Here, Hold this Elephant for Me: Compassionate Ways to Say No

in #psychology8 years ago

"And make sure to keep it warm!"

That's what my daughter told me as she exited our van for school. She wanted me to care for her baby because stuffies aren't allowed at school. Oh, but this elephant, Penny, is not a stuffy. She's a baby elephant and she needs lots of cuddles. As her grandmother (WTF really?), I have a job to do.

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This isn't a parenting post. This is a followup up to a post from awhile ago, "And I Will Carry What is Mine." My daughter literally handed me an elephant to take care of, but that elephant is symbolic of the types of physical and emotional labor requested of us daily. It's important to know when to say yes, when to say no, and when to compromise.

I mean, of course I'm going to take care of my daughter's stuffy. By handing the toy to me, she was actually asking me to keep her safe, keep her warm, keep thinking of her while she was away from me by tending to the stuffed animal she couldn't bring in the school with her. I assured my daughter I would take care of that elephant (aka her heart). And that's why Penny is now tucked in a doll stroller ensconced in baby blankets.

But what about those emotional loads friends try to hand you that you aren't ready or able to shoulder?

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Saying no can be just as much of a challenge as acquiescence to a job you don't have time for. When I was composing my Daisy Troop parent survey, I asked parents if they would be able to sponsor children into our troop. Their options were:

  • Yes
  • I am unable to at this time, but I appreciate being asked.

I wrote the question with the assumption the majority of parents would say no, but left space for them to not feel guilty about it. Why? Because I know how hard it is to say no, how easy to overreach, even when you don't have the time, money or emotional space. We need to help others, yes, but without hurting ourselves.

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This is how I feel when I overreach.

Saying no is empowering. It allows us to do better on the tasks we do undertake while caring for ourselves in the process. If someone tries to hand you a literal elephant, here are some ways you can gracefully say no:

"I am unable to at this time, but I appreciate being asked."

Say this when you mean it. If you'd like to be asked again add, "Could you ask me again in a week?" Choose a time period that works for you. By doing so, you indicate your support and willingness to help in future with compassion.

"I appreciate your trust in me/my abilities, but I would prefer not to receive requests like this."

No need for further explanation, but if you are speaking with someone you trust, you can tell them you are working on a personal balance right now, and one way of caring for yourself is by not taking on ______ duties, even for people you love.

"While I can't commit to ______, I'd love to __________. Will that help?"

Choose what you can offer and stick to it. If you can't offer what is most needed, that's okay.

But what about cases of conflict, when someone is draining you by regularly laying their yoke on your shoulders?

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"I can see you are struggling with ______. It feels like you've been asking me for help in this area a lot lately."

From here, you can try to figure out if there is a hidden need by stating why you think they keep asking, "It feels like you aren't being heard/supported at home and so you are asking me to hear/support you. Is that right?"

You might not want to have that conversation. The request/individual is one that is unwelcome in your life. You can follow up with, "I need space from this." Or, "I need you to find someone else to depend on for this." Or, "I think you would benefit from support I can't give. Here are some numbers of professionals for offering this type of advice/support."

Be sure to state explicitly whether you are setting a permeable or impermeable boundary.

I'd prefer if you don't bring this up again without a clear plan for how I can help in the moment.
"Do not speak to me about this again."
"Do not come over again."
And when/if boundaries are ignored, document, block and do not engage.

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Sometimes we feel guilty for advocating for ourselves in this way. It's better to set a boundary early on in a relationship so you don't reach a breaking point, but that isn't realistic in every friend/family dynamic. Do your best, be your best and forgive yourself.

What are some kind ways you say no?

images from pixabay.com

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Even though as good people that we are, we would love to help anyone who needs it, sometimes it’s just not possible to attend to all the help people requests from us.

We also have our needs, duties, wishes and obligations, and we need time for our own things.

I have see no people sacrifice themselves to a extreme level just because they think they always need to do favors. That’s unhealthy and this dynamic can eventually make the person fail as his/her goals.

Maintaining a balance is important

Exactly. Balance is essential. It does no one any good if we give so much we harm ourselves.

I really need to start saying no to some things next year. Ive been a kind of walkover for long. Time to stand up. Thanks for the post @shawnamawna

You are most welcome. No is difficult but rewarding. Good luck setting boundaries. Are there any in particular that you struggle with?

I'd say relationship wise. It's like I'm a doormat for friends, all for wanting to be "friends".

That’s a hard way to live. It leaves one feeling used. <3

Those are fantastic and brilliantly worded. I absolutely hate saying no to people... It's pathological. I do no know why I struggle with this. As a result, it really makes me mad when people engage me with their problems. I mean, I listen and share and give advice when asked, but it's the doing things that pisses me off. If someone broaches that they are moving next weekend, that opens a door for me to process the fact, check my schedule, and then, if possible... OFFER to help. But then it progresses and when I don't reply with an immediate commitment to help, I get asked. I'm sure this is within appropriate behavioral norms for friends... I just don't do this. I'm sure I'm the freak, but it honestly makes me not want to talk to people. My life is overwhelming enough without having to add things. You asked some of the ways we say "no?" I mentally imagine drawing down on them and solving their problem by inserting a funeral, but alas, that's just make believe. "No" usually comes across as some mumbling and waffling before saying "yes."

Oh I feel for you. Saying no is a challenge we all struggle with. Yes is easier because it makes others happy. But we deserve to be happy as well, which is why no is sometimes better.

I agree with you, and your well thought out approach makes so much sense. I am definitely going to try to incorporate some of these responses to help save friendships and sanity. Fantastic approaches.

I hope they help you!

Compassion is not mercy. Not at all.
Compassion is love and acceptance. This is the bride without judgment and criticism.

First of all, to yourself. Instead of hating yourself - loving yourself.
Accept yourself without self-flagellation and endless criticism.
Accept what you define as mistakes, just like what you feel as successes.

Instead of getting angry at those who annoy you.
About those who say insulting things to you.
About those who attack you. To understand that something hurts them.
Which is bothering them. That they lacked something
(Maybe a hug or love, maybe self-confidence or quiet)
So they react and act like that. Not evil.
People are not bad. Man's creation is not inherently bad.
But the man gets tired with the years, the burden and the suffering.
And we will become a little __ for others.
He also deserves compassion.

😍😍😍😍 lovingly written!

you deserve it :)

Beautiful write up, I loved the way you started your writing and a brave message, indeed :)

Stay passionate, stay blessed !

... I assured my daughter I would take care of that elephant (aka her heart). And that's why Penny is now tucked in a doll stroller ensconced in baby blankets.

I couldn't help but chuckle a little. And I set on not laugh today.

I'm dealing with the same sort of thing. In my opinion the most insidious form of intrusion and imposition is the demand for one to reciprocate friendship.

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