Sometimes it’s important to pay attention to that creepy feeling you have about an employee – even if you don’t know why you have it.

After her team doubled in size in a year, Anna hired Debbie as her personal assistant.

Before Debbie arrived, productivity was high and the group had a natural camaraderie.  Key elements were its flexibility and their willingness to put projects on hold and take on new ones, and to pass off partially completed projects to other team members as corporate directives required.  And group members accepted with good grace, each other’s personal quirks that didn’t interfere with work.

But after Debbie arrived, Anna noticed a change.  The symptoms were clear, but the cause wasn’t.

To read the rest of this article from the Pittsburgh Business Times, see:
One bad apple spoils a whole team

  • Employees quit kidding each other.
  • They stopped eating quick lunches together in the break room.  Instead, they ate alone or went for long lunches in pairs or small groups, mostly with Debbie.
  • They started isolating themselves, working in silos and not wanting to pass projects along to other team members or to put projects on temporary hold when something else needed attention.
  • They began resisting and criticizing Anna’s goals and corporate changes.
  • No matter what Anna did, her team members were irritated and grumpy.  She simply couldn’t please them.

During the next three months, Anna carefully observed the effects of Debbie’s influence on the members of her team.

See the original article for details about what Anna saw and what she did.

Most people would advise Anna not to act just because she had a creepy feeling – but when she gets that feeling, she should investigate immediately.

However, Anna goes further.  She now recognizes that she got that feeling during Debbie’s interview.  Also, in her life, she’s had that feeling with only two other people and both times the person was extremely destructive.  Also, Anna recognizes the difference between that creepy feeling and how she feels when she simply doesn’t like or is scared of someone.

She’s decided that she’ll act immediately if she ever gets that creepy feeling about an employee, even without definitive proof.  She bears the scars of the year of damage that Debbie caused.

The best way to learn what to do to stop covert bullies and empire builders is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

In case you didn’t know, teen suicide is contagious.  That is; when one teenager commits suicide at a school, the chances of other teenagers also committing suicide goes up dramatically.

The same goes for teenage murders.  Although the contagion is worse closest to the initial event (contagion spreads from an infected center), the national publicity for each episode stimulates other kids to proceed down that horrible path.

Also, when schools and communities come together with effective anti-bullying, harassment, abuse or suicide efforts, the beneficial effects are also contagious.  The immunizing effects of antibiotics spread from a strong source.

We’ve known that.  And there are studies to reinforce these observations.  For example, see the Christian Science Monitor Weekly article, “Teen suicide: Prevention is contagious, too.”

It’s not just teenagers
In addition, the same contagion and immunization effect are seem among adults at work, in families and in personal life.  Where harassment, bullying and abuse are tolerated, condoned or enabled, the behavior quickly spread.  Rarely is bullying an isolated event.

Similarly, when one person stands up strongly, other follow that example.  Witnesses witness; they don’t become bystanders.

The best way to stop bullying or suicide at work, in your family or at schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and consulting so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

We like to think that success will cure all our problems.  But rapid growth can create the same shock waves generated by rapid downsizing or mergers - with the same insecurity, anxiety, stress, fear and pain for individuals, and the same consequences for organizations.

To read the rest of this article from the Denver Business Journal, see:
Growth and Success Can Create Problems

Even though the change is billed as success, we typically respond with our worst, habitual and off-the-cuff strategies.

Fatigue, anxiety, fear and resistance drive most behavior.  Plans are disrupted.  Productivity, creativity, response time and morale nose dive.  Staff does not detect or capitalize on opportunities.  People problems and sick leave skyrocket.

Do some of these emotions and behaviors sound like your workplace?

  • Shock, depression.  People are too numb and frozen to be productive.
  • Confusion, hesitation, insecurity, vacillation, anxiety, fear, panic.  Loss of structure and control leads to turf wars.
  • Anger, emotional volatility, blaming.
  • All-or-none thinking.
  • New employees either are unwelcome or are lured into taking sides.
  • Old contacts either are neglected or clung to for security.

Recognize the symptoms and treat the disease in its early stages.  You don’t have to be a therapist or even a people person to take simple steps to avoid critical mistakes.

