Lessons from a Recovering Doormat

Lessons from a Recovering Doormat

Resolving Conflict

posted by Daylle Deanna Schwartz | 12:01pm Thursday June 3, 2010

BookCover-JustConflict.jpgDoorMats have a tough time resolving conflicts. Often we do what we can to avoid them to the point of generating serious negative emotions from not addressing what bothers us. If we reach the breaking point, our handling of the conflict can be emotional and ineffective. I’m delighted to have Rev. Dr. Mark Robinson as my guest today. He’s a psychotherapist and the Executive Director of the Center for Creative Conflict Resolution in St. Louis.  He is also the author of JUST CONFLICT: Transformation through Resolution. He has some great tips for handling conflicts in ways that will bring you the most satisfaction and self-empowerment.

How to Resolve Any Conflict
By Dr. Mark Robinson

We all resolve conflicts every day. Many of our conflicts are so small we hardly notice them. Some are ones we address all the time and are very skilled at resolving. But there are some conflicts which arise over and over in our most significant relationships which never seem to be adequately worked through.

??Because they keep coming up–and because they are in relationships which are important to us–we do everything we can think of to try to resolve them. When we can’t we often decide that they are irresolvable. “Since I have tried everything,” we reason, “and it still isn’t fixed, there must be nothing I can do about it.” ??

HeadShot2-MarkLeeRobinson.jpgIn thirty years of working with people in high conflict relationships I have found that there is one simple shift that opens up a vast array of possibilities for addressing and resolving conflict. This shift is to let go of trying to change the other and to focus instead on changes we can make in ourselves. When we are centered in our own experience, clear about what we need, doing what we can do to generate the qualities we need, without any expectation or demand that the other change, we discover we are immensely powerful and creative. ??

Nevertheless, while this shift in perspective is simple and creative, it is not easy. By looking at the reasons this shift is hard to make we can find hints for creative change. ??

We don’t know we are trying to change others. We know we can’t change others. Even if we get them to change their behavior in the short run, they can always change back. But just because we can’t control them doesn’t mean we don’t try. If you are trying to address a conflict with someone and they are resisting you, you are trying to change them. ??

The problem is not in wanting others to change; of course we want that. The problem is in trying to get them to change. Even trying to get the other to understand me is trying to change them unless the other wants to know what is going on with me. ??

We don’t know why we should change. We see the other as responsible for the problem so it is the other who should change. We aren’t to blame. But when we think of responsibility only as whose fault it is we generate a fight. A fight is when we try to make each other lose. ??

If the only way I know to win is to get you to change, all you have to do to make me lose is do what you are already doing. What could be easier? The reason for me to change is not because I am bad or wrong the way I am, but because I am not getting what I need the way things are. We change because we care about ourselves. ??

We don’t know how to use our emotions constructively. With these persistent conflicts our emotions can overwhelm us. We can feel flooded by them and they sometimes inspire choices which get us the opposite of what we need. We think of these as “negative” emotions. But emotions are data and energy. They are information about what we need and the energy to act to create what we need.

Emotions arise because there are important qualities missing from our lives. When we act to create those qualities for ourselves, we not only create what we need, we create what everyone needs. This is not a zero sum game. Everyone can win. ??

We don’t know what would be a better choice. While it is simple (though not easy) to shift from trying to change others to changing ourselves, knowing what to do can be quite complex. Most of the conflicts we are trying to address are complicated.

??I may have a conflict with my son over the tidiness of his bedroom. I want him to learn that if he wants to be able to find his things and have them be safe he will have to take care of them. And I don’t want to live in a pigsty. Part of me wants to allow him to experience the consequences of his own choices and part of me is worried about vermin. When I can clearly hear from each of these internal perspectives and know what each is trying to create for me, I can then know how to act towards my son in a manner that supports his ability to care for himself, his property, and his relationships with others.

??By letting go of the goal of changing the other and simply working to transform ourselves all conflicts can be resolved.
——————–
Rev. Dr. Mark Lee Robinson has been on the forefront of conflict resolution, social justice, and gender equality for over thirty years. He is a psychotherapist and the Executive Director of the Center for Creative Conflict Resolution in St. Louis.  He is also the author of JUST
CONFLICT: Transformation through Resolution
(Epigraph 2009). For more information about Dr. Robinson, and to learn more about his Center for Creative Conflict Resolution, visit the website at www.creativeconflictresolution.org and www.justconflict.com

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Comments read comments(3)
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Your Name Babs

posted June 3, 2010 at 1:22 pm


Very informative.Useful for personal relation at home. Have a son in dire need of applying to his life
Afraid to come out of his shell and feels only wauos to rely on his dad. Son is 31



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Mark Lee Robinson

posted June 3, 2010 at 4:08 pm


Babs,
Your son is suffering in his shell and you would like to help him out of it. Under these circumstances you must feel pretty helpless. You can’t get him to change. Try instead to notice how his condition affects you. Pay keen attention to the impact on you and see if you can distinguish what you want [him to come out of his shell] with what you need [the qualities that are missing in your life]. You may be feeling as though you have failed as a mother. You may be angry at his dad for coddling him. You may be sad that his potential isn’t being realized. See how many effects you can identify and then look for what you want to do about it. If you are concerned that his dad isn’t challenging him, do you have a relationship with Dad in which you can give each other constructive feedback? Would you like to? Would he? Just be careful not to decide on a strategy before you know fully what it is that you need.
Mark Lee Robinson



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Daylle Deanna Schwartz

posted June 5, 2010 at 12:42 pm


Thanks for your response Dr. Robinson!



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