Which might mean: By declining to do favors/tasks for people, you may feel like a selfish person, but limiting what work you take on you will reduce your stress, increase the quality of your work, and and increase your status. Plus you don’t feel used or resent being helpful.
A good strategy could be to decline first, check schedules, then accept if possible: “I may be able to do that, but let me check my schedule first.” Good for many situations.
I doubt the LW crowd has a problem with resisting peer pressure and defying authority. If anything, I would expect them to have trouble with the opposite. So let’s also say: “you can say yes.” Peer pressure and authority are not inherently bad.
I doubt your doubt :-) Resisting peer pressure is easy if it’s not actually peer pressure—if you can detach yourself and basically go “oh, I’m cooler/better than that”. But resisting pressure from you true peers—people you respect, people whose opinion you respect, people who you want to like you—that is hard.
Same thing for defying authority. It’s not a big deal to defy some assistant dean on college campus who’s trying to enforce some obviously stupid rule. But not many people have the internal grit to stand up to real cops (who have zero problems with putting you in handcuffs and booking you on a variety of charges), real security services, people with real authority who actually have the power to screw up your life pretty badly.
No, peer pressure and authority are not inherently bad. But I would argue that the—rare! -- ability to resist them when needed is a valuable feature of one’s character. Knowing this ability exists is the first step.
One of the basic P/S/As:
You can say no.
Which might mean: By declining to do favors/tasks for people, you may feel like a selfish person, but limiting what work you take on you will reduce your stress, increase the quality of your work, and and increase your status. Plus you don’t feel used or resent being helpful.
A good strategy could be to decline first, check schedules, then accept if possible: “I may be able to do that, but let me check my schedule first.” Good for many situations.
It’s a very generic P/S/A , amenable to being understood in a multitude of ways :-)
Though my personal interpretation tends towards the resistance to conformity pressure (aka “going with the crowd”) and/or defiance of authority.
I doubt the LW crowd has a problem with resisting peer pressure and defying authority. If anything, I would expect them to have trouble with the opposite. So let’s also say: “you can say yes.” Peer pressure and authority are not inherently bad.
I doubt your doubt :-) Resisting peer pressure is easy if it’s not actually peer pressure—if you can detach yourself and basically go “oh, I’m cooler/better than that”. But resisting pressure from you true peers—people you respect, people whose opinion you respect, people who you want to like you—that is hard.
Same thing for defying authority. It’s not a big deal to defy some assistant dean on college campus who’s trying to enforce some obviously stupid rule. But not many people have the internal grit to stand up to real cops (who have zero problems with putting you in handcuffs and booking you on a variety of charges), real security services, people with real authority who actually have the power to screw up your life pretty badly.
No, peer pressure and authority are not inherently bad. But I would argue that the—rare! -- ability to resist them when needed is a valuable feature of one’s character. Knowing this ability exists is the first step.
And contracts can be negotiated. They generally aren’t take it or leave it.