. What is the
problem in getting that done?”
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“
Sometimes a manager resists apologizing, fearing to appear weak and
ineffective. It seems more powerful to pretend that you are always right,
that you never make errors. But that is a mistake. Rather, the ability to
admit mistakes can make a manager stronger. The courage it takes to
express regret is often recognized by others. An apology can create a
strong bond between boss and staff. And an apology can give others per-
mission, or even set the expectation, that they too will admit mistakes
when they make them. A sincere apology takes responsibility, acknowl-
edges the harm done, and asks for another chance to do better. Such an
apology can be powerful, especially in difficult conflicts. An apology that
is heartfelt and convincing can melt hardened attitudes and begin to
rebuild relationships.
One of the hardest lessons for me has been to learn how to apolo-
gize, and that is true of so many of us. First, you must recognize when
you have been wrong, and admit that to yourself. Then, you must walk
back into the room and say it out loud to another person: “I am sorry. I
was wrong. I behaved badly. I am not the person I want to be—or want
to think that I am.” What makes it so hard? It is the vulnerability, admit-
ting your imperfection and putting yourself at the mercy of another per-
son. That means you have to trust that your apology will be accepted. Or,
you have to trust that you will have the strength to deal with what comes
next if you don’t receive forgiveness. Yes, you commit to not doing it
again—to trying not to do it again—even to knowing you are imperfect—
and that you may step unconsciously into that same pattern again. What
you do know is that, as you learn, you step into those negative patterns
less often and you catch yourself more quickly each time.
How to Apologize
Though making an apology isn’t easy, breaking it down into concrete
steps can make it more manageable.
1. Acknowledge what you did and what harm it caused.
2. Ask the person how you can repair the damage, or offer the other
person a solution.
3. Make every effort to change the behavior that caused the harm.
4. Give the other person time to hear your apology and to process
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what you have said. An apology is often an important step to
forgiveness, but you cannot demand to be forgiven.
5. Be patient, hopeful, and optimistic; seek new moments to
demonstrate your sincerity and commitment to restoring the
relationship.
Sincerity is the key word when it comes to apologies, as these exam-
ples demonstrate:
> “I realize that I let you down when I didn’t speak up in the
meeting for the work you have been doing. You deserve a lot of
credit and you have not gotten it. What can I do to make certain
others appreciate your efforts?”
> “I should have remembered how much work you already had on
your desk. I am sorry that I lost my temper over that report. I
want to do a better job managing my own reactions, and I will
work hard not to blast you that way again.”
Consider This
] Consider a recent action you now regret. Using the steps
outlined above, have a conversation with the person most
affected by your actions.
When Is an Apology Not an Apology?
Your apology has to be sincere, or else it simply is not an apology. Here
are some clues for detecting an insincere apology:
> The too quick, flippant “I’m sorry” doesn’t carry any weight when
it is said too soon, without reflection. It is likely to be heard as
just a way to get out of an uncomfortable situation as quickly as
possible.
> It’s another apology from the person who apologies too frequently,
for everything. This person apologizes for things he or she doesn’t
even control. “I’m sorry it’s raining.” “I’m sorry you forgot your
lunch.” Sometimes the person seems to be apologizing for his or
her own existence. The apology is as meaningless and as empty as
those who are too quick to offer one. Worse, the person makes the
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idea of apologizing seem weak and ineffective—giving apologies a
bad name.
> “I am sorry you felt that way.” This is not an apology. There is no
acceptance of responsibility for your own actions.
> “I am sorry you misunderstood what I said,” or “I’m sorry I didn’t
get that report to you on time. You didn’t give me enough time to
do it.” These nonapologies turn the blame back onto the other
person.
Forgiveness Granted
As I said earlier, the flip side of an apology is forgiveness. One naturally
follows the other, as day follows night.
The Cost of Not Forgiving
Some of us carry hurts and grudges and bad feelings for a long time.
Forgiveness does not come easy. In fact, sometimes holding onto those
experiences becomes a mantle of pride: “Fool me once, shame on me.
