Short Notes
From:
EMOTIONAL
VAMPIRES AT WORK
Dealing with
Bosses and Coworkers Who Brain You Dry
Albert J.
Bernstein, PhD.
McGraw Hill Education
258 pages
The antisocial that most likely will give you
trouble at work are in 2 basic models: Bullies & con artist. Quite a few of them have the kind of charm it
takes to get promoted way beyond their level of competence. From above, they look greed. From below, it’s
an entirely different story.
Antisocial
bullies
are the most menacing of the emotional vampires. The most erotically skill needed to deal with
emotional vampires is the ability to think rather than react when subjected to
emotional pressure. Bullies are hooked on
excitement. Their drug of choice is
intimidation. As bosses, they delight in
making their subordinates squirm.
Bullies look for reasons to attack. The cause is unimportant. They do it because it feels good. Bullying antisocial bosses often create fear
and confusion in the crudest way possible with profanity, harsh teasing and
name calling. For other people, angry
cut, burst has a purpose, for antisocial bullies they are an end unto
themselves.
Your first response in an emotional situation is
usually your own habitual kind of fast thinking. Often it plays right into the vampire’s hands.
In stressful situations, your first idea
is rarely your best. Some suggestion is:
·
Ask for time
·
Repeat asking for time if necessary (in emotional
situations, before you say anything else, ask for a moment to think)
·
Know your goal
·
Maintain control by asking question (ignoring
attacks and asking questions)
Most conflicts with bullies are really about
dominance. Content hardly matters. Dominance is about hierarchies. Bullies get off on beating people down,
especially people who can’t fight back. To
the people above them in hierarchy, they are obsequious as they expect you to
be. The rule is simple and direct: the
boss gives the orders and the subordinates follow them.
We have to listen to our superior, but they do not
have to listen to us. This is one rule
you just have to accept without getting bent out the shape. Laughter at work has much more to do with who is
telling the joke than how funny it is. Bullies
laugh at you. They never laugh at
themselves.
Even if your facts are incontrovertible, superiors,
even if they aren’t Bullies, will not be wrong. Whatever point you have to make will be more
effective if it is presented as a request for information. In general the person asking question is
asserting dominance over the person answering them. Subordinates can request clarification, but
not justification. Make sure you know the
difference.
Most of the conflicts you are likely to experience
with emotional vampire bosses begin as struggles for dominance.
To be continued…
Coming next: antisocial con
artist….
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