6 stars. One of my favourite leadership books of all time! Here are the best bits:
"But here's the point, Tom: Was there an apology to
accept?"
"No, because you didn't really mean it, just like Nancy said." -
"That's right. My words said I'm sorry, but my feelings didn't, and it was the way I was feeling
"The point, here, Tom," I heard Bud say, calling me back from my troubles, "is that we can sense how others are feeling toward us. Given a little time, we can always tell when we're being coped with, manipulated, or outsmarted. We can always detect the hypocrisy. We can always feel the blame concealed beneath veneers of niceness. And we typically resent it. It won't matter if the other person tries managing by walking around, sitting on the edge of the chair to practice active listening, inquiring about family members in order to show interest, or using any other skill learned in order to be more effective. What we'll know and respond to is how that person is regarding us when doing those things."
"I have found at least with me," Bud continued, "that if I'm not interested in knowing a person's name, I'm probably not really interested in the person as a person. For me, it's a basic litmus test.
people respond not primarily to what you do but to how you're being — whether you're in or out of the box toward them."
"Self-betrayal"
An act contrary to what I feel I should do for another is called an act of "self-betrayal."
When I betray myself, I begin to see the world in a way that justifies my self-betrayal.
When I see a self-justifying world, my view of reality becomes distorted.
So-when I betray myself, I enter the box.
Overtime certain boxes become characteristic of me and I carried them with me.
By being in the box, I provoke others to be in the box.
We don't see people straightforwardly, as people. Rather, we see them in terms of the self-justifying images we've created. If people act in ways that challenge the claim made by a self-justifying image, we see them as threats.
"When I'm in the box, there's something I need more than what I think I want most. It's like I said a couple of minutes ago. In the box, I'm blind even to my own motivations. So what do you think that is? What do I need most when I'm in the box?" I repeated the question to myself. What do I need most when I'm in the box? What do I need? I wasn't sure.
Kate leaned toward me. "What I need most when I'm in the box is to feel justified.
"Exactly. And that's just the point," Bud said, leaning toward me. "Because I was in the box, I couldn't mean it. In the box, every change I can think of is just a change in my style of being in the box. I can change from arguing to kissing. I can change from ignoring someone to going out of my way to shower that person with attention. But whatever changes I think of in the box are changes I think of from within the box, and they are therefore just more of the box-which is the problem in the first place. Others remain objects to me.
And then you're telling me on top of that that I can't even get out of the box by changing myself?" "Well you can't get out by continuing to focus on your-self-which is what you do when you try to change your behavior in the box. So yes, that is what we're saying," he answered calmly. "But then how could we ever get out? I mean, if what you're saying is right, then there's no way out. We're all stuck."
This is why the way out of the box is always right before our eyes — because the people we're resisting are right before our eyes. We can stop betraying ourselves toward them — we can stop resisting them.'
"So although it's true that there is nothing we can do from within the box to get ourselves out, in the out-of-the-box moments provided by our out-of-the-box relationships, there are a whole host of things we can do — things that can help us reduce our in-the-box moments and heal our in-the-box rela-tionships. In fact, this is precisely what your experience with Bud and Kate did for you yesterday-you did something while you were out of the box toward Bud and Kate that helped you to get out of the box toward Laura. My mind searched for the answer. "What did I do?" "You questioned your own virtue."