Thursday, February 11, 2010

Valentine's Day for Singles A-ha Moment: "Love Has a Price"

Click the Play Button to listen through the player. You can read along with me in the transcribed text.

“Love has a price.” Have you ever heard that before? Or maybe you’ve even said something yourself, such as "With love comes trade-offs." Any of those thoughts around “Love has a price” is also saying that love is a commodity. Kind of like you’d go to the store and buy love. So, in this mindset, I have to have $2 to pay for a can of soda, and love works that way too. No moolah, no soda; nothing to trade away, no love. In that thought, that’s how love is “transacted.”

Put in those terms, it makes love sound bleak and cold. Do you believe that love works that way, bleak and cold in a transaction like that? I’m thinking you probably don’t, but if you’ve said that there’s a price for love, then that’s the belief you’re starting with. That’s the belief that your actions are starting with.

If you’ve noticed now that this is your thought and you’d like an alternative around it, well, here’s your alternative.

“Love has a price” is just one thought. There are many thoughts we could have about love. Here’s a suggested thought, if you’d like one to try out for size. It is that love is like currency. But unlike dollars or Euros and pennies and coins in your pocket, love is a limitless currency. Sometimes we ask each other in conversation, if you had all the money in the world, what would you do with it? We answer with things like, give some to charity, buy a boat, buy a giant house.

So consider this as you try the thought “Love is my currency” on for size: If you believed that this was true - that you could never run out of love, that mean people have as much love in them as you do, that love is out there to be freely given and freely received - what would you be doing differently? If you thought your love was a limitless currency, what would you be doing differently?

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Why We Don't Say No More Often

(You can click the "Play" button in the player below to listen to the audio. Or read the transcribed text below the player.)

Have you caught yourself overwhelmed, drained, or feeling more obligated than motivated to help others?

Oftentimes, when we get to this point, we ask ourselves, “How did I ever get to this??”

 Just as often, we can trace back our getting to this breaking point to all the people and projects we said “Yes” to, just because we felt we couldn’t say “No.”

Why We Don’t Say “No” More Often

“No” tends to get a bad rap. No one wants to be known as the person who is “uncooperative” or “not a team player” or “asocial,” just because you declined one too many times.

The social stigma around saying “No” is that we’re only using “No,” because there was no alternative to “Yes.” If I could have responded with some words other than “No,” then I would have used them instead. This idea is so ingrained in us that, indeed, this is what we sometimes still try to do. Instead of just saying “No,” and leaving it at that, we feel the necessity to add justification or regret, because we certainly wouldn’t want to seem too happy, smug or secure while declining.

Some examples:
"I can’t – because I’m already committed to something else at that time.”
“No - but I really wanted to.”
“I would - but I’m swamped.”
And the classic: “I’m washing my hair that night.”
But notice how we don't usually feel the need to justify saying “Yes."

The truth of the matter is that one honest “No” is worth more than a thousand fake “Yes’s.”

While we all want to hear “Yes” to every request we make, we also know the deadly aftermath of the “Yes” that never had any commitment behind it – the “Yes” that had been a “No” all along.


Becoming Aware of Present Behaviour

If you’re starting to wonder just why you don’t say “No” more often, consider how you feel today when someone says “No” to one of your requests.
  • Is “No” uncomfortable for you to hear?
  • Does “No” feel better when a person provides a reason why not?
  • Does it somehow feel like a personal rejection, even when you know they’re rejecting the request, not rejecting you?
  • When a project or request that you know you should decline comes across your desk, do you find yourself putting off having to break the bad news? Do you wait to see if it will blow over?
Is saying “No” easier or more difficult, depending on who’s asking something from you? With family? With business associates?

When you get a request, imagine yourself responding with “No.” Notice your behaviour, your physical reactions, and your emotional reactions in everyday situations where “No” is involved, and you’ll discover some keys to any hangups around rejection.

Rehearsing “No” - An Exercise

Listen to the audio version here, or scroll down for the transcribed text. If you don't have a partner handy, you can use the audio to rehearse by yourself.


All uncomfortable situations become easier to handle as we become practiced in them. Just like rehearsal for a play, we can rehearse hearing and saying “No” in situations that are less significant, so that it’s not as shocking when we have to say “No” in situations where it counts.

Here’s my exercise for rehearsing “No,” and even become more aware of your current reactions to “No.”

Work with a partner or a friend. Remember that the automatic answer to the next ten questions is “No.” You can say “No” in whatever variations you like (i.e.: “Definitely not,” “Certainly not,” etc.), but resist being apologetic and resist justifying your “No.”

Ask your friend the first five questions, and hear them say “No” to you. Then have your friend ask you questions 6-10, and decline all five questions.
  1. Can you spot me $5?
  2. Would you put the dishes away?
  3. Would you take notes for this meeting?
  4. Do you like asparagus?
  5. Would you like to see the dessert menu?
  6. When are you going to lunch?
  7. So can I sign you up for this committee?
  8. What’s the last movie you saw?
  9. Can I count on your vote?
  10. Can I get that by noon?
Note what you did when you heard and said "No." If you're working with a friend, you may be able to share your observations of each other during this exercise.

Feel free to share your experience in the Comments here, or by emailing me at SoulmateFromWithin@gmail.com.