You need two plans to deal with the upheavals.  Plan one is to develop and present direction, define goals, and specify organizational structure.  Plan two is to develop the human support needed to face the oncoming changes.

If you’re not knowledgeable, get help.  If you are knowledgeable, ask a wise outsider to review your ideas.  The results of your efforts can indeed be measured.  The attention and care you give your people will determine if your plan will remain just paper or be translated into effective actions.

The best way to capitalize on your success is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

Richie Incognito harassed, bullied and abused Jonathan Martin inside and outside the Miami Dolphins’ locker room.  Incognito threatened to kill Martin’s mother and sister and even Martin himself.  He repeatedly called and texted Martin terrible names and insults.

Why didn’t other players protect Martin?  What’s the cure?

Why didn’t other people in the locker room stand up to a bully?
There are many excuses.  Typically, people who “pile on” enjoy the power, want to be part of the pack or fear the bullies.  In every company, family and school, there are people who are scary.  Richie Incognito threatened Jonathan Martin’s mother and sister.  He threatened Mr. Martin’s life.  He can pretend he was kidding, but the threat is always there.

Some people looked the other way.  They were content to be bystanders, spectators.  They had no sense of outrage at what Incognito said or did.  Incognito is scary and seemed to have power.

Character and courage are required to stand up to bullies.  Dolphins’ coaches and management did nothing to stop Richie Incognito.  They may even have encouraged him.  Like a do-nothing principal faced with a student’s suicide, they now realize that by doing nothing to stop him, they gave Incognito power.

What’s the cure?
The league will investigate.  Punishments will be handed down.  The union will fight the severity of the punishments.  New rules will be written into the collective bargaining agreement.  Civil suits will be filed.  Education will encourage witnesses to step up instead of choosing to become bystanders.   Programs will be launched convert bullies into civilized humans.

In companies, families and schools, bullies use slightly different tactics to terrorize their targets, but the common patterns are clear.

Across the board, the treatment is the same as we would use to cure an infected splinter.  You cut it open, expose the infection, clean out all the pieces of the splinter so it doesn’t fester again and you drain the pus.  Only then can you heal the wound.  It’s the same for a cancer.

Bullies have no place in NFL locker rooms, companies, families or schools.  You stop the behavior as soon as it appears; even in the peewee leagues, even if that means you might lose more games.  You don’t give your locker room leadership to predators.  

The best way to stop bullying at work, in your family or at schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and consulting so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Leopards have spots, dinosaurs had size.  Each developed a particular competency to succeed in a fixed environment.  But when the environment changes, the most rigid species become the most vulnerable to extinction.  Clever chameleons and adaptable amphibians are flexible enough to succeed – they are better able to survive the tides of change.

Humans need to be adaptable and our team structures must be versatile in order to meet the demands of our rapidly changing economic environment.
 
To read the rest of this article from the Denver Business Journal, see:
Adaptable Teams and Individuals Survive Change

Teams with more bodies, or with fixed hierarchies and rigid roles can be appropriate for some tasks.  A regimented sequence of robotic skills succeeds on assembly lines.  However, the fads of “core competencies” and “outsourcing” can lead organizations to become too ossified in a niche that will be gone tomorrow.

Companies require versatility on three important levels:

  1. Individuals must act competently in varying roles and relationships in different teams designed to handle different tasks.
  2. Individual teams must be capable of adopting new strategies when demands change.
  3. Teams must alter patterns of interactions between them in order to meet changing needs.

When do problems arise?
When the organization fails to provide the necessary structure and resources, or new staff aren’t sufficiently trained in the company’s style of team processes.  Also, when someone:

  1. Tries to do it all him/herself.
  2. Puts self-interest above team goals and processes.
  3. Plays “intrigue”, “sabotage” or “politics.”
  4. Responds ineffectively to pressure, change, fear or anger.

Clever chameleons, adaptable amphibians and appropriately flexible individuals in versatile teams are able survive where dinosaurs couldn’t.

The best way to create adaptable and successful teams is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

Richie Incognito harassed, bullied and abused Jonathan Martin inside and outside the Miami Dolphins’ locker room.  Incognito threatened to kill Martin’s mother and sister and even Martin himself.  He repeatedly called and texted Martin terrible names and insults.

