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Getting the last word with apology | Jennifer Thomas | TEDxGreensboro

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    Ten years ago, my husband and I
    had an argument.
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    That is never fun.
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    Being at fault, I said "sorry."
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    I noticed JT was unusually quiet
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    during dinner.
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    There was tension in the air
    and a knot in my stomach.
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    What my apology had lacked in elegance,
    I thought it made up in simplicity.
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    Apparently, not.
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    Recognizing that my apology
    had failed miserably,
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    I did what any well-trained
    expert communicator would do.
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    I went inside and asked myself a question:
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    "What's the matter with him?"
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    (Laughter)
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    Actually, I asked him,
    "What's the matter?"
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    He said, "I just wish you'd apologize."
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    I wanted to say,
    "Whatcha talking about, Willis?"
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    But I said something like,
    "I said I was sorry."
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    And then I got curious.
    "JT, what was I supposed to say?"
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    That's when I heard it.
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    "Honestly, Jen, I wanted you
    to say you were wrong."
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    Wow.
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    Looking back, I realized
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    that instead of making me guess,
    he had given me a gift.
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    What happened next?
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    I said, "That's what I've meant to say.
    I made a mistake and I was wrong."
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    Soon the tension between us
    lifted like a fog rolling out to sea.
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    We went on to have a happy evening
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    and I had
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    my usually easygoing husband back.
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    This exprience between us
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    was directly related to my work
    as a clynical psychologist
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    and it sparked my research
    on apologies and forgiveness.
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    I realized JT is not alone.
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    We all have scripts,
    that come from our childhood,
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    for apologies
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    but the trouble is,
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    we have a glaring lack of awareness
    about effective apologies.
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    In my work as a business consultant,
    I've seen my share of failed apologies.
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    It's so easy to feel overlooked,
    undervalued, and ignored.
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    I know the real cause of trouble
    in our offices today,
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    is that we work with people,
    who don't know how right we are.
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    (Laughter)
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    Everytime we get offended,
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    it creates an emotional block
    between us and them.
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    The next time it happens, another block,
    untill we have a big wall
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    and it's very hard
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    to talk through a wall or around a wall,
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    and it doesn't go away
    just with the passing of time.
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    Apologies require vulnerability
    and they feel too risky to some people.
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    TED speaker and researcher,
    Brene Brown, insists,
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    "Vulnerability does not mean weakness."
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    If I could talk
    to that person in your office,
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    who hasn't given a decent apology
    since the Bush administration,
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    that's 41 not 43, here's what I would say:
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    "You are crushing your credibility
    and trashing your trust.
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    This is stunting your career growth
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    and causing untold frustration
    for the rest of us."
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    What we really need
    are baby steps for apologies.
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    My passion is to help people know
    what to say, whenever sorry isn't enough.
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    To that end we had amassed
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    what may be the world's largest data set
    on apology preferences,
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    and we're just beginning.
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    The impact of our findings
    on relationships at home and at work
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    could be truly transformative.
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    Who do I mean when I say we?
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    I realized that JT and I
    were speaking different languages,
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    and I thought
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    there might be a lot of people
    in the same boat.
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    So naturally, I reached out
    to Gary Chapman,
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    New York Times bestselling author
    of the relationship book
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    The Five Love Languages.
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    He was kind enough to sit down with me
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    and we began by reviewing
    his five love languages.
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    Those are: words of affirmation,
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    quality time, receiving gifts,
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    acts of service, and physical touch.
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    What he says is if you really want someone
    to feel loved or appreciated
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    you shouldn't speak your own love language
    but you should speak theirs.
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    Otherwise you're just
    going to be wasting your effort.
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    When we sat down and talked,
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    I shared with him just
    what I've shared with you here,
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    and I added, "When it comes to apologies
    the key word is sincerity."
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    We want to know,
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    "Did they really mean this
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    or are they just trying
    to get this behind us?"
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    I told him that I was struck
    by the similarity
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    between this need to match our apologies
    with what they expect,
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    and the need to match our love languages
    with what they expect.
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    Then I waited for his reaction.
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    To my relief, he really
    resonated with the idea.
