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This is how to survive in a toxic workplace 3 secrets from research
This is how to survive in a toxic workplace 3 secrets from research This is how to survive in a toxic workplace 3 secrets from research Do you deal with some awful people at work? Do they annoy you beyond belief at times?Actually, itâs a lot worse than that - whether you realize it or not. In addition to making you miserable, those impossible bosses and jerk co-workers can reduce your productivity, reduce your empathy, and even give you a heart attack.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:New nurses bullied by veteran nurses and doctors put forth less effort and develop less empathy for patients. Service employees who are subjected to customer aggression report more mental and physical health problems and are less committed to their jobs⦠a twenty-year study that tracked six thousand British civil servants found that when their bosses criticized them unfairly, didnât listen to their problems, and rarely praised them, e mployees suffered more angina, heart attacks, and deaths for heart disease.In the past, weâve reviewed dealing with workplace narcissists, psychopaths, and bullies. But we really need to hear from the #1 guy on coping with office monsters.Stanford professor Bob Sutton has a new book coming out: The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt.It offers a ton of excellent strategies for staying sane when youâre surrounded by horrible people. Letâs look at a few of the top tips Bob has to offerâ¦Dodge Bullets, NeoThe numero uno strategy for dealing with the workplace dregs of humanity is simple: avoid them. That doesnât mean itâs always easy, but before you start having revenge fantasies the first thing you want to think about is how to minimize contact.Because the worst thing these monsters can do isnât annoy or harass you - just like in a zombie or vampire film, they can turn you into one of them. If you spend most of your day around a je rk, your chance of becoming a jerk more than doubles.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:In 2016 Housman told Fast Company that they discovered a âtoxic densityâ effect: much like research shows rudeness spreads like a common cold, they found that sitting near a destructive jerk dramatically increases a workerâs risk of infection. Housman explained, âIf you add a toxic worker to within a 25-foot radius of a focal worker, the chance that the focal worker becomes a toxic worker themselves more than doubles (112.5% increase).âAsk if you can move your desk. Spend time working in conference rooms or public spaces if possible.But thatâs not always an option. So you may need a Secret Service detail. One of the best meta-strategies for coping with jerks is to band together with others who are suffering with you.If youâre lucky, you might have a supervisor who can provide some cover. But co-workers can help too.If you and your all ies take turns âjumping on the grenadeâ and handling The Beast it can offer each of you some stress-free time to recover and actually get some work done.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:A 2013 study of nearly two thousand Finnish dentists found that when they worked in close cooperation with their dental assistants, dentists suffered less pressure to present fake emotions to their patients and performed their jobs better. Part of the reason, the researchers suggest, is that a skilled dental assistant (who usually sees patients before the dentist and often sees them more frequently) can âbufferâ the dentist from difficult and demanding patients. In other words, they take the patientâs flak and cool them out, which spares dentists from having to deal with it.But sometimes thereâs nowhere to hide and thereâs no way to limit exposure to a boss who roams around making life intolerable. So be a smart mouse and try hanging a bell around the catâs neck.If the boss has a sympathetic assistant, get them on your side. They can tell you when the dragon is in a fire-breathing mood and when heâs relatively calm and stable. This will allow you to know when itâs safe - and when itâs time to cower in the bathroom.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:In some places, the bossâs administrative assistant is recruited to inform colleagues when the boss is in a foul mood (and should be avoided or handled with care) or feeling upbeat (and it is a good time to visit or raise a sensitive subject.)(To learn more tips on living an awesome life, check out my book here.)But maybe the duck and cover approach ainât gonna fly. Hereâs where we need some serious psychology to keep your head on straight when someone is intent on making you miserableâ¦Mind Tricks That Protect Your SoulCognitive Behavioral Therapy recommends something called âreappraisal.