Working Life
  • Home
  • About
  • Clients
  • Coaching
  • Contact

Assumptions

7/29/2012

6 Comments

 
Picture
We are programed to protect ourselves. So when someone says or does something we’re not sure we understand, we immediately start running through the possibilities. We quickly draw a conclusion about what they meant so we know how to react. Communication being what it is, we are naturally doing this constantly all day long every day without realizing it, except maybe if someone offers us some food. Which probably just means 'would you like some food?' Of course it could mean 'you look too thin', or 'I’d like it I you were fatter than I am', or 'please eat this chocolate with me so I won’t feel guilty about it'. 

We naturally have varying degrees of trust levels with everyone we know, and with people we don’t know, we unconsciously assess as quickly as possible how much we can trust them and for what. We do this to stay safe; it’s an instinct as old as humankind, or perhaps the entire animal kingdom. In humans the famous fight or flight instinct is rooted in the amygdala, a set of neurons in the brain associated with both fear and pleasure, responsible for the processing and memory of emotional reactions. It enables past experiences to influence our reactions in the present, since we base our current impressions of what is happening on emotional memories.

The problem is that this often causes automatic responses based on false assumptions about another person’s intentions. At work perhaps the most common and powerful negative reactions come from a perceived threat to your status - someone questioning your judgment, a colleague who doesn’t seem to like you, your boss giving you the evil eye. Without more information or direct communication with the other person, over time you can build up a very strong case for your initial negative assumption about their motives. She’s trying to spoil my reputation, he wants me fired, she wants my job….. Which of course will not be invisible to them, and in turn will cause them to make negative assumptions about your intentions.

Often these situations can be remedied by a frank person-to-person talk exploring motives. Most of the time whatever is going on has all to do with them and very little to do with you. I would like to suggest a practice to help counteract some of this fear and paranoia that we all experience at times. First assume the best. Put it on a sticky note on your computer where you have to see it all the time. Stop and think what might be going on with the other person or their situation that has nothing to do with you. See if that helps when you do it repeatedly. If not, then maybe it’s time for that talk.

6 Comments
Ann Hornbeck link
7/29/2012 11:42:16 am

Great advice! Oh, I remember those days! So happy to now know myself.

Reply
Kathy Burke
8/3/2012 04:33:49 am

Maybe you should call yourself a "career happiness coach"!

Reply
research paper services link
11/5/2016 12:53:40 am

Ok, I will definitely try this strategy. It will be an amazing experience for me.

Reply
bestdissertation link
1/5/2017 02:12:24 pm

I think I must admit, it is really true! An assumption is something that we hold as true. Sometimes there is evidence to back up our assumptions other times we just take it for granted that it is true. If some one told you that the sun came up today you would believe them based on past evidence. Critical thinking demands that we become aware of our thought processes including our assumptions. We must examine what we may be taking for granted as true.

Reply
buy essay link
1/18/2017 04:20:06 pm

I think that now is a great time for such talk! What do you think?

Reply
buy essay link
1/18/2017 04:21:20 pm

It's perfect time to talk now! Do you agree with me?

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Picture

    Working Life 

    Kathleen Marvin 

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

    Picture

    Archives

    July 2012
    June 2012

    Categories

    All
    Communication
    Emotions
    Intentions
    Leadership
    Success
    Values

    RSS Feed

Site powered by Weebly. Managed by Bluehost