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8 ways to stop yelling

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stovebolts

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This was a great article I just read and wanted to share.
Enjoy!

8 Ways to Stop Yelling (and Be Heard)
By Rosally Saltsman

The worst kind of noise pollution is yelling! Yelling causes damage, irreparable damage, to the environment, to our relationships, to our psyches and nervous systems, and to our mental and physical health. We need to stop raising our voices, except for happy cries of “Mazal Tov!”
  1. Listen, really listen, when someone is speaking to you. Most of the time, people raise their voices when they don’t feel heard. Subconsciously, they feel that by speaking louder they will be listened to. Teachers scream at students, mothers at children, siblings at their brothers or sisters, and customers at customer-service representatives when they don’t feel that their requests are being heard. If you listen when people speak to you, there is less chance that they will feel the need to yell.
  2. “As water reflects the face to the face, so is one man’s heart reflected in another’s.” (Proverbs 27:19) If someone starts yelling at you, speak more softly. Unconsciously, they will reflect your actions and lower the volume as well.
  3. “The words of the wise are heard when spoken softly.” (Ecclesiastes 9:17) The softer you speak, the more people will pay attention in order to hear what you’re saying. Speak clearly, but gently.
  4. People yell when they’re frustrated. When you feel the urge to yell, articulate to yourself what it is that is frustrating you and then explain it. If someone is yelling at you, try to pinpoint what is bothering them and reflect it back to them. If you say, “I see you’re frustrated because it’s a long wait, and I realize that waiting is a pain,” they’re likely to feel understood and calm down.
  5. There is a lot of noise all around us—construction, music, people on their cell phones, television screens everywhere and the ubiquitous hum of technology. Try and quiet your environment as much as possible so that if someone wants to talk with you, he or she doesn’t have to compete with the background noise.
  6. Strong emotion causes us to yell, even positive strong emotion. We can transform some of the energy into physical expression—jump up and down, smile broadly, pace. If you channel some of the emotional energy into something physical but harmless, you canovercome the need to yell. People at sporting events are a good example; they often accompany their cheers or boos with physical movement.
  7. Never yell at someone who won’t “hear” you. Remind yourself that often the person you’re yelling at won’t listen to you anyway, either because your yelling doesn’t make an impression on them (the stranger on the bus) or because they have now been petrified into inaction (the toddler you have just terrified).
  8. Communicate in writing. While it is still possible to “yell” in writing, it doesn’t cause the same reaction as screaming so if there’s someone with whom verbal communication is uncomfortable, loud or violent, revert to a letter, SMS or email.
Yelling is never the sign of a refined person; it’s the sign of someone who has lost control and is often accompanied by abusive language. The Torah has many negative things to say about someone who loses his temper, such as: “His wisdom departs from him” (Pesachim 66b), and “He is considered as if he worships idols” (Maimonides, Hilchot Deios 2:7). When people lose their temper, they are being possessed by their evil inclination. We want to maintain our Divine image and be seen as refined people—not turn into a screaming banshee. This, of course, takes practice. But the more you overcome your desire to yell—and the less you tolerate being yelled at—the more harmonious your life and, by extension, your world will become.

By Rosally Saltsman More by this author
Rosally Saltsman is a freelance writer originally from Montreal living in Israel. Click here for free inspiring e-books by Rosally Saltsman and Robin Meyerson.

Read Online · Discuss ·Share on Facebook













 
This was a great article I just read and wanted to share.
Enjoy!

8 Ways to Stop Yelling (and Be Heard)
By Rosally Saltsman

The worst kind of noise pollution is yelling! Yelling causes damage, irreparable damage, to the environment, to our relationships, to our psyches and nervous systems, and to our mental and physical health. We need to stop raising our voices, except for happy cries of “Mazal Tov!”
  1. Listen, really listen, when someone is speaking to you. Most of the time, people raise their voices when they don’t feel heard. Subconsciously, they feel that by speaking louder they will be listened to. Teachers scream at students, mothers at children, siblings at their brothers or sisters, and customers at customer-service representatives when they don’t feel that their requests are being heard. If you listen when people speak to you, there is less chance that they will feel the need to yell.
  2. “As water reflects the face to the face, so is one man’s heart reflected in another’s.” (Proverbs 27:19) If someone starts yelling at you, speak more softly. Unconsciously, they will reflect your actions and lower the volume as well.
  3. “The words of the wise are heard when spoken softly.” (Ecclesiastes 9:17) The softer you speak, the more people will pay attention in order to hear what you’re saying. Speak clearly, but gently.
  4. People yell when they’re frustrated. When you feel the urge to yell, articulate to yourself what it is that is frustrating you and then explain it. If someone is yelling at you, try to pinpoint what is bothering them and reflect it back to them. If you say, “I see you’re frustrated because it’s a long wait, and I realize that waiting is a pain,” they’re likely to feel understood and calm down.
  5. There is a lot of noise all around us—construction, music, people on their cell phones, television screens everywhere and the ubiquitous hum of technology. Try and quiet your environment as much as possible so that if someone wants to talk with you, he or she doesn’t have to compete with the background noise.
  6. Strong emotion causes us to yell, even positive strong emotion. We can transform some of the energy into physical expression—jump up and down, smile broadly, pace. If you channel some of the emotional energy into something physical but harmless, you canovercome the need to yell. People at sporting events are a good example; they often accompany their cheers or boos with physical movement.
  7. Never yell at someone who won’t “hear” you. Remind yourself that often the person you’re yelling at won’t listen to you anyway, either because your yelling doesn’t make an impression on them (the stranger on the bus) or because they have now been petrified into inaction (the toddler you have just terrified).
  8. Communicate in writing. While it is still possible to “yell” in writing, it doesn’t cause the same reaction as screaming so if there’s someone with whom verbal communication is uncomfortable, loud or violent, revert to a letter, SMS or email.
Yelling is never the sign of a refined person; it’s the sign of someone who has lost control and is often accompanied by abusive language. The Torah has many negative things to say about someone who loses his temper, such as: “His wisdom departs from him” (Pesachim 66b), and “He is considered as if he worships idols” (Maimonides, Hilchot Deios 2:7). When people lose their temper, they are being possessed by their evil inclination. We want to maintain our Divine image and be seen as refined people—not turn into a screaming banshee. This, of course, takes practice. But the more you overcome your desire to yell—and the less you tolerate being yelled at—the more harmonious your life and, by extension, your world will become.

By Rosally Saltsman More by this author
Rosally Saltsman is a freelance writer originally from Montreal living in Israel. Click here for free inspiring e-books by Rosally Saltsman and Robin Meyerson.

Read Online · Discuss ·Share on Facebook













amen- thank you for this
 
amen - i would be interested in more of the articles you found helpful - parenting and otherwise - i love learning practical things on how to deal with people
I read a parenting article from chabad several years ago about lies.. I'll have to dig it up. I still use what I learned from that article and only wished I read it 20 years ago!
 
Keep this woman away from anything to do with natural resources or heavy industry. Yelling saves lives. Calmly walking over and having a calm conversation with someone means they have already lost a limb or worse.
 
As long as we're already yelling *clears throat* "IT'S PEANUT BUTTER JELLY TIME, PEANUT BUTTER JELLY TIME, PEANUT BUTTER JELLY TIME!!! :woot2


 
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