But Incognito has his excuses.  Should those excuses excuse his behavior?

Should Richie Incognito be excused because he didn’t know how hurt Jonathan Martin was or because he thought he was Mr. Martin’s best friend?
“No.”  Incognito uses the typical excuses and justifications that perpetrators always use:  It wasn’t so bad, he didn’t know, it’s the victim’s fault, he had good reasons, he’s a special case in a special situation, his bad childhood made him do it.  Nonsense.  Incognito is an adult. He could have learned from all the other incidents on his rap sheet.  But he’s a predator and predators don’t change.

Richie Incognito talks as if he still thinks he’s Jonathan Martin’s friend and it’s all a misunderstanding.  Like typical relentless bullies, he minimizes what he’s done.  He says he didn’t know.  Incognito has been kicked off teams and out of colleges for behaving this way.  He knows what he’s doing but he’s gotten away with it.  Some team has always picked him up so there have been no consequences that have changed him.

He’s assaulted many people including a young woman volunteer at a charity golf event.  But his victims have always been bought off.

The master of slaves may say his slaves are happy, but we know better and he’s supposed to also.  If Richie Incognito is your big brother, as he claims; get another big brother.

Should Richie Incognito be excused if he was ordered to “toughen up” Jonathan Martin?

After World War II, we rejected the typical bully’s defense of “I was only following orders.”  Some orders, you don’t follow.  Of course, if such an order was given, Dolphins coaches and management bear one hundred percent of the responsibility for giving the fox the keys to hen house.  Just as the fox bears one hundred percent of the responsibility for being a predator.

In companies, families and schools, I see bullies using the same excuses.  Strong leaders learn to ignore these rationalizations and keep their territories bully-free.

Bullies have no place in NFL locker rooms, companies, families or schools.

The best way to stop bullying at work, in your family or at schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and consulting so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

Multi-tasking is necessary if we are to accomplish all we want, but when multi-tasking turns into hyper-work, all benefits are lost.  The key to multi-tasking is concentrating attention on each task in its turn.  That way we can make progress on more than five jobs each day even though we can’t focus on five things at the same time.

What’s hyper-work? Remember the white rabbit from “Alice in Wonderland” - rushing frantically from place to place, always late, always distracted, too busy to stop, listen and think.  He expends lots of effort in going nowhere, producing nothing.  Sweat doesn’t count, only results.

To read the rest of this article from the Denver Business Journal, see:
Beat the Rat Race - Multi-Task, Don't Hyper-Work

Some keys to successful multi-tasking, instead of hyper-working:

  • Prioritize, manage your time.  Don’t get desperate, don’t panic.  Take a careful look at what you really have to do.
  • Focus, concentrate, pay full attention to one thing at a time.  Set aside blocks of time when you allow no calls, no disturbances.
  • Be specific about the steps you need to complete tasks.
  • Get a worthwhile life.  Hyper-work is rampant in personal life also.

White rabbits cover a lot of ground but their work has no quality and their personal life has no value.

The best way to become more successful at work and at home, and to help your staff become more productive is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

Richie Incognito harassed, bullied and abused Jonathan Martin inside and outside the Miami Dolphins’ locker room.  Incognito threatened to kill Martin’s mother and sister and even Martin himself.  He repeatedly called and texted Martin terrible names and insults.  Why didn’t Martin stop him?

  1. Martin was scared.  He was afraid that if he resisted, Incognito’s bullying would get worse.  Incognito might carry out his threats.  You never know.  Incognito is scary.
  2. Martin didn’t know how to stop a person who pretended that his abuse was only kidding.  Bullies often take advantage of your politeness.  And they put down any resistance with phrases like, “You’re just too sensitive.  I’m only kidding (or joking).  I was only having a little fun.”  Then you feel foolish and embarrassed for “over-reacting.”
  3. Martin tried to make friends.  Like most people, Martin had been taught that if you ignore bullies, they’ll stop.  Or, if you’re nice to bullies, you can make friends with them and then they’ll stop.  These beliefs are wrong.  Neither of those approaches stop relentless bullies.  If Martin had been raised in a war zone he would have known better.  Relentless bullies think that you ignore them or you’re being kind because you’re weak and easy prey.  It’s like limping or being isolated when you’re being observed by predators like hyenas.  Predators go after those who can’t or won’t resist.
  4. Martin didn’t know what to do when the peaceful, kindly approach didn’t stop the bullying.  People who are inexperienced in the ways of mean streets don’t know what to do next.  They’ve never been trained to push back verbally, to get help or to push back physically.

