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Take Back Control of Your Life: Master the Art of Everyday Assertiveness
8th January 2025 • Social Skills Coaching • Patrick King
00:00:00 00:22:33

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Do you struggle to say no? Do you constantly put others' needs before your own?

In this video, we'll delve into the key concepts from Patrick King's book, The Art of Everyday Assertiveness, and equip you with the tools you need to confidently stand up for yourself and get what you want.


Hear it Here - https://bit.ly/assertivenessking


https://www.amazon.com/Art-Everyday-Assertiveness-Boundaries-Control-ebook/dp/B07N51DJ5V


You'll learn:


The importance of assertiveness in achieving your goals

How to identify and challenge the beliefs that hold you back from speaking your mind

Practical strategies for setting healthy boundaries and protecting your time and energy

Effective communication techniques for saying no gracefully and without guilt

How to prioritize your own happiness and well-being


This video is your roadmap to a more assertive and fulfilling life. Stop letting others dictate your choices – take charge and start living on your own terms! Today's episode is from the book 'The Art of Everyday Assertiveness' by Patrick King. In this book, Patrick King teaches you how to stand your ground without guilt, fear, or awkward tension. Finally, get what you deserve and stop 'letting it slide.' Stop enabling, sacrificing your needs, people pleasing, and being so 'agreeable.' This is a guide for the chronically 'nice,' 'overwhelmed,' and 'accommodating.' The Art of Everyday Assertiveness is available on Amazon, and the audiobook is available on Amazon, iTunes, and Audible. Assertiveness requires a delicate balance, especially if you are new to it. You may have started as too passive, but take care to not swing into the aggressive territory where you are robbing other people of their needs. You can’t control what others do or how they might respond to you, but you can control your own behavior.


Remember Tony Robbins' six needs of human happiness: certainty, variety, significance, love and connection, growth, and contribution. These are what's at stake every time you choose to shrink away from asserting yourself.


Ultimately, the power to live as you want is within your hands, not dictated by others' acceptance. Yes, sometimes this might ruffle some feathers, but you're not living for them.


And finally, don't forget to write down your personal bill of rights and post it somewhere visible. These are your rights, not privileges.


The Art of Everyday Assertiveness by Patrick King is available on Amazon, and the audiobook is available on Amazon, iTunes, and Audible

Transcripts

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The Art of Everyday Assertiveness:

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Speak Up. Set Boundaries. Say No. Take Back Control. Get What You Want. Written by

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Patrick King

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Narrated by Russell Newton.

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What does assertiveness mean to you?

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I can tell you what it means to me -

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freedom.

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It’s not necessarily freedom from

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others or from the obligations in my

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life,

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but assertiveness is the freedom to

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choose what I want to do and not be

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beholden to people,

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places,

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and things.

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It might sound insignificant,

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but it’s absolutely not.

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It’s analogous to the difference

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between feeling like you’re drowning

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versus treading water effortlessly.

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And if it sounds familiar,

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then welcome to the first step in

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taking back your time,

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energy,

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and life.

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I’m a recovering people-pleaser,

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passive person,

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and overall doormat.

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I realize now that I acted in this

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manner for a few reasons.

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First,

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I didn’t know that it was okay to say

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no to people.

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Second,

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I felt like people would hate me if I

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disagreed with them.

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Third,

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I literally didn’t know the words to

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use.

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These things sound almost silly to read

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back as I write them,

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but I know I’m not alone in

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them—I’ll dig into these factors

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deeper in later chapters.

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I wrote this book as much for me as for

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you.

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Becoming an assertive person who knows

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how to stand up for themselves takes

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far more than a few simple phrases in

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the guise of communication skills.

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It requires a deep look into the

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relationship you have with others,

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and more importantly,

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the relationship you have with yourself.

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That’s why you’ll go to extreme

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lengths to avoid conflict,

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unable to express yourself clearly and

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fairly without your emotions sabotaging

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you.

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That’s also why you’ll beat

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yourself up for being such a pushover,

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losing your temper,

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or following orders against your better

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nature.

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Assertiveness is,

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in theory,

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as easy as saying those simple phrases

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- “No,” “I don’t want to,”

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and “Are you trying to take advantage

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of me?"

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But in practice,

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it’s one of the most difficult lines

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to tread.

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How can you get your message across

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without insulting or enraging others?

