This quote by Mark Twain “Get your facts first, then you can distort them as you please” is the focus of this week’s blog.
It is a quote that makes me smile in my work as a conflict management coach – and well, personally too! Over 20 years ago, when developing a coaching model for supporting people in their efforts to engage more effectively in their interpersonal conflicts, it became evident that many people distort what transpired in a dispute between them and another person. Mostly, it is done in self-serving ways! What they wish they said gets mushed with what they actually said; what they assumed about the other person and their intentions seems to become fact; what the other person is purported to say isn’t really what they said but what was interpreted, and so on.
Though I have found that clients’ discussions about their conflicts typically start off missing some the true facts, that initial version does shift to what occurred. That is, with deep listening, lack of judgment, a safe space, and support clients tend to emotionally settle, gain perspective, and step back into a more objective frame of mind. So, contrary to Mark Twain’s quote, I find it is more often the case that when clients stand back from the emotion and stories they tell themselves they are more likely to share the facts of their stories more truthfully and openly. This obviously applies to us and our relational disputes, too.
This week’s Conflict Mastery Quest(ions) blog invites you to take a close look at one of your disputes to check out its veracity: