(no subject)
Apr. 11th, 2006 10:49 amDisclaimer: This has nothing to do with fandom. It's about something that drives me nuts about some people in RL, and while it's definitely based on recent events, it's not something any of y'all did.
Why is it that some people don't know how to listen? I'm not talking about listening to instructions or anything like that. I mean, when you're going through a bad time and just need to vent to someone, why do some people take it upon themselves to try to fix whatever your problem is or cheer you up?
I'm basically a cheerful, optimistic person, but I have my moments of frustration. When I do, I would really like to just vent about them and say, "Argh, this sucks and it's not fair!" What I do not need at that moment is a happy little Mary Sunshine saying, "Oh, cheer up! Things will work out, I just know it!"
Fuck you, Mary Sunshine. You're missing my point entirely. If I really believed that, I wouldn't need to be ranting about it, would I? When you tell me that I'm wrong to be worried and distressed, you're basically saying I'm an idiot who has no clue about the situation I'm in. Not true. I do know, and what's more, I know a hell of a lot more about it than you do. It's a complex situation with details you haven't even thought of. So fuck off.
Other people don't take the cheery route, but instead think they can fix it for you. They have an answer to your problem, no matter how bad, and it usually involves something you should have done or ought to do now that s/he would have/has done in this situation. If you argue back or try to point out how your situation is different, or that perhaps they might not have all the information, they just keep coming up with even more outlandish solutions to your problem. Often, these are things I have already tried or considered, but for one reason or another they didn't help. Individuals who do this never seem to assume I have considered these options at all, and they jump at the chance to enlighten me.
So the thing I would dearly love to say to those folks (but never do) is this: I didn't come here to ask you for advice. If I wanted you to help me fix my problem, I would've said that. What I wanted was just to vent about it, and you offering "helpful" suggestions just makes me feel worse, because what you're basically saying is that I'm so incompetent that I can't handle this situation myself and need your help. I don't need your help. Perhaps no one can really help me at this point, and I'm just struggling to find a way through this on my own. Kindly fuck off and go try to fix somebody else's problems.
So here's my point: when someone vents or rants about something to you, it is generally not a cry for help. It doesn't mean that your duty as a friend/parent/sister/lover is to try to "fix" it for them. I know you mean well, but really, it doesn't help.
You know what you can really do to help? Sit there. Listen. Nod your head. Say stuff like, "Oh, shit, that really sucks" and "Wow, I don't know what I'd do in that situation either" and "I can totally understand why you're frustrated and angry about this, because I would be too." And then let them talk some more, until they decide they've vented enough and feel better.
And that's all you need to do. Seriously.
Why is it that some people don't know how to listen? I'm not talking about listening to instructions or anything like that. I mean, when you're going through a bad time and just need to vent to someone, why do some people take it upon themselves to try to fix whatever your problem is or cheer you up?
I'm basically a cheerful, optimistic person, but I have my moments of frustration. When I do, I would really like to just vent about them and say, "Argh, this sucks and it's not fair!" What I do not need at that moment is a happy little Mary Sunshine saying, "Oh, cheer up! Things will work out, I just know it!"
Fuck you, Mary Sunshine. You're missing my point entirely. If I really believed that, I wouldn't need to be ranting about it, would I? When you tell me that I'm wrong to be worried and distressed, you're basically saying I'm an idiot who has no clue about the situation I'm in. Not true. I do know, and what's more, I know a hell of a lot more about it than you do. It's a complex situation with details you haven't even thought of. So fuck off.
Other people don't take the cheery route, but instead think they can fix it for you. They have an answer to your problem, no matter how bad, and it usually involves something you should have done or ought to do now that s/he would have/has done in this situation. If you argue back or try to point out how your situation is different, or that perhaps they might not have all the information, they just keep coming up with even more outlandish solutions to your problem. Often, these are things I have already tried or considered, but for one reason or another they didn't help. Individuals who do this never seem to assume I have considered these options at all, and they jump at the chance to enlighten me.
So the thing I would dearly love to say to those folks (but never do) is this: I didn't come here to ask you for advice. If I wanted you to help me fix my problem, I would've said that. What I wanted was just to vent about it, and you offering "helpful" suggestions just makes me feel worse, because what you're basically saying is that I'm so incompetent that I can't handle this situation myself and need your help. I don't need your help. Perhaps no one can really help me at this point, and I'm just struggling to find a way through this on my own. Kindly fuck off and go try to fix somebody else's problems.