Jonathan Martin’s behavior is typical of most people when facing a relentless bully – especially one who pretends he’s being friendly and that he’s not doing anything wrong; that it’s just his way of relating to people.  Martin saw that no one stood up and defended him.

Does Mr. Martin’s lack of skill in defending himself excuse Incognito’s bullying?  No!  Richie Incognito is responsible for his behavior.  Bullies are one hundred percent at fault.

Bullies have no place in NFL locker rooms, companies, families or schools.

The best way to stop bullying at work, in your family or at schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and consulting so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

CEOs uniformly report that lack of skilled workers is the major barrier to growth.  The question for management is what rewards will keep productive employees.  Major complaints of staff are increasing demands coupled to decreasing compensation.

Cut costs in other areas before squeezing valuable employees.

To read the rest of this article from the Wichita Business Journal, see:
Seven Ways to Keep Quality Employees

Seven guidelines to keeping quality employees:

  1. Don’t pay attention to the generic bad-mouthing of Generation X employees.
  2. Don’t be cheap or loot your company at employees’ expense.
  3. Be clear about goals.
  4. Create a culture of incentive and reward.
  5. Money is an effective reward when tightly coupled to performance.
  6. Money is only one reward.
  7. Reward people who “lubricate” everyone’s efforts.

Keep weeding out the negative, bullying abusers.

It’s not the economy’s fault if you can’t treat people decently while being competitive - you’re just not being creative enough.

The best way to stop harassment, negativity and bullying, and to retain your highest quality employees is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

The Miami Dolphins’ locker room is being exposed for the hotbed of harassment, bullying and abuse that it was allowed to become.  I’ll be writing about different aspects of the situation during the next week.

Today, the two questions asked most.  Is an NFL locker room a different environment than other places – at work, at home, at school?  Is this sort of bullying new?  The answer is, unequivocally, “No!”

  1. Is an NFL locker room unique and different from any other business, family or school?

One approach to answering this question would be to examine the locker rooms of every other team in the league or to ask if the winners of the last 20 Super Bowls had locker rooms in which this behavior was tolerated.  The answer given by players and coaches has been unequivocally, “No!  The bullying in the locker room was despicable.”  Great coaches don’t even tolerate hazing as a way of creating the bonds necessary to play together well in a game.

Another approach is to examine the behavior that I see in the rest of the world.  Although the violence on an NFL field is different from most workplaces, the techniques used by a bully in the locker room and the lack of defensive skills on the part of his target are no different from those in any company I consult for, any family I coach or any school situation I work with.

The idea that 300 pound guys in a violent business will automatically behave that way or even need to behave that way in order to get their jobs done is nonsense.

The key factor in the Miami Dolphins organization, like in many businesses, families and schools, is that the bully’s behavior was tolerated or even encouraged.  They allowed or enabled the locker room to become a hostile workplace.

  1.  
  2. Is this bullying and predatory behavior new?

Again, the answer is, unequivocally, “No.”  From around the world, in every culture, the earliest oral and written epics revolve around bullying, terror and predators.  Bullying and abuse are nothing new in human behavior.  Many humans behave that way.  We have to be taught to behave better.

Bullying as a tactic to getting on in life is nothing new for Richie Incognito.  Incognito has a long rap sheet going back at least to his college days, when he was thrown out of some schools for his behavior.  Like typical bullies, Incognito continues to bully people because he’s never been stopped with any consequences that matter to him.  He’s been able to bounce around through college and the NFL, earning his millions, and thinking he doesn’t have to stop.

In addition, when a light was shined on his behavior towards Jonathan Martin, Richie Incognito presented the typical excuses, justifications and rationalizations that bullies and predators use – that’s his personality, he was just kidding, he didn’t know that Martin minded, Martin is being too sensitive.