Fool me twice, shame on you.” Often, though, that determination to
carry those grudges turns us bitter and resentful. Learning to let go can
release you from the past and open your heart and your mind to new
opportunities.
The story is told of two Buddhist monks, Tanzan and Ekido,many years ago, who were walking together along a muddy
country road. As they neared the village, they came upon a young
woman stranded on one side of the road. She could not cross
because the mud was so deep she feared it would ruin her silk
kimono. Tanzan carefully picked her up, carried her to the other
side, and the monks then continued on their way. Hours later, as
night was falling, they finally arrived at their lodging. Ekido sud-
denly blurted out, “Why did you carry that girl across the road?!”
“You know we monks are not supposed to touch women!”
Tanzan replied, “I put that girl down hours ago. Are you still
carrying her?”
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You may know someone like April, whom
I met in my role as a mediator. Or maybe you
recognize yourself in some parts of her story.
Many of us hold onto grievances and wounds
for so long they begin to cripple us.
April walked into the meeting carrying a manila folder bulgingwith paper. Three years ago her office had faced a major reor-
ganization. Her job was eliminated; she was slotted “temporarily”
into a lower grade position and had been working on a short-term
assignment since then, to enable her to maintain her previous
pay. Another position description was created that included some
of her former responsibilities. When April competed for that job
with others in the office, she was not selected. Sam was.
What was in the folder she carried? E-mails, some of them
two or three years old. Performance evaluations proving her com-
petence. She was eager to show me all the files and forms and
e-mails that proved she had been wronged, deprived of the pro-
motion she should have gotten. On the phone or in one-on-one
conversations, she repeated her justifications. She had been vic-
timized, denied a job that should have been hers. And she offered
again and again to give me proof. She cried out in pain, “It’s just
not fair!”
She acknowledged the effort that Hank, her boss, had put
into restoring her job to the higher grade, but she clung to the
injury she felt, even though that decision had been made over two
years ago. So, Hank complained bitterly to me about April. “No
matter what I do, she’s not happy. I don’t even want to talk to her
anymore; all she does is complain.”
April spent much of her time in the office collecting data and
evidence about Sam, the man who got the job she wanted. She
tracked his hours at his desk, watching each of his assignments.
She peppered the boss with questions (usually through e-mail):
“Where was Sam yesterday afternoon?” or “I could have done that
project, why didn’t you give it to me?” Or, “Why did he take so
long to get that done?” The more she complained, the more the
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To forgive is not just to
be altruistic, it is the best
form of self-interest.
—ARCHBISHOP DESMOND TUTU
boss avoided her. The more he avoided her, the more she com-
plained.
What price did April pay for holding onto this grudge? Her
anger and bitterness came with her to work every morning. She
missed seeing a lot of the good and beautiful moments of life
around her because her mind was consumed with how she had
been wronged. When pressed, she acknowledged how she liked
the field of work she was in, the luxury of avoiding the madness
of metropolitan traffic, the friends that she had at work, her gen-
erous and supportive family. But, even her hours away from work
could become wrapped up with the negative mood she created,
the dread of going back to work after lunch or the next day, or
after the weekend was over, or after vacation. She created a great
deal of mental stress for herself. She alienated her boss and many
of her co-workers. Others at work saw only the hostility that
shrouded her face. They saw her as April, the discontented.
Holding onto the resentment, she was the one who paid the price
for not forgiving the boss or Sam.
There was a cost to April’s story, too, to the organization. Consider
the work that didn’t get done while she was busy gathering evidence
about Sam. Think of the effect her attitude had on office morale. Morale
drops, productivity falls, the business of the business is not getting done.
And it is important to note that this victim mentality exists in all types of
organizations and at all organizational levels.1
So, holding onto resentment over past wrongs can be pretty self-
destructive. Seen from another way, there often are rewards that keep a
person stuck in a negative pattern such as April’s. What did April get out
of holding onto this resentment? As long as she committed herself to vic-
timhood, she did not have to take responsibility for her own happiness
or her job satisfaction or her performance. As long as she could blame
someone else, she let herself off the hook.