â Thatâs a fancy word for interpreting your situation differently. You may not be able to change the situation, but you can change how you perceive it. (Shout out to my ancient Stoic homies.)Itâs not a crisis - itâs a challenge. Itâs not a frustration - itâs a puzzle to be solved. Theyâre not an intolerable boss - theyâre a cranky child.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Social psychologists and other researchers have shown that reframing (or âreappraisingâ) disturbing facts or distressing experiences in a more positive light - while not a cure-all - can provide relief. For example, whether the same experience is portrayed as a fun and exciting challenge - versus a distressing threat - can transform how people feel and perform in response.You want to depersonalize whatever stress theyâre giving you. Theyâre in a bad mood or they have issues. Itâs not about you. Donât treat dealing with them like a nightmare, ta ke a lesson from Navy SEALs, Army Rangersand Special Forces soldiers who all deal with stress by reappraising it as a game.But you will have to talk to your tormentor every now and then. And theyâll probably do their shouting act. When they do, take a tip from debt collectors who routinely take abuse from the people they call. Slow your speech down and the more worked up the other side gets, the more calm you want to be.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:We were taught that the more irate the debtor - the more he or she screamed, swore and insulted us - the more long pauses we should take before answering questions and the more clearly and calmly we should talk.Hostage negotiators and clinical psychologists both use this same strategy to deal with the most out of control people imaginable.(To learn how to deal with a narcissist, click here.)So you can reappraise or slow things down to help you cope. But you donât want these str ategies to make you complacent when youâre dealing with serious abusive behavior. So how do you fight back?How To Fight BackTo sum up the bulk of the research in one word: Donât.Itâs usually not worth it. First off, itâs unlikely to work. As Bob notes: âHornstein found that 68% of the payback efforts that he studied failed to stop abusive bosses.âAnd having a desire to punish actually makes you miserable.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Carlsmith explained, âIn actuality punishers ruminate on their deed and feel worse than those who cannot avenge a wrongâ and people âwho donât have a chance to take revenge are forced, in a sense, to move on a focus on something different.âFinding another job, switching roles, or avoiding the problem person have less of a chance of blowing up in your face and can put you on a better track to happiness.Still wanting revenge? Fine, have it your way - you bully. Weâll call this t he âIn case of emergency, break glassâ section.Before taking the warpath, Bob suggests you think about three critical resources: How much power do you have? If youâre the janitor and youâre having problems with the CEO, good luck. If your tormentor is a peer, youâve got a better shot at taking them on. Documentation: Avoid âhe-said, she-said.â Keep track of abusive incidents, emails, etc. Go into the fight with real proof. Solidarity: This is the big one. Donât fight back alone. Research shows a team effort to bring down a jerk is far more successful and safer than trying to be a hero by yourself. From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:A study by Professor Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik found that when bullied employees banded together to fight back, authorities punished 58% of the abusers and none of the bullied employees were fired. But when employees battled alone, only 27% of the bullies were punished and 20% of the bullied employees were fired.And when you approach a superior or the HR department about the problem, youâre much more likely to have your complaint well-received if you have evidence and you seem like youâre focused on the greater good, not just a selfish desire to get even.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Research on âmoral angerâ and ârighteous angerâ suggests that confrontation is most likely to reform offenders, be seen as socially acceptable, and mobilize support when: 1) It is justified - there is good evidence that the person is doing something bad. 2) The motivation for the confrontation is seen as constructive and aimed at improving the greater good; not just a selfish, vindictive, or irrational urge to inflict harm on an enemy or nemesis.