“Don’t Take It Personally"
I was asked in a recent parenting seminar on any rules for dealing with the rollercoaster of teens. I suggested there are two good rules. I turned and wrote on the board:
Rule 1: Take Nothing Personally
After the chuckles stopped, I added the second rule:
Rule 2: See Rule #1
That was it. That was the extent of the rules. Because it is the "taking it personally" that suddenly makes the conversation go downhill.
In his book, Four Agreements, Miguel Ruiz makes the same point. One of his agreements is to take nothing personally. The reason for his suggestion is because nothing is really personal.
When someone tells me he or she is angry with me, that person is saying much more about him- or herself than about me. Whatever they say is a perception, not necessarily correct or true.
But our response is to become defensive, to react to the attack. And there is a good reason for that. Our brain's most primitive part is designed to detect threat. It is not designed to be good at assessing whether a threat is actual or not, only that there is a possible threat. Brain researchers tell us that there is an area of the brain, the amygdala, that is deep within our brain structure. It is always scanning for threat.
When it sees a potential threat on the horizon, it sends the brain and body into protection-mode. Just in case.
Survival depends upon over-reacting. So, we are better off, survival-wise, responding to real threat and perceived threat with equal speed and force. If I am walking down a path and see a crooked stick, my mind registers the possibility of a snake, and I freeze. Then, the rest of my brain catches up and assesses that it is only a stick. I move on. Had it been a snake, but my brain was set to assume it was not a threat, I would have been bitten. Not good for survival.
Unfortunately, what is good for survival is not so good for personal relationships. When someone raises their voice to me, or uses critical words, my deepest instinctual part sees threat. And since the person probably doesn't just stop, my mind continues to register threat. Suddenly, my body is ready for one of two responses: fight or flight. Neither are particularly useful responses in having an intelligent discussion.
So, working on not taking it personally is a step in stopping that immediate response of fight/flight. If it is not a personal attack, there is no reason to respond to the attack. And, of course, as with most things, this is easier said than done.
Make it a spiritual discipline (which means you will have to work at it) to take nothing personally. Whatever is said, do as my mother often said, "consider the source." And while mom may have meant it in a somewhat derogatory way toward the other person, in this case, consider the views, feelings, and understandings of the other. Perhaps the other is having a difficult time. Perhaps there are some key things that trigger a response in the other. Perhaps it has just been a misunderstanding. Unfortunately, misunderstandings can spiral out of control as each misunderstands the other, resulting in resentments, which only increases the potential for misunderstandings.
And this is true, even with a spouse. Take nothing personally.
In a coming article, I’ll talk some more about how to actualize this in a marriage.