Would you like to be able to resolve interpersonal problems and bring real peace to a situation? People with this skill are valuable contributors to teams that get things done.
Understand first that there is a difference between peacekeepers and peacemakers. Peacekeepers usually try to avoid conflicts, maintaining the status quo and not rocking the boat. On the other hand, peacemakers are active. They deal with situations directly, honestly, yet respectfully.
Consider these “Ten Commandments for Peacemakers”. (You can remember them by spelling PEACEMAKER.) Putting these into action will greatly enhance the likelihood of achieving lasting resolution to the inevitable conflicts that surface in every relationship.
1. P: Pick
a private time and place.
Many
potentially productive discussions have been disrupted
by interruptions, after which it is difficult to regain
momentum. Other ways to sabotage success are the fear
that someone can overhear or actual embarrassment
because of lack of confidentiality of the discussion.
Head off those problems by arranging a quiet time in a
private place without distractions.
2. E:
Establish an appointment to discuss the issue.
When you want
to discuss something, approach the person respectfully,
say what you’d like to talk about, then set a time to do
so. You might say something like this: “Janet,
yesterday in the meeting we seemed to be having a
difference of opinion that turned negative. I’d like
for us to talk about this and see if we can work through
it and get it cleared up. When do you think would be a
good time for us to do that?”
3. A: Avoid
labels, name calling, and emotionally-charged words.
Describe the
behavior rather than labeling it. For example, instead
of saying, “You’re insensitive,” say, “Yesterday in the
meeting, several times when I was talking, you
interrupted with a reason you felt I was wrong.”
Emotionally charged words only serve to escalate bad
feelings. Identify words that are likely to fan the
flames of hostility and avoid them.
4. C: Create
mutual benefit.
The goal is to
work for a “win-win” solution. Both people need to get
many of their needs met in order for the solution to
last. Therefore, each should work to address the
concerns of the other person as well as one’s own.
5. E:
Empathize.
Walk a mile in
the other person’s shoes. Make a real attempt to see
the world as he was seeing it and try to feel what he
might have experienced. Make a statement about that.
(e.g., “I can see how it might have looked that way to
you, and how you could have thought that I was trying to
take over your job. In a similar situation, I would
probably have felt angry, too.”) When a person feels
that you are trying to understand, this goes a long way
toward inviting their understanding and cooperation.
6. M: Make a
distinction between needs and preferences.
Identify real
needs in a situation (e.g., I want to feel involved in
decisions that affect me). Distinguish these from your
preferences about the ways those needs can be met.
State your underlying needs clearly, then be flexible on
your preferences about specific strategies for meeting
the your needs as well as those of others involved.
Brainstorm together to devise a plan that works for
everyone.
7. A: Actively
listen.
Give the
person your full attention. Make a real commitment to
try to understand exactly what he or she is
communicating to you. Check for understanding by
verbally summarizing and paraphrasing.
8. K: Keep
away from a focus on the past.
Your problem
solving will be much more successful if you focus on the
present instead of the past. Of course, sometimes you
need to put things in a historical context so that the
person understands how your thoughts and beliefs and
attitudes toward a situation have developed. However,
using more recent examples is better because everyone
will remember them more clearly and because current
happenings present more potential for current change.
9. E:
Establish a specific action plan.
Don’t walk
away from the discussion, relived that you’ve talked
about something, only to find the next day that the
people involved really did not have a common
understanding about what was to take place. Be specific
about the part each person is to play in the solution to
the problem. What specific things will each person do,
when, and in what circumstances?
10. R:
Response-ability of each person eliminates denial and
blame.
When people
are in a win-lose conflict, they tend to deny their own
responsibility and blame the other person. This
destructive pattern can be eliminated if each person
will take “response-ability”. “Response-ability” is
this: each person has the ability to respond differently
in some way so that the situation can be better. If
each person focuses on and acts on those things within
his or her control, the situation will definitely
improve.
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