The Value of Just Saying “No.”

No written on a yellow post it note.

“No.”

“Say it again,” he urged. “This time with feeling.”

I laughed. “No!”

“Better. Keep practicing, you’ll improve and soon it even may feel natural.”

I doubt it.

But I’m trying.

Why can’t I say “no?”

Oh, who knows?

I want to be agreeable, helpful, and considered valuable.

Sometimes I’m so busy guessing at someone else’s feelings, that I can’t decline to do something.

That’s been true for too long.

But, I was so busy last year, I needed help.

After the umpteenth (well-meaning) phone call asking me to do something, I had to take steps to stop it.

So, I wrote a post-it note and stuck it on my computer.

I don’t think that admonision went a week before I broke it.

How about if Liz says, “no?”2 post-it notes saying

I was whining, er, describing my predicament to a wise friend on the telephone. (I think all my friends named Liz are wise).

She took me firmly in hand. “Michelle, you have a lot of things to do, important things to do. You cannot keep saying yes. You need to say no.”

“I know, I know, but . . . “

“No buts,” she interupted in her wonderful school marm voice. “I tell you. You have to say ‘no.'”

I nodded–even though she couldn’t see my response–and wrote another post-it note.

I put it next to the first one.

That helped.

A little.

And the friends who know Liz agreed. I needed to listen to Liz.

And yet . . .

Feeling trapped

I often feel trapped when I’m caught desperately trying to say “no” even as “sure” comes out of my mouth.

Squirrel trapped ina bird feeder Photo by ennif pendahl (Unsplash) [image error]Photo by ennif pendahl (Unsplash) [image error]Photo by ennif pendahl (Unsplash)

Again, this only may be me, but I feel my heart sinking as I mentally rearrange what I’d planned to do with that particular time.

Most of the time I manage a weak smile before going home to berate myself in private.

I’m hyper-aware of these feelings and often when I ask someone to do something for me, I hedge it.

I’ll say something like, “Would you like to _________________? No is a fine answer.”

No one makes that offer to me.

Perhaps it’s because they know my boundaries are weak?

Now, at least, I take a breath and say, “I’ll need to check my calendar.”

I then go home and shore up my defenses for my true answer–even if it’s “no.”

A philosophical explanation for “stop.”

Someone, somewhere, had brilliant insight one day and I managed to scribble it on a post-it note.

Whoever you are, I thank you.

“‘No’ is a complete sentence. You can’t say ‘yes’ if you don’t feel you can say ‘no.'”

It’s that word feel that caught my eye.

Too often I don’t feel like I can say decline.

It doesn’t usually have anything to do with whether I want to say “no” or not.

It’s an emotional reaction to the person asking.

But if that person loves me, they want the best for me, right?

The people who love me–and whom I love back–are the ones who will accept me, no matter what I say.

Right?

And often–my husband looks at me–my family are the ones who suffer when I don’t say “no” often enough.

Recovering, but still not quite there, yet.

I am doing better.

My life also has slowed down.

I’ve found places to explain how to say “no.”

In addition, I’ve added Martin Luther to my admonition bar. 🙂

He was good at saying “no.”

How about you?

Three post=it notes saying no, plus Martin Luther.

Tweetables

Why is saying “no” such a conundrum to some of us? Click to Tweet

The value of just saying no. Click to Tweet

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Published on March 19, 2024 04:57
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message 1: by Cathey (new)

Cathey Zimmermann rose king Ugh! Another one of my issues! Saying 'no' is so hard, even when I want to just hide under the covers. I like your idea of the post-it and I will incorporate it after this post!
PS Thanks for saing 'yes' to the LWML retreat last summer. The ladies loved you!!


message 2: by Michelle (new)

Michelle Ule :-)


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