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HOW TO DEAL WITH AN AGGRESSIVE
PERSON
Each of us has had the
experience of being on the receiving end of another person’s anger or
aggressiveness. Maybe it was an interaction with a customer who felt
that service was below par. Maybe the interaction occurred when a
co-worker felt that you had mistreated him in some way. Maybe it was
with a relative you didn’t please.
The natural tendency when
someone begins to attack is to strike back. However, this is often not
wise. People who are in the heat of an aggressive attack are rarely
successfully dealt with by counterattack. Counterattack only adds fuel
to the fire and rarely accomplishes anything with an angry person.
A wiser approach is to help
the person to feel understood and encourage him or her to calm down and
discuss the situation reasonably. A caution, however, is that is would
be most unwise to admonish the person in the middle of an attack to
“calm down and discuss the situation reasonably!” Instead, use the
following steps.
1. Hear the person out.
Don’t interrupt or try to make
your point. Instead, listen attentively, using head nods or short
verbal statements like “Uh-huh” or “I see” to encourage the person to
continue to talk.
2. Keep asking for elaboration and clarification.
Yes, I realize that this about
the last thing that you want to do when someone is aggressively
attacking. You don’t want to ask them to give you more details than
they are already giving you! However, keep a cool head. Realize that
when you show that you are open to hearing and understanding what the
person is saying, this will eventually encourage the individual to calm
down. You may ask questions like, “Then what happened?” or “Tell me
more about what you meant when you said I was insensitive.”
3. Consider taking notes.
In some cases this can be
helpful, if you say something like, “I want to be sure that I’m
understanding your main points, so would you mind if I take a few notes
while you tell me about it?” This sometimes has a way of slowing what
the person is saying, and it may tend to cause him or her to be less
raging. However, the note-taking strategy must be used with caution,
because at times it could make the person even angrier, especially if
they’re tending toward suspiciousness and paranoia about your motives.
4. Show concern on your face.
Your facial expressions should
be attentive and concerned. Indicate your interest in what the person
is saying by maintaining a pleasant, relaxed facial expression and a
steady (not staring) gaze.
5. Keep your voice tone soft.
Never raise your voice volume
so that you can be heard over a person who is yelling. This will only
make the other person yell more loudly! Instead, lower your voice tone
even below your normal range. The natural effect of this is that the
other person will also speak more softly.
6. Paraphrase and summarize what the person has said.
In an attempt to show to the
person that you are listening and trying to understand, you might say
something like, “Let me see if I have the main points that are important
to you”…(then proceed to summarize those in your own words).
7. Do not argue.
An argument occurs when you
listen to what the person is saying with the intent of finding the
weakness in it. You then begin to rebut their statements, often
interrupting to do so.
8. Find as much as possible to agree with.
If you look closely enough,
you can usually find something to agree with in what the person is
saying. There is usually some grain of truth to their observations,
even if they have misinterpreted some part of the situation. Mention
some area of the person’s point of view in which you find validity,
acknowledging your ability to see how it could have been interpreted as
they are seeing it.
9. Empathize with the person’s feelings.
You might say something like,
“I can see how you would be really frustrated. In situations before
where I felt that I was cut off and my opinions didn’t matter, I felt
frustrated, too.”
10. Ask if the person would be willing
to hear some additional information. This is where you begin to
share your side of the story. You’re not saying that yours is the right
information and theirs is wrong. You are saying something like, “Would
be it all right if I shared with you some other facts that may give us a
part of the total picture?”
11. Ask what he or she thinks would make the situation better.
Very often the person is so
consumed with the expression of anger, he or she has not really paused
to think about what can be done now to improve the situation. Openly
asking the individual for suggestions for improvement can begin to move
the situation toward a problem-solving mode.
12. Add your suggestions.
If the person has not offered
constructive suggestions, but insists on continuing the attack, you may
want to suggest something that could make the situation better.
Apologize and make an offer for resolution.
13. Suggest a “thinking break.”
There may be times when you’ll
need to schedule another time to talk. If it is apparent that
continuing the discussion at this time is leading nowhere fast, a
cool-off, thinking break can be helpful. You might suggest, “Why don’t
we both give this some thought and get back together tomorrow…maybe
around 2:00…and see if we can work this out. Does that time work for
you?”
14. Make an action plan; restate it for clarity.
If you have been able to agree
on some action steps, be sure that you both restate those steps to
ensure that you understand your agreement the same way.
Contact us to obtain
permission to reprint this article in your publication. Please include
name of publication, organization and contact information.
Bev@MagneticWorkplaces.com
or 601-264-0890
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