(To learn how to deal with workplace psychopaths, click here.)Okay, weâve learned a lot from Bob. Letâs round it up and find out how you can reappraise bad behavior without even tryingâ¦Sum UpHereâs what Stanford professor Bob Sutton has to say about dealing with those impossible people in a toxic workplace: Avoid them: Move your desk, get backup or throw a bell around the catâs neck so you know theyâre coming. Use Reappraisal: Itâs not a disaster, itâs a challenge. Itâs not a blog post, itâs a masterful work of epic writing. Fight Back - Carefully: Donât seek revenge. But if you do, evaluate the power dynamics, document everything, get help, and focus on the common good. Reappraisal can be incredibly powerful. You use it all the time - and often you donât even know it. Many years ago I had an awful landlord. Just talking with the guy usually had me wondering how Iâd need to angle his body to properly bury him in the flowerbed.But my roommate at the time was unflappable when dealing with the tyrant. I asked David how he did it. David replied, âHis mother has cancer.âIn the blink of an eye, the landlord went from an evil jerk to someone who was suffering. His rudeness didnât stop, but I never let him get on my nerves again. Iâd reappraised his behavior without even trying, just by seeing him in a different light.Fighting bad behavior rarely works. Avoiding it is a great strategy but itâs not always an option. Both of those two rely on the outside world being changed, and thatâs why theyâre difficult.But what you can always control is how you interpret what you see. So reappraise the awful behavior to something more acceptable. And as soon as youâre done weaving a more tolerable story, move on to step 2:Run for the exit.Join over 290,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.Related posts:New Neuroscience Reveals 4 Rituals That Will Make You HappyNew Harvard Research Reveals A Fun Way To Be More SuccessfulHow To Get People To Like You: 7 Ways From An FBI Behavior ExpertThis article originally appeared at Barking Up the Wrong Tree. This is how to survive in a toxic workplace 3 secrets from research Do you deal with some awful people at work? Do they annoy you beyond belief at times?Actually, itâs a lot worse than that - whether you realize it or not. In addition to making you miserable, those impossible bosses and jerk co-workers can reduce your productivity, reduce your empathy, and even give you a heart attack.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:New nurses bullied by veteran nurses and doctors put forth less effort and develop less empathy for patients. Service employees who are subjected to customer aggression report more mental and physical health problems and are less committed to their jobs⦠a twenty-year study that tracked six thousand British civil servants found that when their bosses criticized them unfairly, didnât listen to their problems, and rarely praised them, employees suffered more angina, heart attacks, and deaths for heart disease.In the past, weâve reviewed dealing with workplace narcissists, psychopa ths, and bullies. But we really need to hear from the #1 guy on coping with office monsters.Stanford professor Bob Sutton has a new book coming out: The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt.It offers a ton of excellent strategies for staying sane when youâre surrounded by horrible people. Letâs look at a few of the top tips Bob has to offerâ¦Dodge Bullets, NeoThe numero uno strategy for dealing with the workplace dregs of humanity is simple: avoid them. That doesnât mean itâs always easy, but before you start having revenge fantasies the first thing you want to think about is how to minimize contact.Because the worst thing these monsters can do isnât annoy or harass you - just like in a zombie or vampire film, they can turn you into one of them. If you spend most of your day around a jerk, your chance of becoming a jerk more than doubles.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:In 2016 Housma n told Fast Company that they discovered a âtoxic densityâ effect: much like research shows rudeness spreads like a common cold, they found that sitting near a destructive jerk dramatically increases a workerâs risk of infection. Housman explained, âIf you add a toxic worker to within a 25-foot radius of a focal worker, the chance that the focal worker becomes a toxic worker themselves more than doubles (112.5% increase).âAsk if you can move your desk. Spend time working in conference rooms or public spaces if possible.But thatâs not always an option. So you may need a Secret Service detail. One of the best meta-strategies for coping with jerks is to band together with others who are suffering with you.If youâre lucky, you might have a supervisor who can provide some cover. But co-workers can help too.If you and your allies take turns âjumping on the grenadeâ and handling The Beast it can offer each of you some stress-free time to recover and actually get some wo rk done.