Straight talk does the trick
MAXINE COHEN
Now that the days are longer and the weather is warmer, I’ve been
walking my dog, Maggie, all over Corona del Mar. What a hodgepodge
this gorgeous little village is! If you blur out and just sort of
scan it, it’s ever so charming. Up close, with more focused vision,
it’s a mix of older cottages next to newer two- or three-story homes
and everything in between. Well-maintained buildings and landscaping
abut run-down, unkempt messes.
I suppose that’s the blessing of “CC & Rs” but still and all,
there’s a certain charm to the diversity, unless you’re unlucky
enough to live next door to an unsightly mess and you want to pull
your hair out.
A few weeks ago, Maggie and I went for a walk on one of our usual
routes. On the other side of the street were two neighbors talking
across the low wall that divides their properties. One man’s home was
new, modern, and exceedingly well manicured; the other’s was a
cottage surrounded by a huge pile of tall weeds. I did a double-take.
I walk past that house all the time and I’d always assumed that the
person living there was old and too feeble to do yardwork. But here
was an able-bodied man in his late 40s. Why would he let his property
look like that?
I walked on by, down to Coast Highway, over to Marguerite, and
back up the other side of the street. The two men were still out
there talking. As I got midway between their two homes, Maggie
stopped to sniff and pee. I stood there waiting for her.
The man on the patio of the new house said loudly, “Whattaya
think?”
I looked up. He seemed to be looking straight at me although he
was talking to his neighbor who was sitting amid the tall weeds
covering his yard.
“Pardon me? Are you talking to me?” I asked.
“Yes. You look like you’re thinking about something,” he said.
I gulped. “Well, actually, I am. I was thinking how awful those
weeds look.”
“Thank you for volunteering,” said his neighbor, dripping sarcasm.
“Actually, I didn’t volunteer. I was asked,” I managed as I
quickly pulled Maggie along and walked on up the street.
That was really odd. Not to mention awkward. I know I’ve been
accused of not having a poker face but I couldn’t have orchestrated
this any more perfectly had I tried.
It brought to mind, several months ago, CNN was canvassing the man
on the street to see what she/he thought about some event that was
breaking news. The thing was, they asked Manhattanites who responded
with blunt straight-forwardness. Rudi Bakhtiar remarked, “If you want
to know what people really think, ask people who live in Manhattan.”
Well, I’m not from New York. I grew up 30 miles south of the city,
in New Jersey. Not sure it makes much difference though because since
moving west of the Mississippi, I’ve consistently experienced myself
as more direct and outspoken than most other people. A very mixed
blessing, indeed.
So, I was ruminating on what happened, not feeling good about
having shot my mouth off and thinking that maybe I should have made
up something else to say, although I’m not sure I could have thought
up something right on the spot. I was also feeling grateful that I
don’t live next to a schleppy property and that this is not my
problem because this man will never clean up his yard now, not after
this.
And then three days ago, walking Maggie past this house again,
there was a young man with a weed-whacker busily cutting down the
weeds. I could now see that there is a genuine flagstone patio, a
healthy fruit tree, and a trellis with vines all over it supported by
two stone pillars on the property. Really attractive.
I was surprised, to say the least.
One of the cardinal rules of relationships is that if you want
someone to change, telling them so straight out is the worst possible
way to go about it. It is inherent in human nature that we will
resist when told what to do. We will find a way of criticizing the
other person (how offensive they are, how dare they speak to me that
way, the nerve) and thereby invalidating the message or we will find
a way to rationalize our own point of view. We will not comply. We
will not give in.
Certainly, had I been invested in this man cleaning up his yard,
my outspokenness would have greatly reduced the possibility that he
would ever do so.
And yet, three weeks later, that is exactly what he did. He must
have mulled it over and over and finally come to the conclusion that
what I said was valid, and he was able to do what he thought was
right, apparently without losing face.
The thing is, this must be a man who is good at being in
relationship. Because he did exactly what it takes to make a
relationship work, i.e. he looked at himself and took responsibility
for his part instead of making it about the other person. He was able
to incorporate another person’s view of his behavior and to recognize
that he was not behaving in a way that he felt good about. He was
able to see, possibly for the first time, how his neighbors saw his
yard and to understand what that would feel like from their point of
view. And so he did something about it.
Now granted this is about weeds this time but it really isn’t
about weeds. Because the process is the same regardless of the
content, and if you can see your part around weeds, hopefully you can
see your part around other more important issues. If you are open to
understanding how your behavior impacts others and what that must
feel like to them, then you will most likely be able to look at
yourself and see what fits with your own integrity and behave
accordingly. It’s not about losing face. It’s not about losing at
all. Because when we are in good faith with ourselves, we win, by
definition, because we feel good about ourselves regardless of
anything or anyone else.
So, hey man, next time I walk Maggie by and you’re outside,
introduce yourself, will you? I’d like to know you!
* MAXINE COHEN is a Corona del Mar resident and a marriage and
family therapist practicing in Newport Beach.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.