|
The Get Wrong Do Right Emotional Health Newsletter
This month: What we get wrong about Emotional Validation, why we get it wrong and how to do it right. Plus book recommendations, the monthly poll and announcements. To
subscribe click here. |
What We Get Wrong about Emotional Validation When someone is upset or angry with us, whether justifiably or not, the most productive thing we can do is to validate their feelings because doing so will make them far more receptive to
our side of things. Unfortunately, we typically respond with defensiveness, justifications, and counter attacks in such situations--all of which makes the other person far less receptive to what we have to say. Indeed, in last month's poll, over 90% of readers agreed that emotional validation--conveying that we get what the other person is feeling and why they're feeling it--is an effective way to soothe another person's feelings, and yet, over 75% of readers admitted to counter attacking or
getting defensive in such situations and 25% admitted to not knowing how to convey emotional validation well to begin with. Emotional validation is a crucial relationship skill and an incredibly useful one for conflict resolution but it doing it can feel scary and intimidating. |
Why Emotional Validation Feels Scary to Do1. When someone is upset or angry with us, we fear that telling them we understand why they're upset or angry would be like pouring oil on a fire --it will
only 'validate' that they should feel that way and thus make them even angrier or more upset. 2. We're tempted to try to make the problem and blame go away by explaining why they shouldn't feel the way they do--by making their feelings go away. Telling someone they shouldn't feel the way they already do--that is like pouring oil on a fire--a guarantee of making them more upset. 3. We believe that
if we convey that we get why they feel the way they do, we're basically admitting to wrongdoing on our part. Nope. We can convey we get their perspective while still maintaining ours--that there was a misunderstanding or miscommunication or faulty expectations, etc... 4. We were so busy thinking about a defense or a counter attack that we stopped listening--which makes it hard to convey exactly what they're feeling and why and we're afraid to get
it wrong. 5. We worry we won't articulate their feelings correctly if we tried and that will frustrate them even more. This can be an issue but there are ways around it, as in the example section below. |
Misunderstanding #1We believe we can talk people out of their feelings with reason and logic. Reason and logic can't undo how we feel in the moment, at least not immediately. For example, in experiments in which people went through a rigged rejection experience, finding out that the rejection was rigged and 'not real' didn't make their hurt feelings disappear--that still took time. Misunderstanding
#2 We believe that acknowledging a person's feelings means that we agree with them about who or what is to blame. Not at all. You can say, "I realize how frustrated and annoyed you must be after waiting for me for fifteen minutes and missing the start of the movie
(acknowledging their feelings), but your text said to meet at 7:30 not 7:15." |
The Key Requirement for Validating Another Person's Feelings In order to validate someone's feelings we first have to gain a clear understanding of
what their feelings are by giving them the space and time to express themselves, and by giving ourselves the space and time to understand their emotional experience by asking for clarifications and elaborations or posing open-ended questions to get more information (e.g., "Tell me what you meant when you said, 'my mind was blown'--in what way?" or "I understand that you felt betrayed but I'd like to understand what specifically by?" |
A Step by Step Example of Emotional Validation:Let's use this scenario for illustration purposes:
You were hanging out with another couple and you joked about your partner's cooking. That clearly hurt their feelings, so you (or they) bring it up once you're alone. 1. Invite them to tell you their perspective of what happened and how they felt about it. Look at them as they speak, nod and give other indications that you're interested and taking it in. 2. Listen
with empathy and compassion. Your task is to get their perspective so you can convey it back to them (remember, conveying you get how they feel does not mean you agree you're to blame). 3. Reflect back in your own words the summary of their points and feelings--all of them. For example, "So you felt belittled and mocked when I made that joke, and then you were angry that I didn't realize that and went on to tell another
story..." 4. Ask questions for further clarity and detail. Begin by reflecting the general sentiment: "I get that it was embarrassing when I said your recipe for lasagna was layering one mistake over another--was there anything else I did or said over dinner that made you feel bad?" or "I hear that you were frustrated but I'm not sure I understand what you meant when you said, 'I should have known better'." 5. Put it all together: Tell the story of what happened and how they felt about it from their perspective as accurately as you can while checking with them to make sure you're capturing their feelings correctly. If not, ask for clarification or correction and try that part again. 6. Once you're done and they confirm you understand how they felt, they should look
relieved/calmer because feeling seen and understood is immensely cathartic. However, emotional validation takes practice and so expect a learning curve. 7. If an apology is necessary--now is the time to offer one (check out newsletter 1.23 for how to issue an effective apology). If not, now is the time to introduce your perspective, including any relevant objections or justifications. For example, "You and I joke about your
cooking all the time, so I assumed you weren't sensitive about it and that it was okay to do in front of our friends. Plus, you made a joke about my driving right before I made that comment so it seems like a double standard. Let's both agree to not make jokes about one another in front of friends." |
Announcements1. We're almost at the end of Season 4 of Dear Therapists but remember, there are 3 other seasons of sessions for you to catch up on. Subscribe for free here or wherever you get your podcasts and please do leave a review on apple.podcasts as that truly helps others find the podcast and learn about themselves. 2. Come see me speak in person
On October 6 in Los Angeles, at the inaugural True North, a groundbreaking conference where you'll learn: how to compete from NFL Coach Pete Carroll,
self-awareness from entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk, relational fitness from SoulCycle founder Julie Rice, emotional first-aid from yours truly, self-compassion with Dr. Marissa Knox, and more--curated by David Belasco, who teaches the most celebrated course on mindset at the University of Southern California. As one of my invited guests, you will receive a 25% discount
to attend True North by using the discount code TN-WINCH-25. Come join me on October 6 3. I welcome any feedback about the newsletter, including requests for specific topics in future editions. Negative feedback is always considered and when framed constructively, appreciated. Write to [email protected] |
This Month's Poll: How to Recover After Work |
Please share this newsletter with others. |
Click on my picture to get to my website.
To unsubscribe click the link below. |
|
|