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:A 2013 study of nearly two thousand Finnish dentists found that when they worked in close cooperation with their dental assistants, dentists suffered less pressure to present fake emotions to their patients and performed their jobs better. Part of the reason, the researchers suggest, is that a skilled dental assistant (who usually sees patients before the dentist and often sees them more frequently) can âbufferâ the dentist from difficult and demanding patients. In other words, they take the patientâs flak and cool them out, which spares dentists from having to deal with it.But sometimes thereâs nowhere to hide and thereâs no way to limit exposure to a boss who roams around making life intolerable. So be a smart mouse and try hanging a bell around the catâs neck.If the boss has a sympathetic assistant, get them on your side. They can tell you when the dragon is in a fire-breathin g mood and when heâs relatively calm and stable. This will allow you to know when itâs safe - and when itâs time to cower in the bathroom.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:In some places, the bossâs administrative assistant is recruited to inform colleagues when the boss is in a foul mood (and should be avoided or handled with care) or feeling upbeat (and it is a good time to visit or raise a sensitive subject.)(To learn more tips on living an awesome life, check out my book here.)But maybe the duck and cover approach ainât gonna fly. Hereâs where we need some serious psychology to keep your head on straight when someone is intent on making you miserableâ¦Mind Tricks That Protect Your SoulCognitive Behavioral Therapy recommends something called âreappraisal.â Thatâs a fancy word for interpreting your situation differently. You may not be able to change the situation, but you can change how you perceive it. (Shout out to my ancient Stoic homies.)Itâs not a crisis - itâs a challenge. Itâs not a frustration - itâs a puzzle to be solved. Theyâre not an intolerable boss - theyâre a cranky child.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Social psychologists and other researchers have shown that reframing (or âreappraisingâ) disturbing facts or distressing experiences in a more positive light - while not a cure-all - can provide relief. For example, whether the same experience is portrayed as a fun and exciting challenge - versus a distressing threat - can transform how people feel and perform in response.You want to depersonalize whatever stress theyâre giving you. Theyâre in a bad mood or they have issues. Itâs not about you. Donât treat dealing with them like a nightmare, take a lesson from Navy SEALs, Army Rangersand Special Forces soldiers who all deal with stress by reappraising it as a game.But you will have to talk to your tormentor every now and then. And theyâll probably do their shouting act. When they do, take a tip from debt collectors who routinely take abuse from the people they call. Slow your speech down and the more worked up the other side gets, the more calm you want to be.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:We were taught that the more irate the debtor - the more he or she screamed, swore and insulted us - the more long pauses we should take before answering questions and the more clearly and calmly we should talk.Hostage negotiators and clinical psychologists both use this same strategy to deal with the most out of control people imaginable.(To learn how to deal with a narcissist, click here.)So you can reappraise or slow things down to help you cope. But you donât want these strategies to make you complacent when youâre dealing with serious abusive behavior. So how do you fight back?How To Fight BackTo sum up the bulk of th e research in one word: Donât.Itâs usually not worth it. First off, itâs unlikely to work. As Bob notes: âHornstein found that 68% of the payback efforts that he studied failed to stop abusive bosses.âAnd having a desire to punish actually makes you miserable.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Carlsmith explained, âIn actuality punishers ruminate on their deed and feel worse than those who cannot avenge a wrongâ and people âwho donât have a chance to take revenge are forced, in a sense, to move on a focus on something different.âFinding another job, switching roles, or avoiding the problem person have less of a chance of blowing up in your face and can put you on a better track to happiness.Still wanting revenge? Fine, have it your way - you bully. Weâll call this the âIn case of emergency, break glassâ section.Before taking the warpath, Bob suggests you think about three critical resources: How much power do you have? If youâre the janitor and youâre having problems with the CEO, good luck. If your tormentor is a peer, youâve got a better shot at taking them on. Documentation: Avoid âhe-said, she-said.