There were a few people in the office who commiserated with April,
who felt sorry for her. They joined in her anger and anguish and pity.
Misery loves company. They created a camp within the office of “us”
against “them” and spent a lot of time and energy blaming others for any
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difficulties, discomforts, or challenges. As long
as April could refuse to forgive her boss, she
felt she could hold it over his head—somehow
punish him for his mistake. What she failed to
see was the terrible price that was paid for
holding on to this attitude—and that she was the one paying the price.
Why Forgive?
Why should someone forgive? Forgiveness lifts the weight off; it is liber-
ating. Letting go and moving on is in your best interest, regardless of the
effect it has on anyone else in the office. Forgiveness grants you a strong
sense of control and peace. There is that line from the poem “Invictus”
by William Ernest Henley: “I am the captain of my fate, I am the mas-
ter of my soul.” You may not be able to control all of what happens to
you, but you can control how you react to it. When you can forgive, you
are not buffeted by the whims and actions of others around you.
Holding onto the bitterness, refusing to forgive, is a poison you take
yourself, often expecting it to have some ill effect on the other person.
Reliving the story over and over again is like pouring acid on your own
psyche. Meanwhile, the offender is not affected at all. Even if he or she
had never apologized, the gift of forgiveness is as much for one’s own
piece of mind as it is for the other person.
Occasionally I hear people say, “I never forgive.” If we all were to live
by those words, we would not be able to function in society. In reality,
when we depend on other people to get anything done, we forgive all of
the time. Working together, day in and day out, to meet challenging goals
inevitably involves people making mistakes. A thousand times a day, we
are forgiving the minor annoyances and blunders.
Wherever people need other people, and the workplace is certainly
that, people make mistakes and we let them go. Someone makes a sharp
remark in a meeting, you let it roll off without further discussion. At
other times, there is an acknowledgment and commitment to do better
the next time. Maybe an employee missed a deadline for a report. She
admits the error, you forgive her, and move on. The embarrassment of
forgetting a lunch date with a colleague is not the end of the friendship.
Sometimes we can only shrug our shoulders and sigh.
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Forgiveness means giving
up all hope for a
better past.
—LILY TOMLIN
Forgiving Yourself
Maybe the hardest person for you to forgive is yourself. The past can
haunt us. Things that we did wrong years ago can still sit achingly on our
hearts. The memory of those events can sometimes paralyze us in the
present. Or we can acknowledge them, learn from them, forgive our-
selves, and commit to doing better in the future.
When I recognize one of those parts of myself that I like the least—
those habits and patterns that become traps—there is a voice in my head
that is pretty harsh: “Yep, Stupid. You did it again.” First, I have to tune
my conscious mind to hear that voice. Then I can reframe it: “This is that
part of me that drives me crazy. I’ll keep working on it.” This is the begin-
ning of forgiving myself. I have found I can then more easily translate
that patience and willingness to forgive to others—the clerk at the gro-
cery store who seems painfully slow, the employee who is on the phone
dealing with some personal problem. Yes, I need to talk to him about
using company time to conduct personal business. At the same time, I
can practice being more willing to give him an opportunity to correct his
behavior: I become more willing to forgive and begin anew.
If I could ever see Cheryl again I would apologize. Some thirty-five
years ago, she was a bright high school student who came in every after-
noon in the work-study program to shelve books in the school library I
managed. She did much more than shelve books, however. She became
an indispensable right hand for so many of the tasks that were waiting to
be done—that person I could turn to and simply ask, “Cheryl, can you
take care of this?” Done. When school was out and the program was
over, we said good-bye. She applied for a real job and listed me as a ref-
erence. She had to call me three times to remind me that the future
employer was waiting for that letter of reference.
