7 Ways to Deal with Annoying People and Still Get Things Done

 1. Listen.
A lot of conflicts are based in misunderstandings, so always make sure you’re getting everything, It can be easy enough to tune someone out when they annoy you; the trick is to use careful questioning to focus the other person on the topic at hand so they give you what you need and avoid straying too far. Poor listening leads to misunderstandings that need clarification – which means more time spent with someone you’d really rather not be around.

2. Repeat everything.
Besides the tendency to tune out people you’d rather avoid, our feelings about another person can color our perception of what they’re saying. To avoid this, repeat back any instructions, questions, or other problems they pose to you to make sure you absolutely understand  what they’re saying. Give them a chance to correct you before you go off half-cocked, sure you know what “that kind of person” wants.

3. Keep your cool.
It’s tempting to want to argue with people who rub you the wrong way, or to lose it and start pointing out their faults. Don’t do that! Unless they’re wrong  about something  that directly and materially affects you, don’t bother – starting a debate or, worse, an argument will only prolong your agony – and neither of you is likely to change your mind. Save the debates for when you’re with friends whose opinions matter to you.

4. Be clear about boundaries.
You don’t have to be friends with everyone. Which means you don’t have to do favors for everyone who asks. If someone’s encroaching on your time, simply tell them, “I’m sure this is important to you but it simply isn’t a priority for me right now. I really need to work on x and not y.” Again, there’s no need to be mean, just redirect the conversations whenever conversation drifts into areas that aren’t relevant and where you know you’ll be annoyed.

5. Fight fire with ice.
The  worst thing you can do with an angry or irrational person is engage him or her. In the heat of aggression, any word or action interpreted as aggressive in response will only trigger more aggression – and most of the item, if someone is upset and railing about it, every word and action will be read as aggression. As hard as it might seem to do, the best thing is to sit quietly and let them spend themselves ranting and raving, and then ask if they’d like to schedule a time to discuss the matter more calmly and return to whatever you were doing. If this sets off another round of yelling, simply wait it out and repeat.

It sucks, but the bottom line is you have nothing to gain by engaging with an irate person in the heat of the moment. And while it may seem that you’re giving up control of the situation – after all, you’re sitting there passively taking it all in, even abuse – most people feel ashamed and contrite after an outburst, especially one in which their target clearly was not responding to or inciting them, which puts you back in charge when there’s actually something you can do about the situation.

6. Close the door.
While you may have to interact with people you don’t care for in any number of situations, remember that your time  is your own and don’t let other people, especially ones you’d rather not interact with, take control of your time.

Communication outside of the narrow band needed to fulfill both of your objectives should be minimized – which often means forcefully limiting such talk. Make it clear when you are unavailable, and make yourself unavailable as often as possible. If you have the power, require that your partner make an appointment, and gently reject any effort to discuss your work or projects outside of that scheduled time. People – even annoying people – tend to respect the time of people who make a clear showing that they take their own time very seriously.

7. You’re valuable. Remember it.
If you’ve found yourself in a position where you are obligated for some reason to spend time with someone you dislike, remember that most likely, they are in the same position – and it’s you they dislike. But you wouldn’t be in that situation if you didn’t provide something of value – whether that’s a work skill or talent, specialized knowledge, even things as abstract as emotional support or solidarity. You have a mission, so to speak, and everything that distracts you from that mission reduces your value.

Remember that, and don’t be afraid to remind others of that. You are valuable, which means they need you as much as you need them. If you’re spending your working time listening to someone on your team going on and on about the sandwich she made the night before for her lunch today, it’s ok to remind her that she’s not making the best use of the value  you bring.

People that are annoying, difficult, selfish, boring, or otherwise a chore to deal with are that way for reasons that have nothing to do with you – it’s not your job to fix, engage with, or indulge those tendencies. Don’t worry abut figuring them out or correcting them, worry instead about how you’re going to manage their  annoyances  without letting it hinder your ability to achieve your own goals. What is your place is to take the control the other person has clearly relinquished, and making sure you get out of the contact what you need. The tips above will help.
*

It’s a basic fact of life that, unless you’re Will Rogers, you can’t get along with everyone. Unfortunately, it’s also a fact that throughout your life, you’ll be in situations where you simply have to communicate with some of those people you just can’t stand. This may be an annoying boss, an ingratiating fan, a spineless co-worker, a difficult client, an abrasive in-law, and any number of people with any number of faults.

As much as you might like to run away and hide when you see these people coming, you’ll often need to work with them, sometimes (too) closely, in order to achieve your goals. You don’t always have to be nice – professional and to-the-point will often get the job done just as well – but you do need to make yourself understood clearly or risk letting your dislike translate into inefficient communication that hinders or even undermined entirely whatever projects you’re working on.

Fortunately, all it really takes is patience  — with yourself as much as with the other person — and a little discipline to make sure you stay on the same page – and that you don’t get caught up in whatever makes them so hard to get along  with in the first place. Source: http://www.lifehack.org

Comments

  1. Gordon Lee

    February 9, 2014

    +Jendhamuni Sos I can't even begin to express my gratitude for your timely, intelligent, well-written advice.

  2. BALARAM DAS

    February 10, 2014

    A lot of thanks for Jendhamuni's ideas.

  3. David R

    February 10, 2014

    Where did u copy this essay

  4. ansh bohrey

    February 10, 2014

    Obviously s bvvcsvj ave vdbbfvvrvfvdvdbfvfvfvfvtvrvrrvvvvvchvvtvvcfGaveejgbffhhvfbrvfvgvtvtghhjrrhu

  5. David R

    February 10, 2014

    Jendha mu ni she is a english teacher

  6. David R

    February 10, 2014

    She is taking classes for the world what a woman

  7. Shri Ram Singh

    February 10, 2014

    How frank advice to deal with annoying people. Wonderful. Perhaps we all know it but do not, rather cannot practice.

  8. Babu AndCoffee

    February 10, 2014

    You forgot a solid ass beating. As long as they throw the first punch, you're good.

  9. Loganathan Vsr

    February 10, 2014

    theoretically very effective solution to deal with such people. But we must equip ourselves enormous patience to counter such persons.

  10. Lolly Deas

    February 10, 2014

    Tips 2 follow 2 become a better person.

  11. alizay khan

    February 10, 2014

    Beautiful so beautiful It shows Allah is the best creator

  12. amaka chukwu

    February 10, 2014

    woow,so much lessons learnt…l love this write-up

  13. Bhupendra Jariwala

    February 10, 2014

    Client: BI686, 06/02/2014, Net Contract Amt for NSE: 555.82, Net Ledger Amt Due to KSL 555.82

  14. libin thomss

    February 10, 2014

    very nice………………………………………

  15. Ashok kumar

    February 11, 2014

    copy pasted the post-ashok-only seven steps for futuer ruse

  16. sonia rosamar

    February 12, 2014

    Thank u so much your words gave selfconfidence to deal with this kind of "species"

  17. felix emmanuel

    February 15, 2014

    U can only make wise decision when u always tink twice

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