â Keep track of abusive incidents, emails, etc. Go into the fight with real proof. Solidarity: This is the big one. Donât fight back alone. Research shows a team effort to bring down a jerk is far more successful and safer than trying to be a hero by yourself. From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:A study by Professor Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik found that when bullied employees banded together to fight back, authorities punished 58% of the abusers and none of the bullied employees were fired. But when employees battled alone, only 27% of the bullies were punished and 20% of the bullied employees were fired.And when you approach a superior or the HR department about the problem, youâre much more likely to have your complaint well-received if you have evidence and you seem like youâre focused on the greater good, not just a selfish desire to get even.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Research on âmoral angerâ and ârighteous angerâ suggests that confrontation is most likely to reform offenders, be seen as socially acceptable, and mobilize support when: 1) It is justified - there is good evidence that the person is doing something bad. 2) The motivation for the confrontation is seen as constructive and aimed at improving the greater good; not just a selfish, vindictive, or irrational urge to inflict harm on an enemy or nemesis.(To learn how to deal with workplace psychopaths, click here.)Okay, weâve learned a lot from Bob. Letâs round it up and find out how you can reappraise bad behavior without even tryingâ¦Sum UpHereâs what Stanford professor Bob Sutton has to say about dealing with those impossible people in a toxic workplace: Avoid them: Move your desk, get backup or throw a bell around the catâs neck so you know theyâre coming. Use Reappraisal: Itâs not a disaster, itâs a challenge. Itâs not a blog post, itâs a masterful work of epic writing. Fight Back - Carefully: Donât seek revenge. But if you do, evaluate the power dynamics, document everything, get help, and focus on the common good. Reappraisal can be incredibly powerful. You use it all the time - and often you donât even know it. Many years ago I had an awful landlord. Just talking with the guy usually had me wondering how Iâd need to angle his body to properly bury him in the flowerbed.But my roommate at the time was unflappable when dealing with the tyrant. I asked David how he did it. David replied, âHis mother has cancer.âIn the blink of an eye, the landlord went from an evil jerk to someone who was suffering. His rudeness didnât stop, but I never let him get on my nerves again. Iâd reappraised his behavior without even trying, just by seeing him in a different light.Fighting bad behavior rarely works. Avoiding it is a great strategy but itâs not always an option. Both of those two rely on the outside world being changed, and thatâs why theyâre difficult.But what you can always control is how you interpret what you see. So reappraise the awful behavior to something more acceptable. And as soon as youâre done weaving a more tolerable story, move on to step 2:Run for the exit.Join over 290,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.Related posts:New Neuroscience Reveals 4 Rituals That Will Make You HappyNew Harvard Research Reveals A Fun Way To Be More SuccessfulHow To Get People To Like You: 7 Ways From An FBI Behavior ExpertThis article originally appeared at Barking Up the Wrong Tree. This is how to survive in a toxic workplace 3 secrets from research Do you deal with some awful people at work? Do they annoy you beyond belief at times?Actually, itâs a lot worse than that - whether you realize it or not. In addition to making you miserable, those impossible bosses and jerk co-workers can reduce your productivity, reduce your empathy, and even give you a heart attack.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:New nurses bullied by veteran nurses and doctors put forth less effort and develop less empathy for patients. Service employees who are subjected to customer aggression report more mental and physical health problems and are less committed to their jobs⦠a twenty-year study that tracked six thousand British civil servants found that when their bosses criticized them unfairly, didnât listen to their problems, and rarely praised them, employees suffered more angina, heart attacks, and deaths for heart disease.In the past, weâve reviewed dealing with workplace narcissists, psychopa ths, and bullies. But we really need to hear from the #1 guy on coping with office monsters.Stanford professor Bob Sutton has a new book coming out: The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt.It offers a ton of excellent strategies for staying sane when youâre surrounded by horrible people. Letâs look at a few of the top tips Bob has to offerâ¦Dodge Bullets, NeoThe numero uno strategy for dealing with the workplace dregs of humanity is simple: avoid them. That doesnât mean itâs always easy, but before you start having revenge fantasies the first thing you want to think about is how to minimize contact.Because the worst thing these monsters can do isnât annoy or harass you - just like in a zombie or vampire film, they can turn you into one of them. If you spend most of your day around a jerk, your chance of becoming a jerk more than doubles.