In hindsight, I have stood accused in my own mind, over and over
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You can’t get organisms that are willing to hang in there with
each other through thick and thin and make good things happen
despite the roadblocks and the bumps along the way if
they aren’t willing to tolerate each other’s mistakes.
—MICHAEL MCCULLOUGH
again, of not sitting down immediately and writing that letter. Forgiving
myself is consciously letting go of that guilt. Forgiving myself has also
meant a personal commitment to fulfill the requests I receive now as
quickly as possible. Continuing to beat myself up over it serves no one.
Consider This
] Think about your own experience as a manager. What
regrets do you hold onto?
] For each regret, write down a lesson you can learn from
those experiences.
] Consciously forgive yourself for your mistake, and commit
instead to remembering what you learned.
How to Forgive
Sometimes the wounds are so deep that letting go and forgiving seem
just too hard to do. If you recognize yourself here, if you tend to hold
onto grudges and find it difficult to allow people back into your circle of
trust, begin by forgiving people for some of the small stuff. As you prac-
tice those smaller moments of forgiveness, the larger ones can become
more possible to consider. In those situations, think of forgiveness as a
process. It is not as simple as saying, “I forgive you.” It takes time, ener-
gy, and effort. Sometimes, when the pain has been particularly deep, you
may need to revisit the process of forgiveness again and again. Here are
some steps to follow:
1. Make a commitment to yourself to do what is necessary to feel
better. Forgiveness is for you and not for anyone else. To decide to
forgive is a choice for you to make.
2. Know exactly how you feel about what happened and be able to
articulate what about the situation is not okay. It can help to tell a
trusted person about your experience, or write down what
happened.
3. Imagine as vividly as you can what the other person experienced.
4. Identify all the reasons you can think of not to forgive. Make a
list. Write them down. Often making this list allows you to
recognize how trivial some of those reasons are.
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5. Think of times in your life when your wrong actions have hurt or
disappointed others. None of us is perfect. None of us is without
fault. It is much easier to forgive others when we remember our
own weaknesses and failings. We all need to be forgiven from
time to time.
6. Consider the expectations that the person didn’t meet. Identify
what it costs you to hold on to those expectations.
7. Accept responsibility for your own role in what happened.
8. Design and execute a ritual for completion and closure. This can
be simple: throw the list you have made into a fire, or throw a
pebble into the river declaring your intention for the past to be
washed downstream, or bury the list in the garden, or …
9. Instead of mentally replaying your hurt, seek out new ways to get
what you need. Put your energy into looking for another way to
get your positive goals met.
Consider This
] List the people that you need to forgive.
] Choose one person from this list, and create a plan for how
you will forgive that person.
When Forgiveness Is Not Forgiveness
When you tell people you forgive them, you are making a commitment
to them to let the offense go. Holding on to the bitterness or resentment
is not forgiveness. Continuing to remind the other person of his or her
transgression and how magnanimous you have been to forgive is not for-
giveness. Fully forgiving and rebuilding the trust between you that has
been broken takes time. Not allowing that process the time that it
requires, being unwilling to begin to rebuild the trust, is not forgiving.
Here are some tips on how you can recognize your failure to truly for-
give:
> You keep reminding the person of incidents in the past.
> You ruminate over past hurts or offenses.
> You use past experience as an excuse to avoid interactions
irrationally.
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For example, having been bitten by a stray dog, it is reasonable to be
wary of strange dogs. It is not rational to be afraid of all dogs—those you
know well or who are closely monitored by their owners. Likewise, wari-
ness with new relationships may be wise, while being unwilling to cre-
ate new relationships at all can be crippling.
Note
1. June A. Halper, “Stop the Bellyaching.” USA Today, May 2007.
http://guttmandev.com/pdf/halper_usatoday0507 , viewed 11/10, 2010.
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A
nger. Some of us fear it. Some of us
thrive on it. Understanding it better
can help us to manage it.
Stretching across the Chesapeake Bay
just east of Annapolis is the broad expanse of
a bridge. If you are riding across that bridge on a clear Sunday afternoon
in the spring, you can catch glimpses of a hundred sailboats. Some are
headed up the bay, some down. Others are aiming for shore, on either
the southern bank or the northern. All of them are using the same wind.
