Why is it that some people find it so difficult to say what they mean? And why, when they finally do speak up, does the issue often seem to get blown out of all proportion?
This is one area where the Life-Style Grid can give a visual representation of what is going on. You will remember that we talked about the vertical dimension of the Grid being about (in broadest terms) communication style.
Laying aside for the moment whether we are talking about Interest, Usual Behaviour, Needs or Stress, people who are strongly oriented to the top of the grid will tend to be Direct and Assertive in the way they communicate. This isn't to say they will be aggressive, although that would be a possible stress behaviour, simply that they will tend to deal with clear communication that says what they think, at the time an issue arises. For people at the top of the Grid, there doesn't tend to be very much emotional overhead involved in speaking in this way; having to deal with difficult issues directly doesn't cost them much, emotionally.
People strongly orientated to the bottom of the Grid are a little different. They prefer to work in a Reflective manner and when they do communicate, prefer to do it in a somewhat Indirect manner. So this means that they are less likely to respond definitively at the time an issue arises, and they are less likely to simply say "Black" or "White". They are more likely to say "have a look at this rather complex map of 169 shades of gray, and I guess my conclusions would be around this and that and the other".
First thing - neither of these approaches is better than the other. "Black and White" needs to be balanced by an appreciation for "shades of Gray", and "saying it now" needs the balance of "here are my reflections". But what happens when people strongly oriented to the bottom of the Grid find themselves confronted with a situation which genuinely is Black or White? For example, it might be that someone has spoken or acted in an obviously inappropriate manner, or that a decision has been taken without consultation which has obvious and immediate negative consequences.
The problem is for that "bottom of the Grid" people, there is an enormous emotional overhead to speaking up immediately and out of character. This can be hard for "top of the Grid" people to understand, precisely because they have never felt this way themselves. The people at the bottom of the Grid - let's call them Low-Key People - end up trying to decide which hurts more: saying something; or putting up with the consequences of something which is clearly wrong. And the answer is often the former - "I hate this situation, but speaking up is even worse".
If you aren't Low-Key yourself you will be wondering what on earth is going on here. A vivid illustration Claire Carrison (doyenne of Birkman Consultants in the US) gave a group of us once was of a room full of Low-Key people sitting around a table, with a very smelly dead goat under it. Were they happy? No! Were any of them going to mention the goat? Also no! Noone wanted to be first to speak up (although, and this is important, they would have happily joined in if someone else had started the ball rolling). They would rather suffer in silence. (Now there is a Low-Key mantra...)
Then in walks a top-of-the-Grid person: "Hi guys! Hey something smells terrible in here... look, there's a dead goat under the table. Anybody mind if I take it outside?"
Of course not. The sense of relief from all those low-key people is palpable. In fact, they may now have a vivid and detailed discussion of how they felt about the issue, and why it was such a problem. This will leave the goat-removing, top-of-the-Grid person wondering what on earth stopped them from doing the same for themselves.
But what if the top-of-the-Grid person hadn't ever walked in. Eventually (probably just before the deaths from cholera began) a Low-Key person would have broken ranks. But just think: that means the pain of saying nothing is now greater than the pain of speaking up. Any chance there may be a fair amount of emotional cargo carried by this announcement of a problem?
So that is all this involved story of dead goats is about. Low-Key people find it hard to do what may be obvious (to them as well as the top-of-the-Grid people), because of the emotional overhead involved for them. So when they do finally speak up, there is often an emotional "bill" to deal with.
If you are wondering whether this is affecting your team or your marriage or family or... get the people concerned to stand on the Grid for Usual and then for Needs, and just watch what is going on. In particular, the altitude of Needs (i.e. up or down the Grid) will tell you who this is likely to be an issue for.
- If everyone is low, then you may often find there are issues of which everyone is aware but which noone wants to broach;
- If some are high and some are low, the high ones may wonder why the others never seem to say what they actually think at a time when something could be done about it; and then when they do speak up, do it in what seems to be an emotionally punishing way.
So what can you do about this? Rocket science this is not, but learning to:
- ask questions that make it easier for an individual to raise difficult issues ("Fred - what do you think?");
- ask questions that focus on feelings - e.g. "Fred, how do you feel about this"; and
- making use of indirect communication methods ("why don't we write each other a short letter about this issue" - in a marriage / "let's scribble what we think on post-it notes and stick them on the wall" - in a team)
can all make it easier for Low-Key people to raise issues early on in the process, and to do it in a less emotive manner.