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Reddit mentions of Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 6

We found 6 Reddit mentions of Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most. Here are the top ones.

Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most
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Release dateNovember 2010

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Found 6 comments on Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most:

u/snapxynith · 12 pointsr/SocialEngineering

As you realize becoming great at social skills is just like training any other skill. Realizing you can train it will allow you to build the skill stronger than others who stumble into it. So many will say you can't get better or amazing by reading in a chair. They're right. Read a little, apply a lot, take notes, then review what you did right and what you did wrong, repeat. Get a mentor or training buddy if you can, it accelerates learning, because we can't see ourselves the same as those outside us can. Make a regimen to go out, greet and meet people every day. Or at least three times a week minimum, make it a habit.

I can tell you that I've been in customer service and sales jobs, they taught me nothing because my skills were garbage and sub-par. So I didn't have a paddle for my raft in the world of social interaction. All I got was "people get irritated if I cold approach or try to sell them. Or worse I have to dump mountains of information to make them feel safe." So after studying for the better part of a decade, here's some points that got me to the basics and more advanced subjects. With the basics under your belt, then a job or daily practice will get you understanding and results.

First, learn how to steady yourself mentally, breathing exercise here. Breathing is important as we seem to be learning your heart rate and beat pattern determine more about our emotions than we'd like to admit.

Second, Accept and love yourself, (both those terms may be undefined or wishy-washy to you at the moment, defining them is part of the journey.) Because you can only accept and love others the way you apply it to yourself first.

Third, pick up and read the charisma myth. It has habits/meditations that will be a practice you use every day. I'd say a basic understanding will happen after applying them over three months. Never stop practicing these basics, they are your fundamentals. They determine your body language. The difference between a romantic gaze and a creepy stare is context of the meeting and body language, especially in the eyes.

Sales or cold approach networking will do the same for practice. If you do sales or meeting new people, it is a negotiation. You're trying to trade "value" (safety + an emotion). So if you figure out how to make yourself feel emotion, then inspire emotion in others, mutual agreements happen. Start with Why is a good reference. Here is a summary video. Chris Voss will help you find out that you don't tap into people rationally, you tap people emotionally, big think summary video. Or the full book treatment, Never Split the Difference. The supporting book for Chris Voss' position can be helped by reading Start With No

For training habits and understanding how we execute behaviors, Thinking, Fast and Slow

For dealing with hard arguments and heavy topics both Nonviolent Communication and Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most

Learning what listening is, instead of "hearing" people. Just Listen: Discover the Secret to Getting Through to Absolutely Anyone is a good book for that. This is touched on in Never Split the Difference and in the Charisma Myth because true listening, making the person you are speaking with feel "listened to and understood" is most of what makes a charismatic person work.

u/ASnugglyBear · 3 pointsr/suggestmeabook

I at no point thought you some sort of loon, I think all sorts of doctors, psychologists included, are valuable tools to be used, yet you have concluded I'm being a sarcastic ass to you by advising to use that resource.

After noticing I crossed a boundary from your reaction, I backed off. You clearly come from a place/family/upbringing where that is a grave insult, so I backed off, and suggested a book in line with your request.. Their other book, Difficult Conversations may also work for you. So might Non-violent communication. They're all about non-angrily connecting with people, dealing with misunderstanding, and getting past it.

u/mrflee · 2 pointsr/Teachers
u/GSnow · 1 pointr/AskMen

Gottman's book is excellent. I recommend it all the time.

One communication book that is not specifically marriage related, but relationship related is Difficult Conversations, by Stone, Patton, and Heen. Not a book intended for people right in the middle of a fight, but one that can be very helpful in reflecting on previous conflicts and figuring out what can be done to make future conversations WAY better.

u/yourfriendlane · 1 pointr/IAmA

I wish I could claim the idea, but it's lifted from the book Difficult Conversations. Fantastic read if you're feeling up for a bit of self-enrichment.