Sailors know they need the wind to keep them moving. Too little wind
and the boat sits becalmed in the water; too much wind and the boat is
in danger of capsizing. But a good, steady breeze? The sailor knows how
to set the sails, capture the energy, and move the boat in any direction
he or she wants to go.
Think of your emotions as that same vital force. Your thoughts, your
reasoning power, function as the rudder, giving direction to that emo-
tional energy. Though you may often be unaware of your emotions, they
are generating energy that affects the cognitive, thinking parts of your
brain.
151
Rethinking Anger
C H A P T E R 1 0
There is no thought
without feeling, no feeling
without thought.
—DANIEL GOLEMAN
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Here is an experiment to try with friends or family, or yourself. Ask
them, “How do you feel about … [insert your own topic or idea]?” Notice
the words that each person uses to describe his or her “feelings.” How
often is the answer, “I think …” or “I believe …”? The phrase that fol-
lows “I think” or “I believe” is not a feeling—it is a thought. If the answer
is, “I feel that …” then what follows the word that is also a thought, not
a feeling. But the answer that begins with “I feel” or “I am” and uses
words like happy or sad or scared or upset is describing feelings.
Emotions—feelings—are partly mental, partly physical responses
marked by pleasure, pain, attraction, or repulsion. They are not the
enemy to be overcome; rather, they are an important source of informa-
tion, energy, and guidance when we are aware of them. For many of us,
most of the time our emotions are unconscious. Learning to be aware of
our feelings, to put appropriate words to our emotions, is a skill to be
learned and practiced on a daily basis. You may not know what your feel-
ings are, yet they may be driving your thoughts and your actions without
your even realizing what is happening.
It is easy to see how positive feelings move us. The sun is out this
morning, the sky is blue, and a cool breeze whispers through new spring
leaves. I wake up happy, excited to move into the day and find out what
it might hold. The wind is in my sails, and it is a very good thing! It is
sometimes harder to see how negative emotions like fear, sadness, envy,
frustration, and anxiety can also give us energy to get things done. When
the deadline is approaching, a little bit of fear-generated adrenaline gives
us the energy to take action, to put aside the distractions and get to work.
A healthy dose of fear can keep us from taking risks that are dangerous.
Frustration can be an energizer, as well as an immobilizer.
In conflict, those negative emotions come to the fore. When what
you want, need, and expect is getting in the way of what I want, need,
and expect, emotional energy stirs inside both of us. How we manage
that energy determines the direction in which the conflict will go. Often,
when I am dealing with a workplace conflict, someone explains to me,
“We don’t have emotions here; this is the office. That stuff is for home.”
Or maybe, “If we could just keep the emotions out, we could resolve this
and get back to work.” But is this truly the case?
We must shift our thinking about emotions. They are a part of our
reality at every moment, in every place, and it is dangerous to ignore that
reality. Not only are emotions intimately tied to our thoughts and create
the energy for our responses, but like those boats out on the bay, we need
that energy to move us through conflict productively.
The Physiology of Emotions
Here’s a disclaimer: I am not a neuroscientist. However, I do know that
our knowledge about how the brain functions is expanding at a phe-
nomenal rate. Daniel Goleman brought public attention to the world of
emotional intelligence in his book of the same name.1 In an early chap-
ter, he begins to explain the physiology of our emotional reactions, which
gave me my first introduction to many of these concepts.
Here is my brief summary of how your brain works: Just behind your
forehead are the prefrontal lobes, that part of the brain we are so proud
of. This is where we “think”—problem-solve, plan, build positive rela-
tionships. Surrounding the top of the brain stem are several centers that
generate emotional responses. Sometimes people call this the “lizard
brain.” It functions powerfully and often unconsciously (see Figure 10-1).
Figure 10-1. The human brain.
Back between your ears, near the top and on either side of the brain-
stem, there is an almond-sized area of the brain called the amygdala.