Jonathan Martin was not bullied because he was different.  Relentless predators like Richie Incognito attack their prey because they are predators.  Then they find excuses to justify their bullying.  Also, they pretend ignorance of the pain and damage they cause.  Typically, predators pursue prey who don’t or can’t defend themselves.

With bullying and terrorizing like this, there is no fine line.  There is a Grand Canyon.  The only fine line is on one side of the canyon, at the edge of a cliff about some hazing or some of the expenses asked of rookies in some locker rooms.  But the vicious, despicable language, the threats against Martin’s mother, his sister and himself, the terror struck into Mr. Martin’s heart and the actions against Martin by Richie Incognito are far across that canyon.

Bullies have no place in NFL locker rooms, companies, families or schools.

The best way to stop bullying at work, in your family or at schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and consulting so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

I’ve created a checklist so you can see if your workplace is a hive of low attitudes and bullying – especially by subtle, sneaky, manipulative bullies who fly below the radar.  You’ll learn to recognize tyrannical bosses, covert bullies and “professional victims,” who use their hurt feelings and righteous indignation to gain power and control.
 
See the checklist – How to know if you’re being bullied in sneaky ways at work.

The form is easy to fill out and send to me with a click of a button.  I’ll call you back with your free diagnosis and treatment plan.  Or you can print the form and call me directly at 877-8BULIES (877-828-5543).
 
The best way to stop harassment, negativity and bullying, and to retain your highest quality employees is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Post #8 – BulliesBeGoneBlog Stop Bullies book reviewed in Denver Business Journal

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

I’ve created a checklist so you can see if your kids are being cyberbullied at school – especially by subtle, sneaky, manipulative bullies who fly below the radar.
 
See the checklist – How to know if your kid is being cyberbullied at school.

The form is easy to fill out and send to me with a click of a button.  I’ll call you back with your free diagnosis and treatment plan.  Or you can print the form and call me directly at 877-8BULIES (877-828-5543).
 
The best way to stop cyberbullying or physical and emotional bullying in schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

Jim Fassel, former coach of the New York Giants, and I were interviewed on MSNBC, by Craig Melvin.  The subject was bullying, harassment and terrorism in the Miami Dolphins' locker room by Richie Incognito on Jonathan Martin.  The link is:
http://www.msnbc.com/craig-melvin/watch/inside-the-locker-room-62617667805

I’ll write more on it next week but here’s a short explanation about why Mr. Martin’s attempts to befriend Richie Incognito didn’t work: Not everyone you befriend will return the compliment.  In fact, some people will take your open hand as an invitation to feast on whatever you have.

The best way to stop harassment, bullying and abuse is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

I’ve created a checklist so you can see if your workplace is a hive of low attitudes and bullying – especially by subtle, sneaky, manipulative bullies who fly below the radar.  You’ll learn to recognize the high cost of low attitudes.
 
See the checklist – How to know if low attitudes are costing too much at work.

The form is easy to fill out and send to me with a click of a button.  I’ll call you back with your free diagnosis and treatment plan.  Or you can print the form and call me directly at 877-8BULIES (877-828-5543).
 
The best way to stop harassment, negativity and bullying, and to retain your highest quality employees is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.

I’ve created a checklist so you can see if your kids are being bullied in school – especially by subtle, sneaky, manipulative bullies who fly below the radar.
 
See the checklist – How to know if your kid is being bullied at school.

The form is easy to fill out and send to me with a click of a button.  I’ll call you back with your free diagnosis and treatment plan.  Or you can print the form and call me directly at 877-8BULIES (877-828-5543).
 
The best way to stop bullying in schools is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

I’ve been quoted as an expert in an Associated Press article by Beth Harpaz, which has been picked up in the Wall Street Journal and many other publications, “Bullies: They’re not just in middle school.”