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Is there a way to balance your needs

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with the requests of others?

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Let’s take a look at a scenario that

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is likely familiar,

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from one perspective or another.

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Three friends had been meaning to meet

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up,

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so Keisha booked a table for dinner

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that night.

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She ordered the most expensive meal

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because her promotion allowed her to

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treat herself.

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Michael hadn’t told them he was

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recovering from gastric flu and

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didn’t order food,

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excusing himself,

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sweating and shaking,

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to throw up halfway through the meal.

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Gita had paid out for unexpected car

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repairs that day and,

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hiding a gasp when she saw the prices,

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just ordered a side dish so she could

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afford a much-needed drink.

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When the bill came,

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Keisha told the waiter they would split

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it three ways.

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Michael resented paying for their food

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when he should have been at home in

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bed,

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but he agreed,

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not wanting to disappoint Keisha.

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Gita,

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probably helped along by the house wine

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on an almost empty stomach,

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passive-aggressively groused that

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Keisha was too controlling and they

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should have canceled.

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There was palpable tension in the air

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until things became obvious and plain.

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“Why didn’t you both just say?"

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Keisha asked as she theatrically paid

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for the entire meal amidst protests

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that turned into deafening silence.

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That was the last time they met up as

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friends.

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Most people can remember a time when

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they have played the role of Keisha,

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Gita,

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or Michael.

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Assertiveness would have been a very

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welcome fourth dinner guest.

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Michael’s passive behavior stemmed

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from feeling too guilty to tell Keisha

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he wasn’t well enough to meet up;

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he felt obligated to make it out.

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Gita was ashamed of her financial

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situation and fearful of judgment,

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which bubbled into mistrust of

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Keisha’s intentions.

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Despite Keisha’s outward appearance,

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her low self-worth fueled her

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aggressive behavior surrounding where,

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when,

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and how they ate together.

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Have you been any or all of these

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people on some occasion?

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Assertiveness allows you to let people

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know where you stand,

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but in a way that doesn’t change your

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relationship,

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and doesn’t attach negativity to the

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situation.

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If those things do happen,

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it won’t be because of your actions

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or words.

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Think of assertiveness as a bubble

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protecting your values,

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availability,

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capability,

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and needs—your confident bodyguard

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who stops things from spiraling out of

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control.

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Being assertive is calmly standing up

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for your rights and respectfully

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influencing others in potentially

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stressful situations.

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Again,

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it seems as easy as just speaking a few

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phrases directly and without

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subterfuge,

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but we instinctually know that people

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are anything but predictable or

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logical,

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so it’s never that simple.

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How do you suppose Michael,

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Keisha,

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or Gita would react to an assertive

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pushback?

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We can never imagine it going well,

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though there are many ways to smoothly

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and strategically speak your mind.

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Whatever the case,

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it’s this assumption that keeps us

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quiet until we reach our breaking

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points.

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One way to make assertiveness easier is

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to have remind ourselves of what

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we’re missing out on in our

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lives—what’s at stake.

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It is anything but trivial,

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and it compounds on a daily basis if

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you don’t speak up.

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Asserting Your Needs.

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We all have needs,

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psychological or physical,

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and the inability to be assertive means

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your needs will often go unfulfilled.

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On a short-term basis,

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this is acceptable and sometimes even

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necessary.

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Sometimes we choose to downgrade our

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needs in favor of someone else’s more

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pressing matters.

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But the vast majority of the time,

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are we really making that choice,

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or do we simply feel handcuffed by our

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inability to express ourselves as we

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want?

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Needs are a big part of who you are -

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they are the indulgent daydreams of

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your deepest desires,

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what you wish for when you toss a coin

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into a fountain or see a shooting star,

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or the goals you enter into a journal

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on New Year’s Day.

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They are everybody’s driving force,

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and unmet needs create feelings of

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anxiety,

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hopelessness,

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and unhappiness.

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It’s important to understand the

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needs that you have to meet,

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as they are what you’ve been missing

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out on by not being assertive.

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This is what you’re giving up in

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life—the costs—by always letting

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things slide and not speaking up for

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yourself.

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Would you discover that you are living

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your life in a state of constant

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deprivation and lacking?

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Noted personal development speaker and

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author Tony Robbins defined the

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following universal six core human

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needs.

