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This is an Ezine article about conflict resolution. If you would like personalized help with resolving a conflict or another issue, click on the button to find out more:
Restrict
and Evict the Idea of Conflict
What is Conflict?
Conflict
is not what you think it is. Like anything else, that which we don’t
understand we fear, and what we fear we negatively judge. So lets look at what
the current definition of conflict is: 1.
Fight, battle, war 2. Mental struggles resulting from incompatible or opposing needs, drives, wishes or internal demands; competitive or opposing action of incompatibles; antagonistic state or action 3.
The opposition of persons or forces that gives rise to the dramatic
action in a drama or fiction 4.
To come into collision or disagreement, be contradictory, at variance, or
in opposition; clash 5.
Discord of action, feeling, or effect; antagonism or opposition, as of
interests or principles It
doesn’t sound too good, does it? In outward appearances, some people seem to
even thrive on conflict. Conflict is actually a complicated issue that needs to
be looked at far more closely to understand why it happens and what is really
happening for the people engaged in it.
People
will always have a difference of opinion about many things. We are actually
trained from childhood that conflict is a normal part of life and of most
societies. But have you ever really thought to question the status quo about
conflict? Have you ever considered the possibility that conflict is not required
and does not have to be part of your life? That conflict, like most of our other
emotional reactions can become a choice? Misunderstanding and ConflictWhen
conflict occurs, what is really happening is that both parties feel
misunderstood and they progressively escalate their attempts to prove their
point or show that their position is right. This happens on both sides.
It takes two people to enter into conflict. If one person believes there is a
conflict and the other person does not share that same belief, then there is
no conflict.
What
also happens as soon as misunderstanding and assumptions are made is that the
fight or flight response is also triggered. It seems that in most of my writings
I end up talking about this response. Yet it is so important that we become more
aware of just how incredibly often this is triggered in our day-to-day life so
that we can do something to change it. The
whole point of these Ezines is to raise your awareness of yourself and others so
that you can stop emotionally reacting and make different choices instead.
As long as you remain unaware of your triggers, you remain powerless to
change them. It is only through becoming more aware of yourself that you regain
the power of choice. Now lets get back to understanding conflict. Looking at Conflict More Deeply
Whatever comes out of a person’s mouth has nothing to do with you and everything to do with the way their brain has processed information. The subconscious mind is that vast subterranean part of the iceberg that you cannot see. Only the tip of it is what you are experiencing. I am encouraging you to look down into the water to see that it exists. You don’t have to change anything other than the direction in which you direct your eyes and your focus. A person who goes into conflict has made a mistake. They have interpreted something in their external environment as being unsafe or potentially threatening. In this process, their fight or flight response is triggered. They feel the need to defend themselves against a perceived threat, whether it is there or not. If you believe in the idea of conflict, you will also react in the same way to their reaction. One
of the most interesting aspects of conflict is that because the fears in your
mind are perennially looking for potentially unsafe situations to protect you
from, your mind looks from within a very narrowed perspective. This sentinel of
your mind instantaneously alerts you to potential threats. In that microsecond, your mind
jumps into tunnel vision, tunnel hearing, and tunnel understanding. The
probability of misinterpreting an event skyrockets.
Identifying the Potential for ConflictThe alternative to conflict has a few steps, the first of which is to recognize that the other person feels somehow unsafe and/or threatened. Instead of responding to their mistaken beliefs and assumptions, you instead search for and deal with the real reason for reacting, which has nothing to do with you, but everything to do with the misunderstanding that they are unaware of. You
can tell when a person shifts into even a mild form of fight or flight, which
can be subtle or overt, but when you train yourself, becomes more obvious. We
generally have not developed our power of observation in this way, so we tend to
miss the clues and/or misunderstand them.