So here's my point: when someone vents or rants about something to you, it is generally not a cry for help. It doesn't mean that your duty as a friend/parent/sister/lover is to try to "fix" it for them. I know you mean well, but really, it doesn't help.
You know what you can really do to help? Sit there. Listen. Nod your head. Say stuff like, "Oh, shit, that really sucks" and "Wow, I don't know what I'd do in that situation either" and "I can totally understand why you're frustrated and angry about this, because I would be too." And then let them talk some more, until they decide they've vented enough and feel better.
And that's all you need to do. Seriously.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:05 pm (UTC)*hugs*
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:10 pm (UTC)That drives me nuts too.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:13 pm (UTC)As someone who's 'been there, done that' with various people in my life, you have all my understanding and sympathy.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:27 pm (UTC)But man, I feel your pain. Of course, I always itch to help (but part of that is because everyone comes to me for advice, usually on situations I have no experience with), even though I never expect people to listen.
*hugs tight* Venting is a good thing. I shall fix your problem by telling you to do it more. XP
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:28 pm (UTC)I'm an advice pusher myself *cough*
Trying to suppress that. Not succeeding.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:29 pm (UTC)My best friend said, more or less, those exact words to her husband to let him know what she needed. She had to 'teach' him how to just listen.
Sometimes all a person needs is a sounding board, just someone to bounce ideas off of, or just to echo those feelings of frustration and, yeah, let you know that it's okay to feel like that.
I TOTALLY agree with you, Emma.
(Now, if parents can do that with their children so their children can grow up feeling competent in their problem-solving skills and not expect everybody else to solve their problems FOR them when they become adults.)
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:32 pm (UTC)I've noticed though, on more than a few occasions, that while I was listening to someone rant and rave, and then suddenly they're all like, "I know what to do! I'l just...!" and that's it. They've talked for 30 minutes. I've said no more than 5 words and yet the problem is solved. Voila! :)
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:33 pm (UTC)This is one of those dimensions of personality things, much like introversion/extraversion or sequential versus big-picture learning. It's a topic we've spent some time on in staff meetings and my workplace, and there've been studies done on it, about people who choose to work in service professions because they have the fix-it-now imperative as part of their personality. They are the ones who when presented with a complaint will generate a list of 50 what-ifs in 5 minutes and start trying to solve the problem. Because I happen to work sometimes among a group of people who all have this tendency, we in fact have sort of written into our template for the problem-solving process: wait, is this a problem someone wants solved? because left to our own devices we will solve ourselves silly. Seriously.
The thing is, what you perceive as a venting rant? I can only barely make sense of. I believe you that it is how you feel, but I wouldn't feel that way, um, probably ever. Catharsis just plain doesn't work that way for me. Just venting and having the other person sit there and not have suggestions leaves me feeling hopeless--like, see? nothing can ever ever be done because I didn't come up with anything and neither did they and I'm just screwed and defeated and now I shall go cry a lot.
I have the *opposite* problem. When I rant, I usually *do* want opinions, not necessarily the same as mine, and suggestions, and what I get is people going oh that does suck and I'm sure it feels bad, and in fact, some people believe that because when a suggestion that doesn't work for me is offered, I want to discuss it further, I'm really being argumentative. I'm not. I want to explain/discuss/brainstorm/clarify. Also, to me, I'm free not to take suggestions anyway, and know that I know more about the situation than the suggester, so it doesn't bother me if they suggest something I already tried or tried and discarded.
I mean, occasionally I will rant and just want to holler, but on those rare occasions, 1. I say so because it ISN'T the standard for me, and 2. it pretty much doesn't help, and I know it. I just want to feel sorry for myself and wallow for a while before I come back and ask for constructive comments. I'm so not saying that when you are ranting it's necessarily that you just want to feel sorry for yourself; I'm saying that's how it works for me.
So the thing I would dearly love to say to those folks (but never do) is this: I didn't come here to ask you for advice. If I wanted you to help me fix my problem, I would've said that.
To me? That IS what to say. I'm happy to shut up, but absent being told, no, this is not the solve my problems kind of rant, I will pretty well always default to trying to help you brainstorm solutions unless something about the rant itself (like, the ranter saying "I don't even want to talk about this; I just want to rant") clues me in.