Some of the questions and my responses are:

  • Is the term “bullying” over-used by people who haven’t really been bullied?  “There are people who use the term bullying "to get what they want. They use it as professional victims to gain power and control," says Ben Leichtling, founder of BulliesBeGone.”
  • Did the coach of the Texas high school team that won 91-0 encourage bullying?  “Leichtling's reaction to the Texas football game?  "The coach of the good team did what he could" to mitigate the humiliation of the other guys. "If the behavior of the winning team was cruel, nasty, rubbing it in, I would call that bullying," he said. But that's not what happened.  He noted that there are other remedies for lopsided victories in kids' sports: Parents might lobby for a mercy rule or rearrange leagues so weak teams don't face powerhouses.”
  • Is there bullying outside of junior high school?
  • “Leichtling, founder of BulliesBeGone, says "bullying is not only about kids. It happens all the time, in every culture, with people at every age, in every situation, and always has."
  • “When he coaches adults coping with bullies on the job or in bad marriages, he offers the same advice used to curb bullying in schools.  “You have to say, this behavior is not allowed," Leichtling said. "And you may have to get in the bully's face."
  • For years before he became a psychotherapist, Leichtling had a career running research labs. He says it was good training for the anti-bullying work he does now.  "Boy, I saw bullying in science," he said. "It's not an ivory tower. Academia is vicious!"

The best way to stop bullying in all situations is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

I’ve created checklists so you can see if you’re being bullied – especially by subtle, sneaky, manipulative bullies who fly below the radar.  In this case, by toxic, abusive husbands or wives.
 
See the checklist – Are you bullied in your personal life?
http://bulliesbegone.com/checklist-how-to-know-if-youre-being-bullied-at-home/
 
The form is easy to fill out and send to me with a click of a button.  I’ll call you back with your free diagnosis and treatment plan.  Or you can print the form and call me directly at 877-8BULIES (877-828-5543).
 
The best way to stop toxic, bullying spouses is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching so you can:
1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

According to an editorial in the New York Times, “Vague Cyberbullying Law,” “Lori Drew acted grotesquely if, as prosecutors charged, she went online and bullied her daughter’s classmate, a 13-year-old girl who ended up committing suicide.  A federal court was right, however, to throw out her misdemeanor convictions recently.  The crimes she was found guilty of, essentially violating the MySpace Web site’s rules, are too vague to be constitutional.” Whether or not we’d agree with the constitutional interpretation of the US District Court judge, I think the ruling illustrates clearly why we need clear, specific laws to stop cyber bullies.

Freedom of speech is not the issue.  We abridge freedom of speech in many ways because, in some situations, there are values more important than freedom of speech.  That’s why we prohibit yelling “fire” in crowded public places and why we have laws against libel and slander.  Difficulties in enforcing some laws like libel and slander are no reason not to have such laws.  We recognize that such difficulties mean that there are a lot of gray areas in human behavior in these areas.  Therefore, we expect human judgment to be required in these difficult areas.  But if we didn’t have laws, we’d never be able to respond to cases that are clear.

Angry, vindictive and relentless bullies will continue to abuse their targets by whatever means they can.  If we avoid the difficulties in trying to stop cyber bullying, if we say that we can’t distinguish between lying about our age, weight or physical appearance online, and plotting to cause emotional distress or persecuting someone or spreading malicious, false gossip and rumors online, we only encourage cyber bullying – especially if it can be done anonymously.

Therefore, we need laws that are as specific and clear as we can write them, as well as human judgment in enforcing them.  I’d rather have the option to effectively prosecute people like Lori Drew than to be unable to because there are no clear and specific laws.

Because internet use is nationwide, we need the laws to be Federal laws.

On the other side of the equation, we hope we’ll be able to raise our children to be more sturdy than Megan Meier was.  We hope we’ll recognize the signs that our children are targets of cyber bullies.  But we’ll never succeed in raising all our children to be mentally and emotionally strong enough to resist all pressures and stress.  Not all children will develop the self-esteem and self-confidence to thrive in the real world.  Negative input and negative self-talk will always be a problem.  But in many cases, strong Federal laws will help protect people, especially teenagers.  Cyber safety for as many people as possible takes precedence over freedom of speech.

The best way to stop cyberbullying is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype. 

