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Five Red Flags of Resistance
and Why Resistance Keeps You Stuck
used with permission from Marlene Chism
www.stopyourdrama.com
Your boss doesn’t
listen to your ideas. Your spouse refuses to try to
understand. Your employees resist your leadership, and
secretly you know you keep doing things you don’t really
want to do but you feel stuck and don’t know how to tip the
lever to change. What we are talking about is resistance.
Until you are
trained, resistance is nearly impossible to spot because
often it can be subtle. Good listening is one way to
uncovering resistance in yourself and others. Why should you
care? If you want to shift your current circumstances you
can do so more quickly if you can spot the pockets of
resistance. If you lead others, knowing where there is
resistance will help you to coach that person toward
positive change. There are many signs that a person is in
resistance. In this checklist here are five of them
1. Justification
2. Know it all
3. Need for Approval
4. Living out of the zone
5. Complaining
Justification
Justification is a fancy word for excuses. Listen for the
words, “but and can’t” and you will uncover pockets of
resistance. I can’t do it: it’s too difficult, or “I would
but I don’t have enough money.” Until a person stops making
excuses, there is no room for positive action.
Know it all
A blocked mindset or stubborn resistance shows up in strong
opinions and superiority such as, “I already know that is
what he will say,” or “That will never happen.” Until a
person is willing to consider another possible reality you
will have a lot of energy spent on resisting your ideas or
your leadership.
Need for
approval
Most people never truly grow out of their need for agreement
and approval. The result is procrastination or endless
surveying of others in the form of “what do you think I
should do?” This type of resistance paralyzes people in fear
because they are afraid of making the wrong decision or
making someone angry. It’s good to get other insights and
opinions but needing approval is another way to avoid
criticism as well as a way to avoid personal responsibility.
Living out of
the zone
One sure sign of resistance is living so far into the future
or too far into the past. If on a number line negative ten
represents the past and positive ten represents the future,
the zone, or the present moment is somewhere between
negative 2 and positive 2, or learning from the past and
planning for the future. Anything beyond that is resistance
to the only power you really have which is the now. Living
for the future is a way to resist the present moment by
believing that once the future arrives, relief will come.
“Once I get the raise, once the economy gets better, once I
lose the weight, and meet the right partner then…” The other
form of resistance is living in the past, either talking
about glory days or regretting past mistakes. The way out of
resistance is to live in the present.
Complaining
Any form of negativity is resistance and a big time waster.
Instead of doing the one thing to promote positive change,
time is spent focusing on what is not working, what is
unacceptable, how someone done someone wrong, how things
should have been, what might have been, what opportunity was
missed and how unfair it all is. Until one accepts the
present situation, the “leak in the boat” continues to
expand and worsen the situation.
Marlene Chism
is the author of Stop Workplace Drama and is the founder of
the Stop Your Drama Methodology. To learn more about how to
release resistance go to
www.releaseresistance.info |