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Assertive Communication

What is assertiveness?

Assertiveness is communicating and expressing your thoughts, feelings, and opinions in a way that makes your views and needs clearly understood by others, without putting down their thoughts, feelings, or opinions. Assertiveness is the ability to express our thoughts and feelings openly in an Honest, Appropriate, Respectful, and Direct way. It can be HARD to do, but it gets easier with practice. In assertive communication both individuals are considered to be equally important.

The Basic Assertive Rights of Every Human Being

The basic assertive rights of every human being include

  • Having dignity and self-respect
  • Saying "no" when justified without feeling guilty
  • Expressing your feelings
  • Asking for what you want directly
  • Feeling good about yourself
  • Being able to change your mind
  • Negotiating and reaching compromises when conflict exists
  • Being able to make mistakes

Common Barriers to Assertiveness

Some people fear repercussions of acting assertively or may lack the skills to express themselves effectively. They may believe that they don't have the right to be assertive. Communicating assertively will not guarantee the other person will change his or her behavior and give you what you want, but it will help you establish limits and boundaries with others.

Passive Communication and Behavior

Passive communication and behavior involves allowing your own rights to be violated by failing to express honest feelings, thoughts, and beliefs, or by expressing your thoughts and feelings in an apologetic manner that others can easily disregard. The messages you communicate might be

  • "I don't count; you can take advantage of me."
  • "My thoughts and feelings don't matter; only yours do."

Aggressive Communication and Behavior

Aggressive communication and behavior involves communicating in a demanding, abrasive, or hostile way. It is insensitive to others' rights, feelings, and beliefs. The usual goals of aggression are domination and winning, forcing the other person to lose. Some people mistakenly think they are being "assertive" when in fact they are being aggressive.

Passive-Aggressive Communication

Passive-aggressive communication involves expressing aggressive feelings in an indirect way through passive resistance, rather than by openly confronting an issue. Examples include sulking, ignoring the other person, complaining behind the other person's back, procrastinating, deliberately being late or slow, intentional poor performance, acting in a way that will frustrate others, and "acting innocent" when you have done something to hurt someone.

Assertiveness is simple but hard.

Assertiveness "HARD" Checklist
Assertiveness is "HARD."
Not Assertive
(Passive)
Assertive
(Tactful)
Aggressive
(Rude)
NoHonestYes! HonestYes! Honest
Yes! AppropriateYes! AppropriateNo Appropriate
Yes! RespectfulYes! RespectfulNo Respectful
NoDirectYes! DirectYes! Direct

Assertiveness involves respecting your rights and the rights of others.

Important Facts About Assertiveness

  • Use I or me statements such as "When you do ______, I feel _____."
  • Voice tone, eye contact, and body posture are important parts of assertive communication.
  • Use a steady and calm voice, stand or sit up straight, look the other person in the eyes without glaring.
  • Feelings are usually only one word (e.g., angry, anxious, happy, sad, hurt, frustrated, joyful).
  • Remember, assertiveness doesn't guarantee that you will get what you want or that the other person will understand your concerns or be happy with what you said. It does improve the chances that the other person will understand what you want or how you feel, and thus improve your chances of communicating effectively.

Four Essential Steps to Assertive Communication

  1. Tell the person what you think about their behavior without accusing them.
  2. Tell them how you feel when they behave a certain way.
  3. Tell them how their behavior affects you and your relationship with them.
  4. Tell them what you would prefer them to do instead.

XYZ* Formula for Effective Communication

The goal of the XYZ* formula is to express the way you feel (internal world) in response to other's behavior (external world) in specific situations. You are the only person who has access to your feelings. Others have no access to your internal world. The only way they will know what you are feeling is if you tell them. Similarly, you only have access to other people's external world. It is very easy to make a mistake when trying to guess what others are feeling or intending.

Formula for Effective Communication
I feel X when you do Y in situation Zand I would like*
I feel angrywhen you leave your socks and underwear on the bedroom floorafter workand I would like you to put them in the hamper.
I felt insignificantwhen you left me with an empty gas tankyesterdayand I would like you to leave the car with at least 1/4 tank of gas.
I feel angrywhen you don't call meif you are staying late at workand I would like you to call as soon as you know you will be late.
I feel lovedwhen you kiss mewhen you get homeand I would like you to do that every day.

Source

Hunter, C. L., Goodie, J. L., Oordt, M. S., & Dobmeyer, A. C. (2009). Integrated behavioral health in primary care: Step-by-step guidance for assessment and intervention. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). (2013, July). Assertive communication. Retrieved June 4, 2024, from https://www.mentalhealth.va.gov

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