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    He said,
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    "Yes, for any relationship to last beyond
    the initial infatuation stage,
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    people have to be able to apologize."
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    And about few months later
    he gave me this endorsement.
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    He said,
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    "What you have brought to my attention,
    along with the love languages,
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    I'd call the other essential for happy,
    healthy relationships."
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    We teamed up for some research
    that became our book
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    When Sorry Isn't Enough.
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    Today we've asked 45,000 people,
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    "What do you most want to hear
    when people apologize?"
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    And the second question,
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    "When people apologize to you,
    what do you expect them to say or do?"
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    You might want to make
    a mental note of these questions
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    because they're good ones
    for you to use in your own life.
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    Their answers fell into five categories.
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    I promise we weren't looking for five,
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    although we know
    he really likes that number.
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    (Laughter)
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    We coined the term apology languages
    for these five different ways of saying
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    "my bad."
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    Each one is a separate key.
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    If you have a key and it unlocks the door,
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    you might be tempted
    to use that on every door
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    but that would be foolish,
    and would only end up in frustration.
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    It's the same way
    with our apology languages.
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    I'm going to share with you
    percentages on how popular
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    each of our five apology languages are.
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    This data is hot of the press
    for our event today.
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    The first apology language
    is expressing regret.
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    40% of people most want
    to hear us say "I'm sorry"
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    but that's not a complete sentence.
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    It's important that we give detail
    about their feelings.
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    How we've made them feel sad,
    angry, frustrated, worried.
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    They need to know that we really get it.
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    If it's just a small offence,
    that may be enough
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    but if it's something
    that's either serious or repeated,
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    they're really going to want
    to hear their apology language.
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    It might be something
    like our second language.
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    Accepting responsibility.
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    37% of people most want
    to hear us say "I was wrong."
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    See, I've been practicing.
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    (Laughter)
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    This is really hard
    for some people to say.
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    We find especially people,
    who come from a family of origin
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    or we call it FOO in psychology speak.
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    They kind of put the fun
    back in disfunction.
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    (Laughter)
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    They may have been told all the time
    not just what they did wrong
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    but that they were bad,
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    and they learned
    to cover up their mistakes.
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    The fact is, we all make mistakes.
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    Our third language of apology
    is making restitution or making amends.
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    10% of people really want us to ask them
    "What can I do to make this right?"
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    For them, talk is cheap.
    They want to see action.
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    Our fourth one is revising the plan.
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    10% of people also want to hear us say
    what's gonna be different going forward.
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    They want to know that we've put
    some time and effort
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    into making a better plan.
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    This didn't work so we should tell them
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    "This is a new insight I have
    about when I went off track
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    or how much I disliked this situation."
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    We can't promise we won't make a mistake
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    but here's my best plan for preventing us
    from ending up in this bad spot again.
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    Our final language of apology
    is the request for forgiveness.
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    3% of people most want
    to be asked that question.
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    "Will you please forgive me?"
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    You may be saying,
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    "Jennifer, I've never asked that question,
    that would never even pop into my head."
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    The fact is, for people, who as children
    were expected to ask that question,
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    they're going to expect that of us.
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    If we don't ask them, they may feel
    like we're holding out on them
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    or we were just getting warmed up
    for a great apology. Why did we stop?
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    Those are our five languages of apology.
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    As you can see, you simply can't guess
    what's going to speak to a person.
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    If you're talking to someone
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    you don't know
    what their apology language is
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    or if you're giving an apology to a group,
    we recommend that you use all five.
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    I do blogging about apologies in the media
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    and I find that public figures
    use all five of these only 1% of the time.
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    (Laughter)
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    A lot of bad language [inaudible].
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    "Mistakes were made to the extent
    that you were offended. We apologize."
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    (Laughter)
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    I had such a good time
    analyzing apologies
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    by Tiger Woods, Lance Armstrong,
    and any number of baseball players.
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    (Laughter)
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    You also might notice,
    as you look at these numbers,
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    that there's a huge imbalance.
