Sabtu, 11 Juni 2016

7 Signs You’re Dealing With a Negative Person

7 Signs You’re Dealing With a Negative Person

Negative people
The first strategy is to determine whether you are dealing with negative feedback from a positive person or negative feedback from a negative person.
While we’d all rather avoid it, negativity is a part of life. Chances are you got some negative feedback already this week, and you’re not sure how to process it.
Do you take it to heart, even though it stings? Or dismiss it, and run the risk of ignoring helpful feedback?
Even though it’s unavoidable, negative feedback can derail you—even stunt your progress—if you don’t know how to handle it.
To begin with, there’s a world of difference between receiving feedback from a generally positive person who makes meaningful contributions to the culture and people around him or her, and receiving feedback from a truly negative person.
The first strategy for dealing with negative feedback is to determine whether you are dealing with negative feedback from a positive person or negative feedback from a negative person. You can read about that here.
That distinction will help you develop a filter to figure out the difference between the two. Negative feedback from a positive person can almost always be helpful. Negative feedback from a negative person is rarely as useful.
So how do you know if you’re dealing with a negative person? Here are seven signs:

1. Their negativity is part of a pattern

You’ve seen their negativity before. Maybe they’re a frequent flyer in your inbox or at congregational meetings. But it’s not an isolated, out-of-character incident you’re looking at.
The criticism you’re dealing with is ‘in character’ for them.

2. They’re negative about more than just your organization

Not only are they upset about something you or your team has done, but they’re angry about work, about a whole host of retail experiences, about how bad the world has become and long list of other grievances.

3. They fail the call display test

As subjective as this sounds, the call display test is a pretty good indicator of whether a person drains you or energizes you. When you see anyone’s name come up on your caller ID, you get an immediate emotional reaction to it.
Sometimes you’re thrilled to see the name and can’t wait to take the call. Other times you’re neutral. But sometimes you wince. Whether it’s a phone call, a text or an email, you respond negatively and quietly think “oh no.”
That’s a sign that the person’s overall influence in your life has been negative, not positive.

4. They are mostly against things, but never for things 

Sadly, negative people rarely know what they stand for; they only know what they stand against.
If the person you’re dealing with isn’t “for” anything positive, they likely have a negative worldview.

5. Compliments are usually followed by the word “but”

A positive person (and even a neutral person for that matter) can give a compliment. Negative people can’t.
What starts out positively (“I really enjoyed the event today”) is inevitably followed by a “but” (“but had they turned the volume down and shortened the message it would have been better.”)
People who can’t give a compliment are rarely the kind of people you build the future on.
6. They aren’t accomplishing much with their life
OK, this one sounds harsh, but it’s accurate. Truly negative people rarely accomplish anything great.
You can’t build a life on what you’re against.
Because they are against so much, few people want to work with them. Stalled out careers, a history of frequent job changes, financial trouble and other similar markers often characterize negative people.
Sometimes they get notoriety (think angry bloggers), but beyond a few ‘angry celebrities,’ most negative people do nothing significant with their lives.
And I’m not sure you could call angry blogging or commenting ‘significant.’

7. They have no vision for the future

A negative person is almost never excited about the future. They have no compelling vision for what should be.
They can just tell you why your vision is wrong. When you ask them for alternatives, they rarely have original or well-thought-out ideas.

What do you see?

Those are seven signs I look for to determine whether I’m dealing with a negative person. In the final post in this series, we’ll look at how to handle negative people in your life and in your organization.
I wrote more about creating a healthy church culture in my latest book, Lasting Impact: 7 Powerful Conversations That Will Help Your Church Grow.
In the meantime, what are some signs that tell you you’re dealing with a negative person. What would you add or change in this list?

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