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4 comments

Comment from: Rick H
Rick H

Diana,
I have noticed that people who tend to talk over others(with no malicious intent)usually come from families that have intenes debates and discussions. My wife used to think most of my family and myself were rude and insesitive.(family functions)Now she knows better and has learned to join in. Now that I think about it i have noticed that her family rarely gets together for anything and when they do its kinda like a dour event. We are who we are.

08/15/05 @ 06:47
Comment from: Earl
Earl

Diana, Most people who are good at what they do are seen as rude and overbearing at times. Working as a team is always important. But there are times when the truth must slap you in the face before you’ll see it.In the years I’ve known you, I’ll take your straight to the point attitude over most peoples overly polite lies anyday.

08/15/05 @ 09:07
Comment from: Hinermad
Hinermad

Diana,

You must have a whole cabinet full of canned worms. Gender roles… whew. But I won’t go there. The topic here is your feedback.

About the “gender roles” remark - I wonder if the fact that you were so brazen as to bring up an almost politically incorrect point startled some of the others into not realizing that you really didn’t. Sort of like when they were supposed to show Birth of a Nation at AU-M. They weren’t really promoting racism, nor were you promoting sexism - it just sounded like it. Some people feel the need to rebuke that sort of thing without thinking it through lest they be suspected of being a sympathizer.

As for the “blame game,” I doubt there’s much you could have said publicly (short of blaming yourself) that wouldn’t have been taken as finger-pointing, justified or not. People don’t like being reminded that they’ve goofed. Your remark about “we can work it out later” could have sounded threatening to sensitive ears. Also, some people look to the team to help hide their mistakes from outsiders. They’re willing to work within the team to make it right, but to have their mistake revealed to the world, even semi-anonymously, can feel like betrayal. (Didn’t you ever wonder why so many corporate and government documents use passive voice? It spreads the blame.)

Dave

08/15/05 @ 13:03
Comment from:

Thanks, all. I like my bluntness (otherwise known as “abrasiveness"), but I’d really like to improve the “interrupting when others are speaking” thing–at least when I’m with people who don’t communicate like that.

Dave,

About the “gender roles” remark - I wonder if the fact that you were so brazen as to bring up an almost politically incorrect point startled some of the others into not realizing that you really didn’t.

No kidding. That hits the nail on the head there. Just this week, the subject of feedbacks came up (a couple of times), and one of my classmates told me in private that he’d understood exactly what I’d meant and was right there with me…only, he wasn’t going to say anything. Interesting, I think.

On…and I know why passive voice is so popular. It smoothly fails to assign responsibility. (It also weakens sentence structure in an indefinable way, and makes the speaker seem noncommittal. Nifty tool, if you use it right.) ;)

Whew. Two tests, two writing assignments, and one briefing down. One more briefing and a bunch of untestable lectures to go, and I’m finished with PME for a few years. I think.

d

08/19/05 @ 17:46