Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Civility: A golden rule

Also on my blog.

Sitting across the board room conference table you have a disagreement with your colleague -- do you shout and tell them to shut up because you know you're right?



Do you stand up defiantly, raise your hand, and say, "You are useless. You have no idea what you're talking about. Get out!"

Do you cross your arms against your chest and with piercing eyes, say, "So what? I don't give a damn!"

Do you attack their personal beliefs, drag their marriage or sexuality into your rant, and shower profanities?

Do you stuff your fingers in your ears as they start to speak and run around the room going "La la la la la la la la"?

No.

You would probably try to rationalize in a calm voice. You would most likely say something like, "I guess you're trying to say ABC, but hear me out because I'm saying XYZ."

You would, if you were talking about something diametrically against their point of view, perhaps even go to the extent of saying, "You are looking at this from your perspective, but the way I see it..."

Maybe you'd count to 10. Think and rethink before you blurt out. Wonder if it's belaboring a point and a waste of everyone's time.

Maybe you'll even put yourself in the other person's shoes and decide to give them another chance.


What you wouldn't do is call the person names or even obliquely try to drag any personal issues, theirs or yours, into that professional conversation.


There is something that holds you back from shouting like a two-year-old and having your voice heard. Something that tells you it's inappropriate. Something that restrains you from being rude, uncivil, impolite, and crass.

It may be the fear of getting fired. Or being judged. Or just holding a high personal and professional standard. It might also be an ingrained part of your being that came from a good education.

You might disagree completely with a person, but you wouldn't be uncivil.

In most cases, the same behavior transfers to personal relationships.

Maybe you fight a little harder, show your emotions more openly, point fingers, and sulk with your loved ones. But even then, you don't intentionally, at least, disrespect them. You try not to generalize and either try to bring the argument to a resolution or agree amicably to disagree in favor of living under the same roof peacefully.

But when it comes to conversations on the Internet -- be it instant messages, responses to "controversial" status updates or tweets, or even blog comments, that something that keeps us civil in other settings doesn't seem to apply.

Don't get me wrong -- most people are as courteous in their written communication within the social media sphere as they are in real life, but there are a significant number that shock me with their smuttiness.

They hurl abuses. Get personal. And stray off-topic just to show a person down.

No restraints. No courtesy. No room for agreement.

No room for anything except their point of view.

And not all of them hide behind the cover of anonymity either. When they post something extremely offensive in response to an NPR report on Facebook or tweet a rude personal, albeit public, comment to a Washington Post reporter, their names and Twitter handles are visible to all. Yet, they somehow feel protected. For some reason the intertubes provide them with a notion of safety. Of being untouchable.

This is where they can give someone their piece of mind. Someone they don't even know. Someone they've probably never met ... and never will.

Maybe that is the crux of the issue...

The fact that this "someone" is "somewhere" in the ether -- a real person but with no real significance.

Someone who they don't have to interact with on a daily basis. Someone who they are never going to get close to. Someone who doesn't really matter to them.

And if they don't matter -- heck, why care about them? Why bother with being civil? Why spend time being polite? Why not just dump all your angst on this person and move on ... to your next target?

It's easy.

And I guess that's why people uninhibitedly curse on the road or flip off motorists. They don't know 'em, so how does it matter?

But isn't this behavior the most telling of one's character?

Doesn't this devil-may-care attitude and crassness online reflect on who they are as a person more than anything else? The internet just brings out their true nature. This is the real them -- callous, close-minded, narcissistic, stubborn men and women who refuse to acknowledge the existence of another perspective. They will argue to death with a stranger who "doesn't matter," so to speak, just to satisfy their egos.

And if you're on the receiving end of such bashful commentary, what do you do? Do you also stoop to their level to show them who's the man? Or do you take the high road?

It's easy to get sucked into the rudeness spiral. But, just as in real life face-to-face confrontations, you control your actions online. Just as you wouldn't flip off someone you know, just as you would tell someone being rude to you that it's inappropriate and you don't appreciate it -- you ought to be the calm, rational, composed person online.

I'm not advocating taking crap from anyone, but don't lose your decency.

You're better than that.

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3 comments:

Heather Conroy said...

You are right Mansi-civility is always a choice (and so is rudeness!) Always take the high road otherwise it is just about your ego isn't it? BTW I hate those meetings where you just want to tell people to shut up! One trick I have is to go to a happy place and imagine myself there and the other is to pretend I have to take an urgent phone call and then take a looooong and very sneaky breather! :)

Beth Chapman said...

Mansi, Tuesday's are my 'numb butt' days. The meetings go on forEVER. "You're better than that" sums it up. It is our choice - in meetings and on-line. I found sometimes if I am quiet, say nothing but look intently in their eyes and concentrate on listening 100% they are (a) unsure what to do and (b) it forces me to shut down the screams for mercy in my head. Well done!

Marcie J said...

I agree it is very telling that when they don't think people are there or are looking, they rant and rave and curse etc - but I don't think it reveals their core true selves, their natures - I think it reveals their miserable state of mind and heart - which is a variable, miserable people can learn to be less miserable, they can change their perception of life - we've all been there.

I do feel sorry for them though , in reflection after the fact :) as they are ignorant of what is real in so many ways because they are wrapped up in their own miserable story.