This emotional response center has stored memories of our emotional
life history and is primed to kick the body into action when it senses a
similar moment coming around again. Small as it is, the amygdala is a
powerful response center that controls our fight or flight reactions. It
triggers the release of powerful drugs into our systems—adrenaline and
norepinephrine. And it responds some 1,000 times faster than the
frontal lobes.
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One way you might understand how this happens is to remember
what happens when you watch a scary movie. You sit safely in the the-
ater, intent on the screen. Nothing much is happening at the moment.
The camera slowly pans from room to room. Your palms are sweaty, your
heart is pounding, you can hardly breathe. Your amygdala has triggered
an alert: “Something is about to happen,” and you are primed for action.
You have not consciously thought (in the frontal lobes), “Oh, listen, the
music is increasing in intensity, I think something is about to happen.”
Maybe you remember the scene in Alfred Hitchock’s Psycho, when the
woman is showering, or the ominous theme from Jaws. Your amygdala,
without any conscious thought, has picked up the cues from the music
and has triggered the release of adrenaline and norepinephrine, which
are now coursing through your system. You are fired up, ready to go!
Most of the time, there is a healthy flow of information between
these two centers—the frontal lobes and the amygdala. The frontal lobes
work in synch, helping to calm the amygdala by taking appropriate action
as needed. The amygdala gives the frontal lobes energy and information
about what is important to us and how much it might matter. That bal-
ance is right where we want our brains to be.
Much research has been done on people whose amygdalas no longer
function: they are not able to identify fear in themselves or in others.
This inability can cripple a person’s ability to take action when he or she
needs to, to hold onto relationships that the individual cares about, and
to be able to connect with other people. People need the response mech-
anism of the amygdala to generate energy for the cognitive areas of the
brain to be able to make decisions. In other words, with no amygdala, we
are those boats on the Chesapeake Bay, stranded in the middle of the
water, desperately in need of a little wind.
Emotional Hijacking
Picture one of those boats on the bay when a sudden summer storm blows
up. The wind takes the sails broadside, and before we know it the boat is
heeling hard over, with water washing over the gunwales. The hand at the
tiller struggles to maintain control of the boat. Most of us have been there
emotionally at one time or another. Sparking from zero to sixty in seconds
flat, suddenly we are in the middle of a heated argument, popping back
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hot responses. Maybe we slam the door on our way out. We no longer have
access to the frontal lobes—to the thinking, reasoning part of our brains.
The phrase that is often used to describe this is so accurate: emotional
hijacking. The thinking part of the brain has been taken over by the emo-
tions. Some people spend a lot of time in this zone; others rarely venture
there.
Briefly, here is what happens. When the amygdala triggers an emo-
tional response, it sends a strong dose of those chemicals through the
system. The cortex (in the thinking part of the brain, the frontal lobes)
gets reduced to making up justifications, or rationalizations for the emo-
tions that have just erupted. The cortex’s ability to think clearly, to cre-
ate, to explore, is reduced or eliminated. When I have been emotionally
hijacked, asking me to “calm down” or to think rationally is an exercise
in futility—that attempt may make me even more irate. I no longer have
access to the frontal lobes.
Rational thought stops. Gone is the ability to problem-solve or think
creatively. Here is what I have instead:
> Flawed judgment
> Confused perceptions (seeing or hearing things inaccurately)
> Impaired ability to learn or remember
> Reduced ability to say what is true and accurate
> Deadened creativity (except for finding creative reasons to stay
angry)
> Misreading of social cues (assuming that others are hostile or
angry)
> Defensiveness
> Polarized thinking (people take more extreme positions than they
really believe, and hold onto them tightly)
> Increased energy for blame (whatever has happened it is your
fault, or somebody else’s; I have no responsibility for the situation)
Before people in conflict can productively work to resolve differ-
ences, they must recover from the negative effects of emotional hijack-
ing. If the amygdala is not retriggered, in most people these chemicals
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will usually dissipate in the brain in about twenty minutes. For some
people, however, the effects last much longer—hours or even days.
