MENU

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

[Fropki] Ways to Stop Being Treated Like a Doormat (Shared by: Junaid Tahir)

with 0 comments




You may also like:
Pehla Nasha like you Cannot Imagine (by Alaa Wardi)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

2. Start Teaching Others
 
One of the best things I heard from TV's Dr Phil was "You teach people how to treat you".
 
That's bang-on.
 
Your response to someone's behaviour teaches them what is and isn't acceptable, so if you roll over and take whatever they give, the message is that it's okay for them to do that. And people will always do what works for them until they have evidence that it doesn't work, or that there's a better way. We're kinda dumb like that.
 
If someone is regularly treating you like a doormat, their behaviour is not okay. Your task, and I get how scary this might seem, is to change your response to start giving them that message. This doesn't have to be a big, dramatic showdown; it can be done gently and with the same respect that you want. You might be scared, but you know what you need to do.
 
As the famous line goes, help them help you.
 

3. Stop Being a Bottomless Pit
 
It's great to do things for other people, unless the act of doing things for other people is how you get validation, of course.
 
Being a people-pleaser might begin with the best intentions, but if you're not careul, you keep on doing so because you want to see how pleased they are with what you've done or even to hear those magic words: "Thank you". Being a people-pleaser can turn you into a bottomless pit—that not only sees others take advantage of you, but seriously damages your self-esteem.
 
People-pleasing is not a selfless act; it's a selfish one.
 
It's a flawed way to feel good about yourself, so stop it. How can you be more generous with yourself? And how would it be if you could be generous for others, not because of any validation but because there's value in the very act of giving?
 

4. Apply Confidence
 
If you're used to people walking all over you, it's likely that you're not used to asserting yourself. You might even feel like you're powerless, but I guarantee you that you have natural confidence that you can apply to start effecting change.
 
Think of something you do, where the question of whether you can do it or never arises. This might be doing something you do at home (like cooking a meal, laughing with your partner or decorating a room), it might be something at work (like taking part in a meeting, writing a report or seeing a way through a problem) or it might be something you do socially (like chatting with a friend, ordering wine at a restaurant or meeting someone new).
 
Natural confidence is being able to trust your behaviour with implicit faith in your abilities, so when you're doing something, there's no doubt about your ability to do it—you have full confidence. Applying that same sense of confidence to a new situation is what allows you to operate right at the edge or just out of your comfort zone, and this will feel uncomfortable.
 
That feeling of discomfort isn't the enemy and it doesn't mean you don't have confidence, it just means you're someplace new. Trust yourself to do what's best.
 

5. You're Not Alone
 
If your ill-treatment has been happening for some time you might be feeling isolated in your experience, so it can be extraordinarily useful and important to talk about it, or even to ask for some support or help. Other people are going through what you're going through, and you don't have to do this alone.
 
Asking someone you trust to talk about what's happening is not only a great way to offload a little, it just might allow you to step back enough to see a fresh perspective or another way through. You don't need anyone to fix things for you, so don't let that be your motivation here—the point is to connect with another human being so that you're supported through this.
 
Think about this way: if a good friend of yours was going through the same thing, wouldn't you want to hear about it and support them in attaining something better?
 

6. Raise Your Expectations
 
An easy life is one thing, but sticking your head in the sand and hoping things will fix themselves is crazy—as is setting your expectations so low that you expect to be treated like a doormat. There's a massive cost to lowering your expectations to that kind of level, and the act of lowering your expectations and accepting bad treatment can be more damaging in the long run that the bad treatment itself.
 
Don't ever make assumptions about what you should put up with or what you should expect. If you're going to have any expectations about how things should go, base them on what you'd love to see happen, not what you wish wasn't happening.
 

7. If All Else Fails
 
If you've truly done all you can to change things and to stop being treated like a doormat and nothing seems to work, then get the hell out. Life is way too short to have your experience of it and your self-esteem damaged by someone else, and sometimes you need to make a brave choice.
 
If you need to, be willing to remove yourself from the situation or relationship and start building the kind of life you'd love to live.
You Deserve Better
 
You don't need to "keep on keeping on", and you don't need to put up with being treated like a doormat.
 

Click here for Latest International Videos
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Want More Interesting Mails in your Inbox?
Click here to Join Fropki Mailing List
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Today's Most Popular Topics on Internet:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


__._,_.___


Members who contribute stuff to the group are requested to report any ABUSE or SPAM by other members of the Group. Any member who is found guilty of any such violations will be BANNED from the Group immediately and will be Reported to Yahoo! for further action. Members may report the issue by Forwarding us the mail at abuse@fropki.com and make sure that you copy and paste the Full Header of the mail along with the reported mail.

To change settings online go to:    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Fropki/join
(Yahoo! ID required)

To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
Fropki-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com




Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___

0 comments:

Post a Comment