Summer_Twilight wrote:
Hi:
I want to learn how to be more assertive with people who think they have to repeat themselves with us. So far I have used "I get it, I am not dumb." What are some other good assertive responses?
Are you talking about (1) people with a tendency to repeat themselves
in general, or (2) people with a tendency to repeat themselves with you, in particular, or with people known to be autistic, but
not with most other people, and whose repetitions are just one aspect of an overall talking-down-to-you attitude?
The remainder of this post will assume you mean people in category #1. Handling people in category #2 is more complicated.
I would suggest that when such a person says something to you the
first time, you reply with a
paraphrase of what the person said. Say something like, "If I understand correctly, you want XYZ, right?" or "In other words, you believe XYZ, right?" (replacing XYZ with your paraphrase).
That's the
only way to assure the person that you have, in fact, correctly understood what they said.
People with a tendency to repeat themselves (I'm one of them) do so because we worry that what we said wasn't clear enough, and that the other person may have misunderstood some crucial point. We worry about this not because we think the other person is especially "dumb," but because, in our experience, misunderstandings happen all the time, with all sorts of people. Therefore, we never take it for granted that we have been correctly understood.
Misunderstanding are, in fact, very common -- as should be evident to anyone who has ever played the
the telephone game. And indeed, various scientific experiments have confirmed that misunderstandings are much more common than most people think -- even among NT's. All the more so are misunderstandings commonplace when autistic people are involved.
Saying "I get it, I am not dumb" does not constitute even the slightest evidence whatsoever that you have, in fact, correctly understood what the other person said. It only adds the complication of taking it personally.
If people continue to repeat themselves
after it has been established that you indeed correctly understood what they said, I would suggest that you respond with another paraphrase and
then say something like, "If you have nothing new to add to this, could we please move on to another topic?"
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Last edited by Mona Pereth on 05 Apr 2021, 11:58 am, edited 1 time in total.