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:In 2016 Housma n told Fast Company that they discovered a âtoxic densityâ effect: much like research shows rudeness spreads like a common cold, they found that sitting near a destructive jerk dramatically increases a workerâs risk of infection. Housman explained, âIf you add a toxic worker to within a 25-foot radius of a focal worker, the chance that the focal worker becomes a toxic worker themselves more than doubles (112.5% increase).âAsk if you can move your desk. Spend time working in conference rooms or public spaces if possible.But thatâs not always an option. So you may need a Secret Service detail. One of the best meta-strategies for coping with jerks is to band together with others who are suffering with you.If youâre lucky, you might have a supervisor who can provide some cover. But co-workers can help too.If you and your allies take turns âjumping on the grenadeâ and handling The Beast it can offer each of you some stress-free time to recover and actually get some wo rk done.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:A 2013 study of nearly two thousand Finnish dentists found that when they worked in close cooperation with their dental assistants, dentists suffered less pressure to present fake emotions to their patients and performed their jobs better. Part of the reason, the researchers suggest, is that a skilled dental assistant (who usually sees patients before the dentist and often sees them more frequently) can âbufferâ the dentist from difficult and demanding patients. In other words, they take the patientâs flak and cool them out, which spares dentists from having to deal with it.But sometimes thereâs nowhere to hide and thereâs no way to limit exposure to a boss who roams around making life intolerable. So be a smart mouse and try hanging a bell around the catâs neck.If the boss has a sympathetic assistant, get them on your side. They can tell you when the dragon is in a fire-breathin g mood and when heâs relatively calm and stable. This will allow you to know when itâs safe - and when itâs time to cower in the bathroom.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:In some places, the bossâs administrative assistant is recruited to inform colleagues when the boss is in a foul mood (and should be avoided or handled with care) or feeling upbeat (and it is a good time to visit or raise a sensitive subject.)(To learn more tips on living an awesome life, check out my book here.)But maybe the duck and cover approach ainât gonna fly. Hereâs where we need some serious psychology to keep your head on straight when someone is intent on making you miserableâ¦Mind Tricks That Protect Your SoulCognitive Behavioral Therapy recommends something called âreappraisal.â Thatâs a fancy word for interpreting your situation differently. You may not be able to change the situation, but you can change how you perceive it. (Shout out to my ancient Stoic homies.)Itâs not a crisis - itâs a challenge. Itâs not a frustration - itâs a puzzle to be solved. Theyâre not an intolerable boss - theyâre a cranky child.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Social psychologists and other researchers have shown that reframing (or âreappraisingâ) disturbing facts or distressing experiences in a more positive light - while not a cure-all - can provide relief. For example, whether the same experience is portrayed as a fun and exciting challenge - versus a distressing threat - can transform how people feel and perform in response.You want to depersonalize whatever stress theyâre giving you. Theyâre in a bad mood or they have issues. Itâs not about you. Donât treat dealing with them like a nightmare, take a lesson from Navy SEALs, Army Rangersand Special Forces soldiers who all deal with stress by reappraising it as a game.But you will have to talk to your tormentor every now and then. And theyâll probably do their shouting act. When they do, take a tip from debt collectors who routinely take abuse from the people they call. Slow your speech down and the more worked up the other side gets, the more calm you want to be.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:We were taught that the more irate the debtor - the more he or she screamed, swore and insulted us - the more long pauses we should take before answering questions and the more clearly and calmly we should talk.Hostage negotiators and clinical psychologists both use this same strategy to deal with the most out of control people imaginable.