P
Peeps
Guest
Sometime a harsh confessor (or doctor or teacher or parent or coach or any authority figure) has just the opposite effect.
Rather than swaying someone away from an undesirable behavior or attitude, the harshness actually provokes a stubborn reaction or a rebellion that causes the person to continue the undesirable behavior.
I’m 61, and I’ve seen this happen over and over again, especially in sports. A coach who can’t strike that balance between firmness and harshness creates a rebellious team that won’t listen to anything the coach says.
I think this is especially true in addictive behaviors–the doctor who tells the patient, “IF you don’t lose weight and start exercising, you’ll be dead in a year” often ends up driving the patient TOWARD the very behaviors that need to be stopped or changed.
I know that for me, harshness creates resentment, and resentment causes me to dive into my negative behaviors with glee, as I think (illogically) that I’m making the harsh person even madder and more unbalanced and eventually he or she will find out that they are wrong about me.
I’m not proud of any of this, but it’s something that is part of my personality. I don’t like being treated like a ugly dog. I respond much better to kindness, gentle words, softness, and encouragement than to harshness and condemnation. I will jump through hoops for the boss who tells me I’m doing a great job and asks me to repeat a task that needs a better result, while I will slack off and call in sick for the boss who tells me that I’ve botched something up and they are writing me up for it.
Not sure of the psychology behind this. I’m guessing it has something to do with strong-willed vs. compliant personalities. The compliant personality will willingly do what they are told and benefit from it, while the strong-willed person will deliberately do the opposite of what they are told to do!
Rather than swaying someone away from an undesirable behavior or attitude, the harshness actually provokes a stubborn reaction or a rebellion that causes the person to continue the undesirable behavior.
I’m 61, and I’ve seen this happen over and over again, especially in sports. A coach who can’t strike that balance between firmness and harshness creates a rebellious team that won’t listen to anything the coach says.
I think this is especially true in addictive behaviors–the doctor who tells the patient, “IF you don’t lose weight and start exercising, you’ll be dead in a year” often ends up driving the patient TOWARD the very behaviors that need to be stopped or changed.
I know that for me, harshness creates resentment, and resentment causes me to dive into my negative behaviors with glee, as I think (illogically) that I’m making the harsh person even madder and more unbalanced and eventually he or she will find out that they are wrong about me.
I’m not proud of any of this, but it’s something that is part of my personality. I don’t like being treated like a ugly dog. I respond much better to kindness, gentle words, softness, and encouragement than to harshness and condemnation. I will jump through hoops for the boss who tells me I’m doing a great job and asks me to repeat a task that needs a better result, while I will slack off and call in sick for the boss who tells me that I’ve botched something up and they are writing me up for it.
Not sure of the psychology behind this. I’m guessing it has something to do with strong-willed vs. compliant personalities. The compliant personality will willingly do what they are told and benefit from it, while the strong-willed person will deliberately do the opposite of what they are told to do!
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