] Before you read any further, think of specific examples
when you or someone you know has lost their temper,
either staying to fight or storming out in flight mode.
Anger as a Secondary Response
Anger is not automatic. It is a secondary response to other feelings.
Think of anger as the lid on a jar. To manage anger—yours or someone
else’s—begin by understanding what is inside the jar, what’s underneath
that lid.
Confused about my own anger, dealing with my teenage children’s
anger, working with people who were frequently angry, I volunteered as
a facilitator with my county’s spouse abusers program to understand
more about anger: what triggers it, and how to manage it more effec-
tively.2 Each week for eighteen weeks, a group, mostly men, filed into the
room. Early in the program, we worked with the participants to connect
their anger with their beliefs about themselves—often patterns that had
been laid down early in life.
One brave man volunteered to participate in front of the class. The
group leader asked him to close his eyes, clear his mind, and remember
a moment when he was really upset. The man then told a story, as if it
had happened yesterday, of a lamp that was broken in his home when he
was a teenager. In a rage, his father blamed him for it, hit him, and sent
him to his room.
Our group leader asked, “How did you feel?” He, in tears, respond-
ed, “I felt blamed for something I didn’t do. I didn’t do it. I wasn’t even
there when it happened.” After identifying these feelings, the leader led
him though the process of unhooking that experience from the truth
about himself. That feeling of unworthiness had followed him for all
those years.
My eyes as well as the students’ were opened. By the end of the class
they were saying, “We should have learned this in high school.” So much
of what they learned—what I was teaching, and what, ultimately, I
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learned—opened my eyes and my heart to what was happening between
me and my children. This translated well to the situations I deal with in
the workplaces I enter.
In Chapter 13, I tell a story from my own experience to describe a
solution-seeking process. But here is the beginning of that story, as
another example of understanding the feelings that undergird anger.
In the middle of a quiet afternoon I went up to the kitchen tomicrowave a bag of popcorn. Eric burst into the kitchen, and
he was full of eighteen-year-old energy. “Mom, get your pocket-
book. We have to get to the bank before it closes, so you can co-
sign a loan with me. I have found the coolest 1979 Camaro.”
My response was, “No. I am not co-signing a loan for a 1979
Camaro. Forget about it.”
We went from zero to sixty in two seconds flat. Suddenly we
were in a heated argument, ending with something like, “You just
don’t love me!” When Eric was a little boy, I could sit him down
on the stairs and tell him to stay there until I said he could get
up. I had some control. As he grew into a teenager taller than me,
I could no longer use that approach. I often felt powerless deal-
ing with this new creature in my house, this proud, strong
man-boy. Out of this feeling of powerlessness I frequently spun
quickly to anger. The same feeling of powerlessness was sparking
in him. So capable in so many ways, he felt frustrated by the lim-
its that were part of his life, put on him by his mother.
Anger starts with an Ativating event. Somebody says something or
does something. Maybe it’s nonverbal and barely visible—when you
speak, he rolls his eyes, or maybe you make a statement and someone
shrugs her shoulders. In that moment, the amygdala picks up the verbal
or nonverbal cue and triggers an emotional response. Nearby, the hip-
pocampus, the storage center for previous fearful situations, works close-
ly with the amygdala, calming or intensifying the amygdala’s responses.
The amygdala translates these impulses into Beliefs: I am being attacked,
or I am being accused, or I am being disrespected. When the amygdala
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sends those chemicals into the rest of your system, and you react—fight,
flight, or freeze, depending on your own disposition, or maybe depend-
ing on your mood that day—you are experiencing the emotional
Consequence. These are the ABCs of anger.
What are the beliefs that cause anger?
> I have been accused—falsely or not.
> I have a reason to feel frightened.
> I have been treated unfairly or cheated.
> I am not valued.
> I am powerless or I have no control.
> I have been disrespected.
> I am unlovable.