(To learn how to deal with a narcissist, click here.)So you can reappraise or slow things down to help you cope. But you donât want these strategies to make you complacent when youâre dealing with serious abusive behavior. So how do you fight back?How To Fight BackTo sum up the bulk of th e research in one word: Donât.Itâs usually not worth it. First off, itâs unlikely to work. As Bob notes: âHornstein found that 68% of the payback efforts that he studied failed to stop abusive bosses.âAnd having a desire to punish actually makes you miserable.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Carlsmith explained, âIn actuality punishers ruminate on their deed and feel worse than those who cannot avenge a wrongâ and people âwho donât have a chance to take revenge are forced, in a sense, to move on a focus on something different.âFinding another job, switching roles, or avoiding the problem person have less of a chance of blowing up in your face and can put you on a better track to happiness.Still wanting revenge? Fine, have it your way - you bully. Weâll call this the âIn case of emergency, break glassâ section.Before taking the warpath, Bob suggests you think about three critical resources: How much power do you have? If youâre the janitor and youâre having problems with the CEO, good luck. If your tormentor is a peer, youâve got a better shot at taking them on. Documentation: Avoid âhe-said, she-said.â Keep track of abusive incidents, emails, etc. Go into the fight with real proof. Solidarity: This is the big one. Donât fight back alone. Research shows a team effort to bring down a jerk is far more successful and safer than trying to be a hero by yourself. From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:A study by Professor Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik found that when bullied employees banded together to fight back, authorities punished 58% of the abusers and none of the bullied employees were fired. But when employees battled alone, only 27% of the bullies were punished and 20% of the bullied employees were fired.And when you approach a superior or the HR department about the problem, youâre much more likely to have your complaint well-received if you have evidence and you seem like youâre focused on the greater good, not just a selfish desire to get even.From The Aâ"hole Survival Guide: How to Deal With People Who Treat You Like Dirt:Research on âmoral angerâ and ârighteous angerâ suggests that confrontation is most likely to reform offenders, be seen as socially acceptable, and mobilize support when: 1) It is justified - there is good evidence that the person is doing something bad. 2) The motivation for the confrontation is seen as constructive and aimed at improving the greater good; not just a selfish, vindictive, or irrational urge to inflict harm on an enemy or nemesis.(To learn how to deal with workplace psychopaths, click here.)Okay, weâve learned a lot from Bob. Letâs round it up and find out how you can reappraise bad behavior without even tryingâ¦Sum UpHereâs what Stanford professor Bob Sutton has to say about dealing with those impossible people in a toxic workplace: Avoid them: Move your desk, get backup or throw a bell around the catâs neck so you know theyâre coming. Use Reappraisal: Itâs not a disaster, itâs a challenge. Itâs not a blog post, itâs a masterful work of epic writing. Fight Back - Carefully: Donât seek revenge. But if you do, evaluate the power dynamics, document everything, get help, and focus on the common good. Reappraisal can be incredibly powerful. You use it all the time - and often you donât even know it. Many years ago I had an awful landlord. Just talking with the guy usually had me wondering how Iâd need to angle his body to properly bury him in the flowerbed.But my roommate at the time was unflappable when dealing with the tyrant. I asked David how he did it. David replied, âHis mother has cancer.âIn the blink of an eye, the landlord went from an evil jerk to someone who was suffering. His rudeness didnât stop, but I never let him get on my nerves again. Iâd reappraised his behavior without even trying, just by seeing him in a different light.Fighting bad behavior rarely works. Avoiding it is a great strategy but itâs not always an option. Both of those two rely on the outside world being changed, and thatâs why theyâre difficult.But what you can always control is how you interpret what you see. So reappraise the awful behavior to something more acceptable. And as soon as youâre done weaving a more tolerable story, move on to step 2:Run for the exit.Join over 290,000 readers. Get a free weekly update via email here.Related posts:New Neuroscience Reveals 4 Rituals That Will Make You HappyNew Harvard Research Reveals A Fun Way To Be More SuccessfulHow To Get People To Like You: 7 Ways From An FBI Behavior ExpertThis article originally appeared at Barking Up the Wrong Tree.
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