Now, I've *learned* that people don't always want that (despite that it mostly flabbergasts me), so I generally say in offering advice that I KNOW it's unsolicited, that I KNOW it may be completely unuseful and worth what you paid, which mostly seems to strike a happy medium of offering advice without making the feelings you describe so much (or, if it doesn't, so far no one has seen fit to tell me), but that's a learned thing, and totally unnatural to me.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:33 pm (UTC)So, kudos, I feel for you.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:34 pm (UTC)It's beautiful when they figure it out for themselves, though.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 04:58 pm (UTC)I'll confess I was like that though, I tried to be the problem solver. Now I realise how difficult it actually is to keep your mouth closed and just *listen*. I'm working on it though!
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:00 pm (UTC)<3333333333333333 RE
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:09 pm (UTC)There's always room after you've said that to continue with "But maybe it could get better", if the person is open to it.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:11 pm (UTC)And I dated a guy recently who so badly wanted to "fix" me. And it wasn't as if I was broken beyond recognition or that he didn't have his own massive problems, but it was like he just couldn't rest until he'd solved my problem. He as much as told me that. We ended up breaking off because he was so intensely focused on me that it made the whole thing uncomfortable.
But ah well, the only way I've learned to deal is to figure out which people in my life are good listeners and which aren't - then only take my rants to those who will not make me more frustrated.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:14 pm (UTC)I agree with you 120%!! Sometimes, people just don't know when to leave you alone. Yeah, they can say that it is because they care (since they're family/lover/friend/whatever), but that doesn't mean they're automatically entitled to know everything at that exact moment when you're feeling low and shitty. You've got to know when to give people space to breathe.
And I hope you're better now after the rant.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:18 pm (UTC)So, as someone who's heard it and listened to it, maybe (at least for the people you care about) try saying that their helpful suggestions make you feel worrse and that you're not an idiot and please for the love of deity just listen to you and be sympathetic but not nauseatingly cheerful or advice-giving.
(And I know that just fell under advice-giving and feel free to smack me, but I thought you might want to hear that it is actually helpful in some cases to let people have it full barrel.)
{shrugs}
-DL-
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:48 pm (UTC)My whole take on the "people trying to fix my problems" thing is that they are in denial and don't want to look too hard at themselves or their own issues. It's a comfort thing for them. Sometimes, I guess, you have to say outright, "I don't want advice or an answer - I just want to vent".
(((huggs)))
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 05:49 pm (UTC)I have had to say that to my husband many times, not because he's uncaring but because it would never occur to him to rant or vent without getting some specific solution in return for it. No matter how many times this happens, it's just not something he'll think of if I don't tell him! It saves a lot of frustration for me if I say "I'm just venting, just shut up and listen" at the get-go.
...and you offering "helpful" suggestions just makes me feel worse, because what you're basically saying is that I'm so incompetent that I can't handle this situation myself and need your help.
My annoyance in this sort of situation is a little different -- it comes from the frustration that, if I've gotten to a point where I want to vent, I've undoubtedly already tried all the solutions they've got. So they'll say, "What about this, this and this?" and I'll say, "No, I've tried that, that, and that, and that doesn't work because of this," and then I get frustrated with myself because I feel like I'm being uncharacteristically negative and making it look like I don't want to solve my problem.
Which, of course, if I'm venting, maybe I don't right then, but that doesn't mean I never will.
Yep. All around, very frustrating. *hugs*
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 06:17 pm (UTC)I know that for me, I just often don't really know what to say. If I know osmeone likes to vent, I let them vent. Some of my friends really want my opinion or suggestions, so it's hard to know unless someone says.
I think it was a Laura Kightlinger bit where she said, "Everytime someone says 'Sometimes things happen for a reason' I can't help but hear, 'Sometimes things happen with a razor.'" Yeah, morbid, but just... yeah, sometimes the optimism thing isn't... so helpful.
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 06:23 pm (UTC)So I stopped doing it, which took a lot of willpower (and still odes, really), but in the end it made me feel like I was a much better friend and person. If I am listening to a friend vent like this, I now listen for quite a long time before I say anything other than, "Yeah, that sucks." If I get any sense that they are actually looking for advice, the next thing I do is talk about a similar situation I was in and what happened. If I wasn't in a similar situation, then I really have no advice to offer and I just say that: "Wow, I wish I could do something to help, but I have no experience with this. Is there anything I can do for you to make this easier?"
And I leave it at that. I've opened the door, and they can come in if they like. I'm not going to drag them through it -- not anymore. Because in my experience, most people in that situation really are just venting. There are a few who aren't, and frankly, they should just tell me what they want if my listening and trying to understand is not enough. Friends can do that with each other, thankfully. :-)
no subject
Date: 2006-04-11 06:24 pm (UTC)