After conflicts are ostensibly over an interesting phenomenon sometimes emerges. As we retell what occurred, our stories take on new and different versions. What we actually said gets replaced with what we wished we had said. What the other person said gets replaced with how we heard it, which isn’t always what was actually conveyed. The tone of our respective voices, the attitude we demonstrate, how we acted and other aspects of our communications are frequently distorted – and often in self-serving ways.
Why do we do this? Maybe it is to justify ourselves, to lay blame firmly and categorically on the other person, to make ourselves right and the other person wrong, or to garner sympathy, applause and support. These and other reasons keep the conflict alive and sometimes so strongly that we come to believe the new version.
The following questions will help you to check out whether you are exaggerating, embellishing or otherwise distorting the conflict story compared to how it actually happened.
2 Responses to Is It Really True?