It
is just at or before this point that you can learn to choose a different response. Choose
instead to use your power of observation to look even more closely at what is
happening with this person. Look at their body language. Have they stiffened up,
muscles tensed, facial expressions suddenly changed? What has happened to their
tone of voice? Does it occur to you that you or something else has just been
misunderstood? These
are all the things that you can train yourself to look for. Even if you have
already been triggered into feeling defensive, you can still take different
action in this way. By distracting your mind and giving it a different focus,
you are also working at minimizing your own fight or flight response. Insist to
your own mind that the other person has made a mistake, contrary to what it is
telling you. Disarming Conflict With Different Choices
This other person has experienced a trigger of a deep subconscious response within themselves and the way out potential conflict is to help them become more conscious of what just happened for them before they escalate. This is how you can disarm and avoid conflict. When you see a person being triggered and heading into conflict, first calm your own mind and look for and remove your assumptions, and possible misunderstandings. If you feel a deep need to be right or defensive, you have already been triggered into fight or flight and you need to backtrack. The best solution is to find out the real issue for the other person.
Never tell them that they are wrong or what they need to think or you will escalate the feeling of conflict further. They will react with an attack in their attempt to defend themselves against what they see as you attacking them by telling them that they are wrong in some way. Instead, help them look for the assumption that they have made that is causing them to get defensive. Something has made them feel unsafe. Become a detective in finding out what that could be. Each situation is unique. There is no magic solution where one suggestion will work for all situations. You will have to be creative and adapt the suggestions and try different combinations and variations to see what will work. Personal growth is an evolution that is cyclical and multilayered, requiring a multidimensional approach. When something doesn’t work, you use that experience to learn from it to see what you want to do differently the next time. If either person has been drinking alcohol, it becomes extremely difficult if not impossible to implement these strategies. Alcohol chemically produces the same stress response as in fight or flight by stimulating the release of stress hormones such as cortisol and adrenaline. Your body goes into this response without specific triggers for you to intellectually and logically work through.Learning From Conflict; Not Reinforcing it!
Of course the ideal situation is where you can make the choice at that very important juncture before you go into fight or flight. But what do you do if you are triggered as well, get defensive, go into fight or flight and end up in that conflict that you are wanting to and trying to avoid? This is where hindsight can actually be of value to you. Observe your own behaviors and responses without judging yourself. It is only fear that insists that you or the other person are right or wrong or good or bad. Going into that place of judgment is completely pointless and very harmful. It prevents you from looking at the situation clearly so that you can make different choices in the future.
To teach your brain new responses it must be done from a space of relative safety. Review what happened in this most recent conflict and look for and identify the assumptions that both of you just made. Look for and identify the additional meaning that was placed on the situation. Train yourself to clearly see how both your responses escalated. Watch what your mind did to try to protect you and see how the other person's mind tried to protect them. Notice how this type of "protection" does not work. By familiarizing yourself with this patterned process, it gives you knowledge, awareness, and a little more power. Then the next time you see the potential for conflict arising, when you see a person has misunderstood something and has gone into fight or flight, you know that you have different options available to you. Sometimes you will be able to take them and sometimes not. The Results of All Your Hard Work!There will be the first time that you try this approach and succeed. It will feel wonderful. Then there will be a number of times that you don’t. Fight the tendency to feel bad about it and study the behaviors more. You will succeed again. And then again. The more you practice this the better you will get at it. You will slowly start to feel safer. The safer you feel the better you get at this.
Congratulations, in this process you create incredible value for yourself. Even if you have only just started and haven’t even practiced this yet, the seed has been planted. Practice this in any and all environments. Each experience has value to you from the perspective of putting you in the position to be able to learn through observation. Watch how others go into conflict so that you become familiar with how it evolves in yourself. This is the ultimate in peacemaking. You will eventually learn that there is nothing to avoid or be afraid of. There is great personal power in learning these tools and applying them. It might take you months or years before you really get good at it. How long it takes doesn’t matter. You are changing an elemental and deeply recessed part of yourself.
If you want help with Restricting and Evicting the Idea of Conflict in your life or with any other issue, contact me to get The Help You Need. Right Here. Right Now. Ewa Schwarz OnlineCounseling.org http://www.onlinecounseling.org/
I welcome
your questions and comments on this article as well as suggestions for
future articles: Ezine
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Thank you for your continued support.
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