I do love the movie devil's advocate (that's where the title quote came from).
"In a successful negotiation, everyone wins. The objective should be agreement, not victory."
Here's an interesting article.. "guideline to negotiate for couple".
These guidelines will help you avoid the three most common negotiating mistakes couples make:
1. Failure to prepare before the negotiation with your partner;
2. Caving in too quickly to avoid tension or to keep the peace; and
3. Stubbornly pushing too hard for your own solution.
Conflict is inevitable for growth in your relationship. Many people are frightened of conflict because they can't negotiate. Once you learn to negotiate you won't be so afraid of conflict. Good negotiation leads to acceptable solutions that work for both of you and will strengthen your relationship. Your communication skills automatically improve as you develop good negotiating skills.
The Difference Between Negotiation For Couples and Other Negotiations
Negotiation with your partner can feel especially risky, because the
amount of emotional self disclosure required is much higher for
couples than in business. Also, the result may have life-altering
consequences (like negotiating where to live).
Effective negotiation for complex problems requires lots of openness about yourself, curiosity about your partner's issues and emotional risk. It also takes listening really well!
Some Things Cannot Be Negotiated
Core values, integrity, spirituality, feelings, attitudes and trust
can not be negotiated. Do your best to separate interests and concerns
from values. You can negotiate your interests but not your core values
or integrity. For example, it doesn't work to say, "I'll give up
my spiritual beliefs for you."
The Only Things You Can Really Negotiate Are Behavior And Decisions
You can negotiate what action someone will take and when they will do
it, or you can negotiate a solution to a problem of disagreement.
How To Prepare To Negotiate
Ask yourself how you aspire to be during the negotiation. For example,
calm, open, flexible, honest, understanding, curious. By following the
guidelines you set for yourself, you will more easily focus on a
successful outcome. This is an often overlooked aspect of negotiation.
Staying conscious of your own guidelines will help keep you centered
and focused. Write your guidelines on a piece of paper and keep
glancing at them during the negotiation. You will come across like an
experienced negotiator simply by staying consistent with your own
guidelines.
Before you start the negotiation, quietly reflect on the following questions:
* What do I want? Why do I want it and why is it important?
* How important is this to me?
* To get what I want, what will I need to do and what will my
partner need to do?
* If I get most of what I want what is the positive and negative
effect on my partner?
* How can I make it easier for my partner to say yes?
* However, it may be difficult for my partner to give me most of
what I want because ________.
* I may be able to increase the benefits to my partner by
________.
* I may be able to decrease the downside to my partner by
________.
* Add other relevant information that has not been suggested here.
You don't need to answer every question and complete every statement sequentially in a dialogue with your partner. But as you get mentally clear about these issues it will make it easier to conversationally express your concerns and desires.
It is important to describe the issue as disagreement instead of as a
problem. It is very difficult to say
"The problem is ________"
without blaming your partner or yourself. This actual or implied blame
leads to a defensive reaction from one or both parties. The
negotiation then begins to slip like a house built on loose gravel.
"We seem to disagree about __________."
Then take turns expressing what your concerns and desires are about
the disagreement.
Describe Concerns About the Subject
One person goes first and expresses all their concerns while the other
listens without rebutting or defending anything. The response is
simply to recap and check for understanding. It may also be necessary
to ask questions for clarity.
Avoid leading questions that sound like Perry Mason, "Did it ever
occur to you that...?"
Brainstorm Solutions
After each person has expressed all their concerns and desires, and
each of you feels understood, then it is time for brainstorming
solutions. Think of several possible solutions.
One partner proposes a solution
Make the suggested proposal in the following format:
* Honey, what I suggest is ________.
* This suggestion works for me because ________.
* This suggestion might work for you because ________.
The Rationale For This "Formula"
It encourages being a good self advocate. Simultaneously it forces you
to consider your partner's perspective and helps prevent the
possibility of only stubbornly pushing your own desires.
The Other Partner Responds
If the partner agrees with the whole suggestion, then recap why it
works.
If the partner does not agree then start with recapping the part that
does work.
* The part that does work is ________.
* The part that doesn't work is ________.
* So my alternative suggestion is ________.
* This suggestion works for me because ________.
* And it might work for you because ________.
Add value to your offers. Keep finding ways to make it easier for your partner to say yes.
Remember - this negotiation is only an experiment. Nobody is locked into a permanent solution. It is only for a period of time to see what if anything needs adjusting.
Repeat suggestions until agreement is reached.
Take Action
If action is appropriate, decide who will do what by when.
Decide for how long you will try this solution.
Evaluation
After the action phase come back and evaluate the results.
If things are fine, continue for another block of time.
Round Two, Three, Etc.
If it didn't work out as well as hoped, each person begins by saying,
"Honey, it didn't work the way I hoped, but here is what I could
have done differently." Don't start by stating what your partner
should have done differently.
Then repeat appropriate steps above.
Don't be discouraged if your first attempts at this new negotiation strategy are awkward. This is challenging territory for most couples. Keep trying, and you'll improve. Consider attending a workshop to learn this approach along with a lot of other practical, innovative material for couples. It's definitely easier to learn when you see demonstrations and role-plays. You'd even get to practice with a therapist helping you stay on track.
Good luck, and may all your disagreements lead you to more lively collaboration." - article by Dr. Ellyn Bader
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Sounds pretty good and logical huh, but i wonder in a real world situation when emotion of both parties runs high logic might just fly out the door and you forget everything you read here. Actually most of the mistake we did is when emotion runs in high gear. The world would be a nicer place with a calmer state of mind.
- About the shot. This was taken with self timer.. trying very hard to hold a straight face (but couldn't) cuz i'm usually behind the camera. No photoshop on the color, it came from lighting through the wooden blind. i like this blind, a bit of adjustment changes the color tone significantly. As you can see the color difference between left and right.
| Feminine & Emotion | Popular | Back Light |
Thank you everyone, for taking this picture to #2 on explore!
Here's a background about this shot.
jawadji76, bill.fu, ॐ dragonflyriri ॐ (Limited Flickr Time), Krunal Mehta (@krunalhm), and 202 other people added this photo to their favorites.
View 20 more comments
bangkokbeat 53 months ago | reply
come back to this photo again and really need to tell you that the title (together with your photo) indeed touches my heart. never seen the movie - i'll get it very soon.
ishaip 53 months ago | reply
great scene!
*montivideo+ 46 months ago | reply
how long was the 'relationship', 2 hours ?
coachdrew82 5 months ago | reply
Man, it's a shame about all the copyrights on these great photos! Would you be willing to grant me permission to use this one under Creative Commons for an upcoming article about relationship types on The Love & Freedom Project? www.loveandfreedomproject.com Let me know! Thanks!