How to be assertive
It can be hard standing up for yourself, say authors Conrad and Suzanne Potts, but you can learn to be stronger
Assertive behaviour is when you make a stand for your rights in a way that does not violate another personโs rights, say the authors. Try these techniques:
Avoid I win/you lose. This world view assumes that we live in a hostile place and the way to survive is to be stronger โ strike first; the best defence is attack.
Avoid I lose/you win. This world view assumes that your needs are not as important as those of others. Youโre anxious about standing up for what you want and you assert yourself by making other people feel guilty or sorry for you.
Adopt I win/you win. This world view assumes that your rights are equally as important as others. Youโre responsible for your own behaviour and its consequences.
How to get your point across:
- Own your ideas, views and feelings: โThis is how I see the situationโฆโ
- State what you want: โWhat I would prefer isโฆโ
- Focus on behaviour and facts versus opinions. โWhen I saw you do…โ
- Distinguish opinion from fact: โIn my viewโฆโ
- Be clear: โI donโt have a preference what we doโฆโ
- Ask open questions that invite others to give their views.
- Focus on what can be done: โI know it must be difficult, but we can take that into considerationโฆโ
โAssertiveness: How To Be Strong In Every Situationโ by Conrad and Suzanne Potts (Capstone, ยฃ10.99)
Image: Getty