THE ABC’S OF ANGER
A Activating event
B Belief (the meaning we put on the event)
C Consequence (emotional)
Consider This
] Think about the situations you identified at the beginning of
this chapter. What are the beliefs that caused the anger you
experienced?
] If the situation you identified was someone else’s anger,
what might have caused the person to react the way he or
she did?
People Use Anger
People use anger to control, to win, to get even, to protect themselves.
You probably know people who yell to get their way. Others respond by
jumping into action, saying, “Just don’t yell at me.” And we all know
someone who uses tears the same way. Those around the teary person
are quick to respond, “Whatever you want, just don’t cry!” How do you
handle these situations?
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More than once I have been called into an office to deal witha difficult boss-staff relationship. Staff members have told
me: “He’s totally irrational; you just can’t work with him rationally.”
I respond, “Tell me what he does.”
“If he doesn’t get what he wants when he wants, he starts
yelling. Sometimes he slams the door to his office.”
“Then what happens?”
“You’d better get busy and get it done!”
What would a rational person do to accomplish his or her
goals the next time something needed to get done? Probably what
worked the last time! Yelling, maybe slamming the door—it
doesn’t seem like such irrational behavior, after all.
The amygdala is fully formed sometime between the ages of two and
five. The frontal lobes that govern rational thought and decision-making
skills are not fully developed until our mid-twenties, however, so it isn’t
always easy going, especially when dealing with children. Remember the
energy it took to control the sailboat in a heavy wind? All our lives, we
practice how to respond to the amygdala’s emotional energy. By the time
an adult is functioning in the workplace, the patterns of response are
deeply set in his or her brain. Addressing those patterns as adults requires
attention and energy over a significant period of time. To begin, just con-
sider the challenge of dealing with children’s emotional responses.
Like all small children, my two-year-old granddaughter testedher limits pretty regularly. We had such a tug of war recently.
“These shorts,” she demanded.
“You can’t wear those shorts to bed,” I started out logically,
“your legs will get cold.”
“I want to wear these shorts,” she screamed. “not those pants.
Not the pink ones, not the purple ones. Just these shorts.” She
burst into tears. I tried to hold her, tried to calm her down. She
wiggled away from me and wedged herself under the bed, scream-
ing and crying.
It was not that big a deal. She could sleep in the shorts. My
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“no” response was really about the power between us and who
had it. It was not about the shorts. It was about who was in con-
trol. I couldn’t let a two-year-old get her way by throwing a
tantrum. I stood up and went into the hall. She screamed. She
cried. I waited. Slowly she wound down to soft sobs. I opened the
door and gently picked her up. The tears were gone. She walked
to the suitcase, rifled through the shirts and pants and shorts and
dresses. She picked out a pair of long, soft black pants. I helped
her pull them on.
Sometimes I watch a little boy being pushed around the gro-cery store by his mom, while she is struggling with his anger,
feeling powerless, and he is learning that outrageous behavior
works. When he yells long and loud enough, his mom will hand
him a candy bar to get the screaming to stop. As I watch her
relent, I groan and think, “Someday that child is going to work
somewhere and become someone else’s problem.”
Addicted to Anger
That child wanting the candy bar in the grocery store learns his lessons
very well. He grows up and gets a job. His pattern of behavior—yelling
or crying or stomping out of the room—honed over twenty years, is
deeply etched into the brain’s neural pathways. Changing these patterns,
creating new synapses and paths in the brain, is not an easy thing to do.
Whether you are the person with a negative pattern you want to change,
or you are working with someone with such negative habits, know that
change will be slow in coming.
For example, my granddaughter has learned to put on her own pants
by now. And like the rest of us, she has developed her own pattern for
getting dressed. She holds up the pants and pushes her right foot
through the pant leg first. Then, the left. Some of us do it the other way
around, but we all develop a pattern that is comfortable, day in and day
out. After the pattern is set, we don’t stop to think about it, about which
leg goes in first. If we wanted to change that habit, though, first we have
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