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    Someone might be askig themself,
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    "Do we really need
    to focus on the meger 3%,
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    who want the request for forgiveness?"
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    If you're a smart manager, you will.
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    I worked with a company.
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    Employee name is Sarah.
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    I'm making up that name.
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    She paid such close attention
    to every single detail
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    that she was driving her work team crazy.
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    One day, a guy, who I'll call John,
    blew up on her, again.
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    He actually did come to her the next day
    and started to give her a quasi apology.
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    He said something like,
    "Sarah, I shouldn't have said that."
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    But you see, Sarah is in the 3%
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    and John was way out of the ballpark
    with what she wanted to hear.
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    She was left thinking,
    "And? Give me some more here."
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    But John wouldn't budge.
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    After a little bit,
    when she wouldn't let up,
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    he began to lob stink bombs at her.
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    Give me a nod if you've ever been hit
    by one of these phrases:
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    "We can't do anything about it now,"
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    "You're too sensitive,"
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    "It's time to move on,"
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    "Why can't you just drop it?"
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    This one's really popular:
    "Let's let the past stay in the past."
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    Hopefully, we can all
    do better than John did.
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    Let me share a few tips with you
    that we've learned along the way.
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    First, we want our body language
    to match up with our words.
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    Everyone has that BS meter
    and it'll go off if we seem very closed.
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    I also want you to not apologize by text.
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    Don't you all hate that?
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    Friends don't let friends text apologies.
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    None of your body language
    is going to come through that way.
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    It's just too simple,
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    it doesn't show your sincerity
    because it's too easy.
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    If it's a serious apology,
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    I want you to consider writing it out,
    and taking it and reading it to them.
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    The time you took to write it,
    will show them your sincerity.
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    Also, don't let yourself get distracted
    so leave that cellphone behind.
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    And then, I've narrowed it down
    to three defensive apology mistakes
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    that people often make.
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    Let's not blame, excuse or deny.
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    Those happen to spell BED.
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    Blaming, that seems
    to come naturally to kids
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    and I know a few adults,
    who haven't outgrown that yet.
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    When my younger son had a Lego creation
    that turned up broken parts of pieces,
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    he honed it on me as the culprit.
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    He said repeatedly that I was at fault
    and finally, I went to him and I said,
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    "Russel, I'm tired of you blaming me
    for having busted your Legos.
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    I'm sorry about it but I didn't do it."
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    He leveled his gaze on me
    and with his 5-year-old logic he said,
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    "I'm not blaming you,
    I'm saying you're the one who casued it."
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    (Laughter)
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    We also need to be careful
    not to make excuses.
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    Benjamin Franklin said this,
    "Never ruin an apology with an excuse."
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    And a red flag that an excuse is coming
    is when we hear the word "but."
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    Especially, "but you," right?
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    Then we know, they've stopped apologizing
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    and they're now blaming me
    for their poor actions.
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    We don't want to deny what we've done.
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    We should never try
    to bluff our way around an apology.
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    When people make a mistake,
    we admire those, who admit their missteps.
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    It is the quality of our relationships
    that drives our happiness in life.
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    When we return
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    to those imperfect people
    in our world,
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    let's commit to doing our part
    to make things right with others.
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    Let's put ourselves into their shoes
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    and give them
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    what they really want and need.
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    What's the pay off?
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    Your team members will trust you,
    your customers will be loyal to you.
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    You'll be replacing discord with harmony,
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    your relationships will be
    more peaceful and productive.
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    And you will feel glorious freedom.
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    As I talk today,
    someone has come to your mind.
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    How do I know?
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    The hundreds of people,
    with whom I've talked, have told me so.
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    Here's what you can do, when you feel
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    like you've already tried everything
    to make things right with someone.
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    Demonstrate leadership,
    make the next move.
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    To make sure you aren't just missing it,
    like I did with JT,
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    use all five apologies in your keyring.
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    When you look back,
    you'll never regret it.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Getting the last word with apology | Jennifer Thomas | TEDxGreensboro
Description:

I'm sorry often is just not enough. This talks helps us understand what a person needs to hear and experience as opposed to what the other person says. What we say meets our needs; but what someone hears may or may not meet their needs.

Jennifer is a practicing psychologist and author focusing on communications and relationships. Her focus is offering seminars and sessions for leaders, managers, and individuals on increasing effective positive communication and interaction.

This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
17:06

English subtitles

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