I see someone in clinic with a difficult boss.
This brought up work stories. Now, are these coping skills or manipulation or a bit of both? You decide.
Long ago I work in a lab at the National Institutes of Health. We are super busy and doing a lot of overtime and have some media pressure as well. Our boss gets us together and gives us hell, about making mistakes. I am annoyed, because I've been really careful. I stew. I write a letter, what I think he should have said, which is telling us all great job, you've worked super hard, we are under pressure and also we need to not make mistakes. I circulate it to the four other lab techs, who enjoy it. The lab cheers up a bit. Eventually I get brave and give it to the boss. He likes it and reads it to everyone, who try not to laugh. A year after I leave the lab, I visit, and he has that letter up on his bulletin board.
Long ago I am made chief of staff at a hospital. My goal is to finish the monthly meeting in an hour. I have two senior doctors who always blow up about something in the meeting. I decide to be proactive and go to each one before the meeting and prime them. I pick a topic, say I am worrying about it, and what do they think? They each then blow up in the meeting, but now they have no opposition so there is no brawl. I prime them about something that is not really controversial. I do get the meetings done in an hour.
One year I go to the lake with my family. My father has been drinking heavily. I call ahead and say, "Will you treat our tent site like my house and not come there if you are drinking?" "You don't own the lake land," says my father. "We don't have to come." I reply. He agrees not to drink at our tent site.
He is angry, though, and pretty much won't speak to me. I ask if he would come to a family sing. He says no. I think about it for a while and ask my cousin to hold a sing at her cabin. My father agrees to that, not knowing that I am the instigator. He is happy at it because he's said no to me and yes to her, and I am happy too, because I love to sing and sing with him.
My father was one of eight people to start Rainshadow Chorale in 1997. I sang with him in the chorale from 2000 until the year he died.
Where is the line between manipulation and coping with a difficult person?
I think this is a time travelogue, so let it be my Ragtag Daily Prompt for today.
The photograph is of my father in 2012. He died in 2013.
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