First Impression

29 06 2007

First Impression makes us believe whether we can start a relationship with some one or whether we have to wait. Read this memory about a fist impression part of how we communicate with one another. Sometimes entering from back door. You know what it means!

Many years ago, I met with an elderly woman whom I had last seen in Iran 20 years earlier. She is the mother of a friend and we are some how related! She was visiting here in Vancouver, so I invited her for dinner. The first thing she said after coming to that door was: “Oh, how fat you have become!” She said this with a smile of course.

We Iranians know that she did not mean anything bad by this; it was just her style of communication. She meant that she remembered me from 20 years before and that I had “developed” meaning I had changed. She also felt close to me, and wanting my best, felt she had to be clear by telling me in what way I had changed over the years. She had not intended to offend me, nor was I offended, but another might have been. This is why I think our style of communication needs to improve!

We tend to use negative, judgmental words instead of positive, non-judgmental ones, a passive rather than active language.

What do we mean really?

We need to learn more about the first impressions we make!

Why?

More to come in the next article…

April 23, 2007

www.middlepeace.com



Wants and Hopes

29 06 2007

 

We all have many Wants and Hopes.

Many years ago, as a newcomer to Sweden, I was trying to register for a language course. The lady behind the desk asked me, “What courses would you like to register in?” I was shocked and stunned: I had never before been asked what I wanted! I had always been reminded of what I did not want!

Say what you want and what you do not want!

Giving choices in our communication and having choices for being clear is my point. We can learn new skills and stop wasting time with this “back-door” policy.

We need to learn:

To express our wishes, hopes, and dreams in direct words, gently without offending or devaluing others.

To be able to say what happened, when it happened, and how it happened, and what are the concerns.

To use direct and clear language with our children.

To remember the fact that we model this language for our children; indirect language causes difficulties in problem solving for everyone.

To differentiate between our own needs and those of others: family, children, parents, relatives, and whomever else we are relating to: I want, I need…

To answer questions in positive terms but still be able to say no if we do not like something.

To say sorry if we have made a mistake, yet, not apologize for being the direct person we want to be.

We need to learn that:

Clarity in our communication prevents harm.

We are safer when we admit we are in pain or that we fear something.

We do not need to be superheroes.

We can be happy for who we are and how we are. We do not need to find excuses.

Sometimes we use too much sarcasm, put down others, and make trivial jokes in order to make a communication happen.

We can complain about everything if we want, yet, we have to be aware our way of communicating. In a conversation, do not transfer your negativity; instead be the positive energy that you expect to receive from others!

May 31, 2007

www.middlepeace.com



Communication Skills

23 04 2007

Communication Skills are not always clear to us. Some of us are more skilled in talking, some of us just talk.

What are communication skills and how do we need to work on ours?

Have you ever noticed how we Iranians (of course not all of us!) speak our minds? I have a friend who uses the term “back-door language politics!” What is that?  After you read this article and have a chance for clarity, you might agree with me. I am interested in listing every single example of how we can speak our minds more clearly, straightforwardly, respectfully, and positively without offending anyone!

Why are we not direct in saying what we want and how we feel?

The ways in which we describe how we feel, think, behave, act, or even respond to the tasks of life, often become long stories that make the listener tired.

Why is that?

Of course, it isn’t because we do not possess the skills of speaking. No, it’s because there exists a cloud of culturally structured inhibition that stops us from speaking our minds out loud.

We have been always stopped one way or another from being outspoken. Women are said to be khanom, meaning gracious, when they are silent; children are “polite” and “disciplined” when they conform to everything. Being a Khanom also is about not expressing any desires, not having any wishes, and not feeling the importance of self.

Men are raised to be the spokes-persons of the family, because women traditionally are considered to be ones who need protection from men. Men are also raised to be “men” meaning not having any feelings and emotions. Being a “man” in our culture means to suffer alone, to not feel pain, to not cry, to not complain. .

We have many good examples of Iranian men who are “real” men and who work hard to raise their families and be the father figures that they are!

We have been sentenced to death, forced to leave our communities, and called many names for being outspoken and expressive. In past times, all our writers, poets, actors, and activists have been labeled and re-labeled, because they choose and have chosen historically to speak their minds and because they did not abide by the cultural stop signs!

These experiences have taught us to use metaphors, poetry, narratives, quotes from unreal sources, or even examples of others who have gone through similar situations, to say something about our inner fears, insecurities, and unhappiness.

Communication is a basic life skill. We view ourselves in the mirrors of other people’s eyes. We need to see confirmation and belonging in those mirrors. We say things to make other people happy, to show how good we are, because we fear to be viewed differently!

We never say how we really think, we agree with people for trivial yet we have pivotal differences in our opinion. We find similarity and commonality with others, yet we do not mention it. We can not communicate properly because we have always been what to do next, how to feel next, and how to manage our life in future that is not here. Communicating properly is an art.

This is why many times we do not say what we really mean.

It is hard for us to say, No, thank you”, first because we become bombarded with Taaroof politic, second because we have not learned to say that, and third because other people will find us rude!

We are raised to adhere to everything; we have to accept what is forced upon us, without saying a word, without opposing, and without having any self rights!

How are we communicating in our multicultural style of life?

April 25, 2007

www.middlepeace.com