 

Are your children and teens resilient?  Do they bounce back after they’ve been disappointed or faced hostility, bullies, abuse or trauma?  Are you resilient?  Do you know how to resist a hostile, abusive, controlling or bullying husband or wife?  Can you resist your self-bullying tendencies?  How about abusive, controlling or bullying friends, relatives or neighbors?  How about at work; hostile, abusive, bullying bosses, managers or co-workers?  Do you bounce back from getting passed over, terminated or fired from a hostile workplace?  You know – lies, yelling, cursing, back-stabbing, verbal abuse, demeaning insults, harassment, false complaints or accusations. According to a Newsweek article written by Mary Carmichael (The Resiliency Gene: A genetic variant may protect some abused kids from depression and other long-term effects) the National Institute of Mental Health is funding studies to find the genes associated with resiliency to hostility, abuse and trauma.  As a former practicing biochemist, I can say that, of course, we’ll find genes associated with almost every pattern of behavior.

But, I think it’s a dead end if we focus merely on the genetic expressions of what’s going on.

Why do I think it’s a dead end?  Because you end up thinking that either you have the right stuff or you don’t.  That belief won’t help your children develop strength of character or as much resilience as they can.  For example, contrast the behavior of the teen in cyber-bullying suicide case with the teen who was acquitted of punching a racist tormentor . . Worrying about the resiliency gene won’t help you be courageous either.  You’ll remain a victim; hoping the system can be made 100 percent safe and fair.  You’re better off thinking that you can develop the right stuff to protect yourself, to create a bully-free environment.  That approach to make the world totally and completely safe is being tried right now in our schools .

Resiliency is something that we’ve seen and studied throughout history.  For example, in their elegant studies of about 700 famous men and women (“Cradles of Eminence,” 1962), Victor and Mildred Goertzel, called the eminent survivors of childhood abuse and trauma, “The Invulnerables.”  Our history is full of men and women who failed and then bounced back, struggled and succeeded.

In my coaching of adults (including parents wanting to know how to help their children), I encourage them to focus on the “free will” aspects of their lives.  You have much more control over what you create in life right now, than you do over your genetics.  No matter what life throws at us, whether we’re subjected to natural disasters, large scale human destruction or individual family brutality and trauma, we all must struggle to rise above those events in order to create as great a life as we can.  We can take charge of our efforts  even though we can’t control the results.

Inspire your children by them to look back at their inheritance.  Think of what their ancestors must have lived through.  No matter what their ancestry, they come from an unbroken line of men and women who survived drought, flood, plague, famine, disease, war, uprooting, slavery, rape and every other form of disappointment, hostility, control, abuse, brutality and trauma known.  Everyone one of their ancestors survived long enough to make a baby who grew up to make a baby who grew up to make a baby … until they were born.  If one of their ancestors hadn’t grown up to do his or her part, they wouldn’t be here.  They have a legacy of survivors.

Also think of their mental and spiritual inheritance.  There must have been people who took in some of their ancestors and nurtured, encouraged and stimulated them; even though they weren’t blood relatives.  Despite all the abuse and trauma, here they are.  They have the legacy of survivors.  Stop worrying about their genes and start training them to be mentally, emotionally and spiritually strong.  Start helping them develop the discipline that’s worthy of all the struggle and effort that went into getting them here.

I remember the stories of what my grandparents went through in order to get here.  They didn’t have credit cards, cell phones, health insurance or own their homes.  How can I let them down by not living as gloriously as I can?  How can I let them down by not encouraging my children to do the same – no matter what their genetics has given them?

The best way to learn to parent resilient kids is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching so you can:

  1. Develop the strength, courage, will and determination to be and to act your best resolutely, diligently and effectively.
  2. Develop a plan and master the skills necessary to create the bully-free life your spirit has always hungered for.

Since all tactics depend on the situation, call me at 1-877-8Bullies for expert coaching by phone or Skype.

Posted
AuthorBen Leichtling

Carl loved the title of “Mr. Negative.”  He was proud of being smarter than anyone else and thought his put-downs were funny.  No matter what you said, he would disagree, counter it or top it.  His personal attacks, sarcasm and cutting remarks could bring most people to tears.  He could create a tense, hostile workplace in minutes. He could bring a brainstorming or planning meeting to a halt by finding fault with every suggestion or plan, and proving that nothing would work.  He was convinced that his predictions were accurate and more valuable to the team than the frustration and anger he created.  On his team, sick-leave and turnover were high, while morale, camaraderie and teamwork were low.  Productivity was also low because most people wasted a huge percent of their time talking about Carl’s latest exploits.