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Some may apply more than others to you

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because some are opposite ends of the

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spectrum.

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It’s not a scientifically founded

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explanation,

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but it should provide a clear

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illustration of the everyday basic

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necessities that are missing from your

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life—because of you and no one else.

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(1)

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Certainty is the need for consistency,

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stability,

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security,

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safety,

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order,

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comfort,

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and control.

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It is a basic need that focuses on

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survival and the ability to build a

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structure and a routine in safe

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conditions.

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Without assertiveness - If your

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housemate failed to spend the money you

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gave him to pay your mutual rent and

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bills and you didn’t confront him,

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leading to angry letters from the

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landlord and your water and electricity

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being cut off,

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this need would not be met.

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However,

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human beings are complex creatures;

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too much certainty leads to boredom.

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This is where a need for (2)

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variety comes in - this is the need for

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diversity,

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challenge,

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change,

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surprise,

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uncertainty,

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and adventure.

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Without assertiveness - Your housemate

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always pays his way but views any sense

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of decoration or organization as a

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waste of time.

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Your decor gets you down but you

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can’t find it in you to convince him

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a makeover is the right move.

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You almost wish he’d stop paying the

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rent;

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then at least you could find somewhere

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new.

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(3)

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Significance is the need to feel

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needed,

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honored,

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wanted,

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special,

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and validated.

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From birth,

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we need to feel unique and worthy of

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attention,

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and one way we can achieve the feeling

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of significance is through teaching.

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Without assertiveness - A teaching

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position you’d love to have is being

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advertised at work.

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It’s assumed a colleague will get the

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role,

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but they’re not really interested and

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you know you’d be great.

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You can’t quite bring yourself to

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make your case to the hiring manager,

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though,

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and they eventually give the job to a

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less qualified candidate.

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(4)

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Love and connection is the need for

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communication,

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connection,

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intimacy,

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and shared love with others.

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Without assertiveness - Despite months

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of hints,

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you couldn’t bring yourself to take

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the plunge and ask someone who cared

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for you deeply on a date.

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The moment was there,

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but you faltered and they left,

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sadness ingrained on their face.

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A few months later,

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you found out from a friend that they

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had a new partner now.

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Significance only goes so far,

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as humans crave a much deeper

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connection.

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(5)

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Growth is the need for intellectual,

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spiritual,

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physical,

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and emotional development.

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This need takes you from matters of the

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personality to matters of the spirit.

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Without the previous needs taken care

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of,

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you can’t begin to grow.

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Without assertiveness - Your company is

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offering training in public speaking,

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but when signing people up,

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they laugh and walk past you,

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joking that the timid mouse wouldn’t

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dare.

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You stare silently at their backs as

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they walk off and resign yourself to

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the fact that people like you don’t

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deserve to conquer their fears.

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Finally,

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(6)

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contribution is the need to do good,

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serve others,

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give,

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protect beyond ourselves,

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and impacts others.

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Without assertiveness - You’ve always

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dreamed of rescuing animals,

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but you’re scared of convincing the

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shelter staff;

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you suppose the animals would be better

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off elsewhere and block out thoughts of

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the lives you could improve.

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Your attempts at veganism stop when

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your friends laugh that you wouldn’t

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last a week.

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You eat the meat they cooked and tell

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them you were only joking.

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Being assertive in the examples above

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could have garnered you a newly

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decorated apartment,

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dream teaching job,

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a partner,

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and a pet.

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This is what you’re missing out on;

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the stakes are high,

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even if they don’t appear to be on a

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daily basis.

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They add up.

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You shouldn’t be resigned to

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neglecting them.

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Even if throughout your life your needs

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haven’t been met,

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and you perhaps don’t remember what

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they feel like,

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you still have them.

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It will be impossible to behave

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assertively if you tell yourself you

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don’t have needs and resent others

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who agree with you.

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Do you feel that your happiness is

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subject to what the people around you

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will accept or tolerate?

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The great cost of your lack of

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assertiveness is a life that doesn’t

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resemble anything you’ve ever wanted.

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After you evaluate yourself based on

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those six needs,

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or even just asking if you’re getting

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what you want from the people around

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you,

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it’s likely enough to make you want

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to unload,

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guns blazing,

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on the next person who dares to cross

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your path.

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You’re ready to believe that you

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deserve to be fulfilled.

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You may begin to feel you are owed

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something and blame others for the fact

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you’re insecure or aren’t achieving

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what you want.

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While you shouldn’t selfishly deny

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the needs of other people,

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or simply switch roles from masochist

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to sadist,

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it quickly becomes clear that to get

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more of what you want,

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and less of what you don’t want,

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you must come to terms with being less

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nice.

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Indeed,

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science has bore out the fact that this

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can pay off handsomely.

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In a study published in the journal

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Social Forces,

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sociologist Robert Faris followed

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students in grades six to eight from

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three North Carolina counties for three

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years.

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Faris used factors like being voted

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“most likely to succeed” in

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yearbooks to determine the “elite”

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students and then looked at who they

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had named as their friends.

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The “hangers-on” had named a member

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of the elite as their friend but

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hadn’t been named back.

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Students also shared who they’d

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treated badly and who had been cruel to

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them.

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The elite represented only 5% of all

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the schools,

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with their friends and hangers-on

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totaling 14%.

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Faris found that the last 81% of

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students were still able enter the top

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tier through “reputational

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aggression,” which included

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gossiping,

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shunning,

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spreading rumors,

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and teasing.

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This behavior doubled the chances of

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becoming friends with one of the elite,

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particularly if the aggressive behavior

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was targeted at a high-status student

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or their close friends.

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The victims of reputational aggression

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slunk down to the depths of the second

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or third tier of the hierarchy.

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The conclusion was clear as the

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oft-used phrase,

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Nice guys and gals finish last.

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Aggression was how people got what they

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wanted,

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more often than not—but it will

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probably lead to negative long-term

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ramifications.

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Assertiveness fits right into the slow

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between nice and aggressive.

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It’s at this point that you may

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realize that your definition of

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“nice” is tantamount to extreme

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people-pleasing and not voicing any of

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your own thoughts or desires.

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Assertiveness is something you may

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recognize as decidedly “not nice."

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And that’s okay.

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It will feel oddly confrontational and

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tense—and that’s okay.

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Your relationships with people may

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change,

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as a result of them being used to

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walking all over you—and that’s

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okay.

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You may feel that should stop,

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and rather pick your battles instead of

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making a fuss at every small

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thing—and that’s okay.

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Just remember what’s at stake with

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your needs,

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desires,

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and way you pictured your life playing

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out.

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It’s time to stop compromising on

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them and respect yourself the way you

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do others.

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You don’t have to be Keisha,

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Michael,

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or Gita;

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those are not the only choices of how

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to handle a hazy interpersonal

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situation.

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Assertiveness is asking for what you

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want,

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turning others down,

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and making decisions that are right for

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you without anger,

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threats,

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manipulation,

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or fear of repercussions.

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Everybody deserves to have their needs

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met while maintaining their sense of

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self-worth,

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and no matter what others may do,

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you always have the power to control

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how you react.

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You’ll never be able to stop other

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people asking something of you,

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but you always have the power to say no.

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Being assertive is understanding that

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you can’t control what others may do,

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but you can control your own behavior.

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Your Personal Bill Of Rights.

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Let’s end this introductory chapter

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with what should be your rallying cry.

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This is a powerful reminder of what you

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shouldn’t ever apologize for,

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and what you are due as a human being.

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This sets the empowering tone for the

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rest of the book.

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It’s your responsibility to assert

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your personal bill of rights,

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as no one is going to do it for you.

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You can’t depend on people to

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consider how they might be infringing

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on them,

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as they’ll be focusing on how they

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can achieve their own satisfaction.

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Being able to say,

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“I know my rights,

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and you can’t stomp on them,”

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allows you to assert yourself in order

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to fulfill them.

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The accumulation of contorted messages

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saying you must be selfless to be a

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good person leads to feeling guilty or

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selfish for asserting these rights.

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Losing sight of your personal bill of

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rights happens because of the

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conditioning that forces you to believe

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you should put others before yourself

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unconditionally.

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As you read the rights described below,

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notice whether any of them surprise you.

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You’ll realize that actions or

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phrases you have been afraid of using

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for fear of seeming flakey,

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selfish,

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rude,

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or stupid are actually your rights.

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They are the key to being assertive

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because they give you permission to act

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as your authentic self,

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guilt-free.

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And again,

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they might feel “not nice”—but

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that’s because your definition of

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“nice” needs to change!

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It’s your right… to not justify

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your behavior with excuses.

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You don’t have to give reasons or

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agree to things you don’t want to do

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because you’re worried that your

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reason doesn’t seem good enough.

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If you don’t want to attend an event

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because you want to spend quality time

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with your dog,

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that’s valid and no one can judge.

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You don’t owe someone something just

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because your justification doesn’t

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align with their values.

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It’s your right… to change your

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mind.

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What was possible when you agreed to

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something might not be possible anymore.

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This is normal in a world where the

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only constant is change.

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It’s a shame to inconvenience

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someone,

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but you have to look after yourself.

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It’s your right… to say,

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“I don’t know."

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Capable people often have the burden of

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being the problem-solver thrust upon

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them by people who have the ability to

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find the solution but don’t want to

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put the time in.

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You don’t have to go out of your way

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to find answers to things that aren’t

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useful to you.

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Just because you have an ability or

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skill doesn’t mean other people are

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privileged to it.

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This also applies in situations where

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people want to rush decisions out of

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you.

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It’s your right… to be illogical in

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your decision-making.

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If you’ve saved for years for a house

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and one day decide to blow it all on a

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trip round the world,

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that’s up to you.

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Others’ expectations of you based on

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patterns of your previous behavior

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aren’t something you have to conform

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to forever.

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It simply doesn’t matter if no one

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can understand why you’re doing

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something.

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It’s your right… to decide which of

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other people’s problems you have a

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responsibility to solve.

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No matter how persuasive the cries of

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“You have to help me!” may be,

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only you can make that choice.

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If you have the time and resources to

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help someone,

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then this can be a positive experience

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for you both,

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but you need defenses in place to

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prevent you from feeling pressured,

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blackmailed,

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or helpless.

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If you were to solve everyone else’s

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problems,

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who would take care of yours?

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Certainly not the people you are

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helping.

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It’s your right… to say,

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“I don’t care."

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There will always be people who drain

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you and demand your attention for every

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little drama in their life.

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There are only so many good causes you

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can champion.

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You have to draw the line somewhere -

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for everything you don’t care about,

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there will be someone else who does

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care and can do what you’re not

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willing to.

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You’ve now seen just how many things

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you deserve that you’ve been missing

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out on because you haven’t realized

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that the only person who can provide

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them all is yourself.

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You deserve to prioritize yourself and

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be the hero in your own movie,

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not the martyr who gives their life to

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save everyone else.

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Prioritizing time for you to meet your

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own needs and giving up the pursuit of

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altruism will improve your well-being.

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You can’t please everyone all the

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time,

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so start with yourself,

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which is the first step to

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assertiveness.

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Takeaways -

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1.

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Assertiveness requires a delicate

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balance,

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especially if you are new to it.

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You may have started as too passive,

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but take care to not swing into the

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aggressive territory where you are

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robbing other people of their needs.

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You can’t control what others do or

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how they might respond to you,

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but you can control your own behavior.

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2.

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Tony Robbins succinctly articulated the

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six needs of human happiness you are

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likely keeping yourself from as a

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result of lacking assertiveness.

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They are certainty,

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variety,

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significance,

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love and connection,

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growth,

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and contribution.

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This is what’s at stake every time

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you come to a fork in the road and

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consider shrinking away from the moment.

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It’s not trivial,

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and can lead to a life you want,

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or a life you don’t.

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3.

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The power to live as you want is within

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your hands,

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not to be dictated by the acceptance or

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tolerance of the people around you.

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Yes,

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sometimes that might require that you

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step on the toes of other people,

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but you are not living for other people.

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Being less nice (and even aggressive,

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as studies have shown)

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is paramount to happiness and getting

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what you want.

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4.

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Write the personal bill of rights down

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and post it on a wall in your room.

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These are rights,

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not privileges or luxuries.

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It’s easy to forget until someone

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snaps you out of it.

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Right from the outset,

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you might feel that you’re becoming

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someone that’s mean and “not nice."

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But that’s because your definition of

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“nice” has become skewed over the

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years.

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This has been

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The Art of Everyday Assertiveness:

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Speak Up. Set Boundaries. Say No. Take Back Control. Get What You Want. Written by

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Patrick King

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Narrated by Russell Newton.

Chapters

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