At some stage, I could see from what I had already done why I was losing, constantly, even though I had the best argument ever. It was the argument itself that was the problem, my attitude and believe that I must be right because this and that.
When I saw that, I went, "Oh, now I know why I'm losing." But if you read news, watch TV and any lawyer on TV, or everything in the movies, it's all about arguing, right? They're constantly trying to trick people into thinking that this is the way to go about things, about life, fight! You've got to argue it. You've got to be creating this thing so that we win. You can also remain silent, which is what we define as tacit agreement under the agreement we just read, or you can argue, which is dishonorable, and you basically lose. So you argue, you fight, you do any of those things. That's what we've been programmed to do—to fight against anything we don't want-- since the beginning of times.
There's so much messaging in that as well, like even protesting. It's about fighting, it's about this, you know, fighting back, fighting for your rights, you fight this and that. And then we go into a lawful sort of process, whether it be in court or in the street, or even a conversation with a friend or a family member, and we think that that's going to be the result we want. We're going to fight them, I'm going to fight this thing because it's wrong, and then we just lose. It's like this big trick they're just trying to get us to lose and set us up for that... Set us up for failure. And a lot of the time, I think the other side try to set up an emotional response, and the emotional response is always that as well—it's always that fighting instinct.
One day, I've just put in my notes that a full acceptance is an honorable thing to do. If someone's put an offer to you and you agree, great, you've accepted, but wait a minute, a conditional acceptance, is also, or even more honorable thing to do, and put myself in a totally different position.
Anyone else feels like most of the world today is just playing this emotional game? Consequence of responses given by our more archaic instinct of survivor that nowadays is not worth a penny in the current world?
How we can learn to subjugate our animal instincts and instead have constructive conversations and play a game of compromises?
Have you had any memorable experience playing it?