Coping With Difficult People

Full Title: Coping With Difficult People: ...in Business and in Life (Abridged)
Author / Editor: Robert M. Bramson
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Sound Ideas, 1986

 

Review © Metapsychology Vol. 7, No. 47
Reviewer: Michael Sakuma, Ph.D.

Some people spend thousands of dollars, and
years on therapy to help deal with the vicissitudes of life.  Other people
spend twenty dollars or so and three hours listening to an audiotape that can
tell you how to "cope with all of the difficult people" that you
might encounter.  The path that chosen is up to the individual based partly on
their values, lifestyles and free time. There is debate as to which is the more
efficient use of money.

That said, my curiosity was piqued when I picked
up this audiotape (CD actually, but that is beside the point) claiming to give "all
the tools necessary to put those difficult people in their place. This is just
what I’ve been looking for…imagine, me, being able to cope with others "problematic"
behavior once and for all… it sounds too good to be true. And whereas I haven’t
spent thousands of dollars in therapy, I have spent years and years in graduate
school where they hinted, but did not explicitly tell me what I should be
doing.  I figured that this might be the best twenty bucks I’ll ever spend.

I listened to the CDs… some more than once, and
I was… lets say… disappointed.  There is some good stuff here, but I
certainly don’t feel prepared (from these lessons) to stand up for myself put
my boss or difficult coworker in their places.  There are good, bad (and ugly)
things about the program.  Allow me to quickly outline them. 

The Good: The program describes several different "difficult"
styles that a person might encounter. Description and identification is often a
big part of solving a problem and the program breaks people into types for
identification.  The names given to the types are a bit hokey (e.g. "snipers",
"sherman tanks", "clams") but they provide nice mnemonic
devices for easy remembering Some basics of effective communication are
discussed, and certainly the advice to "schedule an appointment" to
talk to the person is in line with my belief that one should never engage a
difficult person in the "heat of the moment."  Distance is often good
so that cooler, more rational minds might prevail.

The Bad:  The presentation of the problems and scripted
solutions leave something to be desired, both in structure/acting and in
content.  The skits along with the music laced all throughout the program
reminds me of the skits that I used to watch on sesame street, or in school
during 5th grade. I think I would have been able to take the program
more seriously if it were presented differently (maybe).

The Ugly: When all is said and done I believe that this
product is marketed towards fast-food-mentalitied, corner cutting,
listening-on-the-train-to-work people who want a quick and easy way to deal
with possibly deep problems in communication or self-esteem.  Whereas the cover
of the box promises results, there are no absolutes in this field when we deal
with the dynamics of human interaction and certainly no generic sure fixes to
interpersonal conflicts.  It is my belief that are no short-cuts to well
developed social skills and without significant practice with another thinking,
feeling person, most of these lessons will go unheeded and forgotten. The
problem with programs like these is that they try to conceptualize a dynamic
interchange between two people as a static item to be memorized It is a little
like trying to learn Karate from a book. You might pick up some basics, but you
will be lost when someone comes at you from a different angle than the picture
shows.

 I would be remiss if I didn’t re-emphasize that
there is good stuff here.  If this review sounds like I am being a "Sherman tank" it is
because I am reacting to the promises on the front of the box. It is my feeling
that a few sessions with a good therapist practicing effective communication
might be a better use of your time and money.

 

© 2003 Michael Sakuma
 

Michael Sakuma is
Chair of the Psychology Department at Dowling
College
, Long Island,
New York.

Categories: Relationships, SelfHelp