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Are you judgmental about other people's actions?
Do you have a hard time keeping your judgments to yourself?
How do you listen to and support someone without becoming judgmental?
Step 1 — Recognize Your Judgmental Thoughts
You might be judgmental if you:
Jump to negative moral conclusions about others.
Have a moral rating system that is skewed in your own favor (you believe the worst in others but the best in yourself).
Move very quickly from thinking, "This action is morally wrong," to "This person is morally corrupt."
Decide that what someone did was wrong even when you don't know much about the context of a person's behavior.
Step 2 — Overcome Judgment Using DUAL
D — Don’t pass judgment but just observe what's happening.
U — Understand by putting yourself in their shoes.
A — Accept that person for who they are, without trying to change them.
L — Love them or try to love them, even if you don’t know them.
Scenario
You see someone cut in line at the grocery store. You begin to have judgmental thoughts about them and start to get angry.
You think:
Could there be a reason for their unusual behavior?
Have I ever done this myself? I remember once I did the same thing because I was late for a job interview.
How did I feel at that moment? I felt stressed and embarrassed about my behavior.
Quiz
What are some non-judgmental thoughts you can have about the situation?
Observe the situation and understand that this person might have a need to cut in line. This will allow you to accept the situation without judging the person, and you can move on without lashing out.
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Step 3 — Manage Your Judgmental Side
Judging strangers is one thing, but what do you do when you find yourself judging people close to you?
Think:
Am I putting my expectations for myself onto this person?
Have I had a similar experience? How did I feel?
Act:
Identify boundaries that you need to set with this person. Open a dialogue about this.
Tell them, "I really want to be here to support you right now, but I just don’t have the bandwidth to show up for you in the way that you deserve" and discuss other coping mechanisms.
Scenario
Your friend is telling you about her weight loss struggles, but you're tired of hearing about it.
It's a discussion you keep having and you don't think you can help your friend anymore, but you still want to be supportive.
Do
Be a safe space for them and listen
Let the other person vent
Practice empathy
Help them name their feelings
Let them know they're important to you
Don’t
Cut off the person when they're talking
Tell them to get over it
Make them feel guilty about their feelings
Make the conversation about you
Quiz
What should you tell them?
Set boundaries with your friend without hurting their feelings or making judgments about their experience.
This Byte has been authored by
Mary Hoftiezer
Instructional Designer
MBA