“Avoidance isn’t peace. Silence has costs. Both are a slow rehearsal for regret.”
(I’d like to properly attribute the above sentences in quotes to the author. However, a colleague sent them to me from something they read and cannot identify who wrote them.)
The sentiments expressed are not novel. The wording however is so poignant that I wanted to share and discuss them with you.
It has been evident in my conflict coaching practice (and not unique for clients who retain me) that many people live in regret about the adverse outcomes of their interpersonal disputes – when they avoid them or remain silent. They regret a range of things including the lack of resolution and reconciliation, misinterpretation of the unspoken, unmet needs, the buildup of negative emotions, the unsaid, not defending themselves, and other experiences in the after math. And many share that they tend to avoid disputing or have remained silent for many reasons including fear of retaliation/retribution, hurting the other person, getting more upset, lack of confidence or courage or both for these reasons and others, and so on.
This week’s Conflict Mastery Quest(ions) blog invites you to consider your regrets about a dispute that you avoided or one about which you remained silent when answering these questions:
What happened in the situation you have in mind?
What were you avoiding?
What else contributed to you remaining silent?
What do you wish you had said?
What do you think contributed to your reluctance to engage with the other person?
What are the regrets that have stayed with you?
How do you suppose the other person interpreted your response ( to avoid, remain silent)?
What do you suppose the reasons are that you avoid or remain silent if this is your tendency when it comes to interpersonal conflict?
If you do not always tend to remain silent or avoid conflict, under what circumstances are you more inclined to speak up, respond to , initiate contentious issues?
What are the downsides of avoiding and remaining silent that you’ve learned over time? What might it take for you to overcome the tendency to avoid?
What else occurs to you as you consider these questions?
What insights do you have now that you didn’t have before you answered these questions?