Joyinformation

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    3 Women With Eczema Describe the Ways They Combat Nighttime Flare-Ups

    May 17, 2022

    12 Easy Digital Nomad Visas (for Remote Workers)

    May 17, 2022

    Best deals today: GIGABYTE gaming laptops, Samsung wireless earphones, Xbox controllers and more

    May 17, 2022
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Joyinformation
    • Home
    • Technology
      1. Gadgets
      2. Mobiles
      3. View All

      Tech that is designed for marginalized and vulnerable groups from the start is better, safer, more innovative, robust, and integrative of privacy (Afsaneh Rigot/Wired)

      May 17, 2022

      It will soon be easy for self-driving cars to hide in plain sight. We shouldn’t let them.

      May 16, 2022

      When your startup’s core mission is set to be overturned – TechCrunch

      May 15, 2022

      Q&A with retail traders after Terra's crash: some lost their life savings, others shared suicidal ideation on forums, some now acknowledge it's a Ponzi scheme (Edward Ongweso Jr/VICE)

      May 14, 2022

      Best deals today: GIGABYTE gaming laptops, Samsung wireless earphones, Xbox controllers and more

      May 17, 2022

      Qualcomm confirms Snapdragon launch event for May 20

      May 16, 2022

      How to watch Eurovision live stream for free: 2022 Grand Final online viewing guide

      May 15, 2022

      HONOR X9 5G Review: Great smartphone, but it fails to impress

      May 14, 2022

      Best deals today: GIGABYTE gaming laptops, Samsung wireless earphones, Xbox controllers and more

      May 17, 2022

      Tech that is designed for marginalized and vulnerable groups from the start is better, safer, more innovative, robust, and integrative of privacy (Afsaneh Rigot/Wired)

      May 17, 2022

      Qualcomm confirms Snapdragon launch event for May 20

      May 16, 2022

      It will soon be easy for self-driving cars to hide in plain sight. We shouldn’t let them.

      May 16, 2022
    • Business
    • Politics

      Fox and Right Wing News Finally Being Held to Account for ‘Replacement Theory’

      May 17, 2022

      Twitch Removed the Buffalo Shooter’s Livestream in 2 Minutes

      May 16, 2022

      Jesse Watters Squeezes Lindsey Graham On Fast Moving Ukraine Aid While Americans Are Left Hanging

      May 15, 2022

      Joe Biden Refers to Kamala as “President Harris” in Meeting with Southeast Asian Leaders (VIDEO)

      May 14, 2022

      “Pro-Life” Gov. Greg Abbott Demands That Biden Starve Babies

      May 13, 2022
    • Lifestyle
      • Health
      • Relations
    • Home decor
    • Travel
      • Sports
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Joyinformation
    Home»Relations»Brené Brown’s Atlas of the Heart: Defensiveness and Flooding
    Relations

    Brené Brown’s Atlas of the Heart: Defensiveness and Flooding

    stylishwebsBy stylishwebsMay 3, 2022No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp VKontakte Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Defensiveness

    At its core, defensiveness is a way to protect our ego and a fragile self-esteem. Our research team member Ellen Alley explains that our self-esteem is considered fragile when our failures, mistakes, and imperfections decrease our self-worth. In our work, the opposite of a fragile self-esteem is grounded confidence. With grounded confidence, we accept our imperfections and they don’t diminish our self-worth. It makes sense that defensive-ness occurs in areas of our lives where we have fragile self-esteem, or across several areas of our lives if the fragility is more general. Any perceived call-out of our weakness is experienced as an attack on our worth, so we fight hard to defend ourselves against it.

    In order to try to limit our exposure to information that differs from how we think of ourselves, we get defensive and overjustify, make excuses, minimize, blame, discredit, discount, refute, and reinterpret. Defensiveness blocks us from hearing feedback and evaluating if we want to make meaningful changes in our thinking or behavior based on input from others.

    In our Dare to Lead training, we work with participants to figure out what defensiveness looks like for them, what it feels like, and whether there are some situations that are more likely to trigger it than others. To increase self-awareness, we ask folks to think back to a time when they received difficult feedback and try to remember what their bodies were doing, what thoughts were coming up, and what emotions they were feeling. The vast majority of people struggle to remember the exact thoughts and feelings, which makes sense, given that many of us go into fight-or-flight mode in these situations.

    However, for the most part, people can remember their physical responses: Folding their arms over their chest, shoving their hands into their pockets, getting tunnel vision, feeling their heart race, looking down, and getting dry mouth are just a few. It’s worth thinking about the physical cues that show up for you when experiencing defensiveness and devising a strategy that can help pull you back into the present moment.

    When I get defensive, I often get tunnel vision and start planning what I’m going to say instead of listening. But I have found some ways to disarm my defensiveness. My strategy is to subtly open my palms, even if my hands are just hanging by my side or on my lap, and actually say, “I’m sorry. Can you say that again? I really want to understand.” It’s pretty effective. If I’m having a really hard time, I might say, “I’m sorry. I’m feeling overwhelmed. I’m going to get a glass of water. Can we sit down in ten minutes and start again?”

    Flooding

    This seems like the perfect place to talk about the concept of flooding. The body can become overwhelmed when it senses danger, and for a lot of us, a difficult conversation, hard feedback, or an argument is enough to send our body into overdrive. We can feel overwhelmed, attacked, and confused. According to the Gottman Institute, flooding is “a sensation of feeling psychologically and physically overwhelmed during conflict, making it virtually impossible to have a productive, problem-solving discussion.”

    In his book Why Marriages Succeed or Fail: And How You Can Make Yours Last, John Gottman explains, “We each have a sort of built-in meter that measures how much negativity accumulates during such interactions. When the level gets too high for you, the needle starts going haywire and flooding begins. Just how readily people become flooded is individual.” He also shares that flooding is affected by how much stress you have going on in your life. The more pressure we’re under, the more likely we are to be easily flooded.

    One of the worst patterns that I brought to my marriage from my family was “Get back in here and fight with me!” Growing up, we didn’t take breaks during fights. No one ever said, “This is no longer productive and we should take a time-out before someone gets their feelings hurt.” Our strategy was get louder and meaner until you win or someone else is crying. When I first married Steve, in the middle of a heated argument he would say, “Let’s stop and take a break.” I was like, “What are you talking about?”

    At some point, I realized that stopping scared me. Fighting together seemed less painful than hurting alone. Looking back, I just didn’t know how to do it. I had never been taught or seen it modeled. Gottman’s work helped me understand the mechanics behind “Okay, can we circle back in twenty minutes?” or “Okay, how much time do you need?” Knowing that we’re coming back to finish the discussion, and when, reassures me in some way.

    This research also helped me realize that it wasn’t just Steve who was getting overwhelmed. I get overwhelmed too. The difference is our strategies. He shuts down; I lash out. Disastrous.

    Now when I feel flooded, I’m as likely to say “Time-out” as he is. This is a good thing because, according to Gottman, chronic flooding sets us up to dread communicating. Gottman discusses this effect in the context of marriages and partnerships, but I’ve seen the same thing in organizations. I’ve interviewed many research participants who experience chronic flooding with their bosses, so much so that every time they’re called into the office, they’re already on the path to overwhelm.

    There’s only so much our bodies and nervous systems can stand before they flip the survival switch and stop communicating and start protecting or attacking. Looking back, I’ve never once regretted calling a time-out at home or work. Not once. I’ve never experienced a little time and space being a bad thing, but I have plenty of regrets the other way around.

    Excerpted from Atlas of the Heart by Brené Brown. Copyright © 2021 by Brené Brown. Excerpted by permission of Random House. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.


    Gottman Relationship Adviser
    The all-new Gottman Relationship Adviser can help you understand the state of your relationship and help you improve it.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
    Previous ArticleRNC And Trump Campaign Lose And Must Turn Over Email Marketing Data To The 1/6 Committee
    Next Article Frank Sanchez: Cuban dangerman lies in wait for Joe Joyce or Joseph Parker | Boxing News
    stylishwebs
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Self-Soothing Tips for High Conflict Couples

    May 17, 2022

    The Partner With Low Desire, Controls Sex

    May 16, 2022

    5 Ways to Build Emotional Wealth in Your Relationship

    May 15, 2022

    How to Deal With Passive-Aggressive Behavior in Your Relationship

    May 13, 2022

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    This is ads space ( here you can add image or text ) ( to edit this part just go to widget section and select main sidebar and you can add your ads image or text here )
    Our Picks
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Health

    3 Women With Eczema Describe the Ways They Combat Nighttime Flare-Ups

    By stylishwebsMay 17, 20220

    If you have eczema, you know what it’s like – that frustrating struggle to catch…

    12 Easy Digital Nomad Visas (for Remote Workers)

    May 17, 2022

    Best deals today: GIGABYTE gaming laptops, Samsung wireless earphones, Xbox controllers and more

    May 17, 2022

    Tech that is designed for marginalized and vulnerable groups from the start is better, safer, more innovative, robust, and integrative of privacy (Afsaneh Rigot/Wired)

    May 17, 2022

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    Your source for the daily Updates and reviews. Supergametime delivers the best and most comprehensive video and entertainment coverage, including news, reviews, trailers, walkthroughs.

    Our Picks
    New Comments
      Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
      • Home
      • Politics
      • Business
      Joyinformation.com. All rights received

      Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.