What can you do?

In this case, his manager had heard me present “How to Eliminate the High Cost of Low Attitudes” at a conference, and had brought me in as a consultant.  She wanted me to help her create a culture that would be professional, retain high quality staff and be much more productive.

Why did his manager, Jane, bring me in, instead of simply evaluating Carl honestly and having consequences leading to demotion and eventual termination if he didn’t change?  Jane thought that:

  • Carl was bright and expert enough in his specialty that she was afraid of losing him.
  • If she was a good enough manager and learned to say the magic words, Carl would straighten out.
  • Her hands were tied because Carl was a long-term employee in a government organization.

Coaching helped Jane see that she was victimizing the rest of the team by giving in to her fears and helplessness.  Carl was verbally abusive and emotionally intimidating.  And he was subtly manipulative because he had a soft voice and a smile on his face while he sarcastically cut his co-workers to ribbons.  She saw that if she continued to give in to her fear of losing Carl, she’d lose her reputation and position because her team would mutiny or quit.

Despite these insights, Jane remained a conflict-avoidant manager.  She would allow the team to act, but she wouldn’t lead the way.  Therefore we worked around her.

I helped the team create a set of behavioral expectations for individual professional interactions and for team meetings.  It was no surprise that the list did not included any of Carl’s behaviors, that his behaviors were specifically prohibited and that the list of appropriate behaviors contained the opposite ones Carl had been bullying coworkers with.

The rest of the team voted to accept the code of professional behavior.  Carl said he’d sign but he wouldn’t change his behavior.  He’d been Mr. Negativity as long as he could remember and didn’t think he could change.

That seemed like an impasse.  No one wanted to waste a lifetime waiting for Carl to go through therapy, especially since he didn’t want to change anyway.  I helped the team realize that Carl had no reason to change.  There were no adverse consequences to him if he kept doing what he was doing.  The team needed some leverage.

Since the manager wouldn’t act on her own, the rest of the team took a bold step.  They told Carl that they wouldn’t tolerate his hostility and the tension it caused.  They said that they’d remove him immediately from any meeting in which he started his negative putdowns.  He laughed nervously, thinking they’d never really do that.  He still wouldn’t accept that his behavior was so hurtful and despised.

At the next meeting, of course, Carl was negative as usual.  He was shocked when the rest of the team immediately stood up and told him to leave.  He sheepishly did, with a parting shot that they’d never come up with a good plan without him.

He was wrong.  They did develop a good plan to deal with the problem they’d been working on. They also gave him his assignment within it.  They told him that people who weren’t at meetings must be happy with the tasks assigned to them.  Carl was outraged and protested.  He looked for support from anyone on the team, but everyone was against him.  That also stunned him.  They told him that they were following the team’s behavior code.  He could play according to the rules and take what he got or leave.  They also told him that he could be very likeable when he wanted to and they’d be glad to be on a team with the “likeable Carl.”

It took two more meetings at which Carl was asked to leave, before he began to change.  It was amazing to all of them, including Carl, that what he thought was a life-long pattern, changed when enough leverage was applied.  He really did like what he did and he also had wanted to be liked.

This example is over the top in many ways.  But I have a question for you: Did the rest of the team bully Carl or were they right in voting him off their island when he was an abusive bully?

One general lesson here is: “When the legitimate authority won’t act and, therefore, leaves a power vacuum, the most hostile and power-hungry people usually fill it.  Your task is to fill it with the best behavior instead.”

There are many other ways to solve the problems that the Carl’s of the world cause at work and at home.  A stronger manager would have done it by herself.  Jane obviously had problems as a manager and wouldn't step outside her comfort zone to solve them.  Her boss soon took appropriate action.

It’s also a different matter if the negative person is the manager or boss.  There are many other problem behaviors that can be resolved with the Behavioral Code approach.  In other blog posts I’ll cover those bullying situations at work.

Please tell me your story so I can be sure to respond to it.

The best way to stop harassment, negativity and bullying, and to retain your highest quality employees is to hire Dr. Ben for personalized coaching and organizational consulting.

Design and implement an effective plan that eliminates the high cost of low attitudes.  To get the help you need, call Ben at 1-877-828-5543.