A wall of silence

I put on my best poker face and forced myself to look straight ahead. I was on camera during the meeting and willed myself to keep my mouth shut. The senior executive on the other end of the video conference looked back and waited a long time before he saw that I wasn’t going to say anything else and finally caved-in, saying my decision made sense.

I let out a sigh of relief.

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

I’m horrible at negotiations. In a meeting a few weeks ago, a senior executive who I’m working with tried to bully me into accepting some work that really doesn’t fall into my span of control. I explained my rationale, keeping things very professional, and how I thought it belonged more with his team than my own and then said nothing. Normally in situations like this I find that my strong need to make the customer happy and maintain a collegial environment gets me in trouble. I’ll hem and haw and if I can help, I’ll cave in and say I’ll take on the extra work. However, I’ve been trying to improve my negotiation skills and get better about pushing back.

My ace in the hole: I’ve come to see that silence can be my best friend. 

Noise creates illusions, silence brings truth

Normally I hate dead air. In particular, I’m talking about the small talk back and forth between people who don’t really know each other well and the dead air that comes along for the ride. I find myself oftentimes trying to fill that space.

In this situation, the executive saw that I wasn’t bending to his will simply because he wanted me to do so and he broke. He told me that he got what I was saying, but he had to try. He said he would take care of the work. I had won. 

I think this is a big reason why I hate networking, those awkward silences as we get to know folks. I hate silence outside of work too. As we drove home from getting together with family recently, my wife made fun of me for coming out of my introverted shell and keeping everyone entertained and talking.

She teased me by saying I was “loud.” I claimed I was just trying to make everyone feel comfortable, by asking about them and joking with them.

Photo by Andrea Piacquadio on Pexels.com

“You sure were talkative.”

The good and the wise lead quiet lives

Yes, I had to admit that I had been talkative, but the ironic thing is that I normally love the silence that allows me to think and be creative. When I’m pulled into larger groups, though, I’ll often poke fun of myself, let me be the butt of jokes, and ask questions about others. My need to make people happy gene forces me to look for common ground.

But I’m learning. Sometimes not speaking is not a bad thing. Sometimes quiet can be your friend. I’ll get there. It might take some time, but I’ll definitely get there. 


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63 thoughts on “A wall of silence

  1. Beautiful blog!
    It’s awesome that you ask others questions about themselves. Many people don’t do that.
    It’s also great to have silence, but sadly we can only experience that with ourselves and those very close to us. Example, I can drive in silence with my husband and feel totally comfortable.
    However, if I go on a long drive with a girlfriend, there will be constant chatter.
    You just have to feel out the situation and go with the flow. There’s nothing wrong with being loud or being quiet. It’s all good 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Yes, in a work setting, there’s very little silence. Yes, I love that I can drive on a long trip with my wife and don’t have to be forced to say anything. I love the creative stories I can come up with in my head. However, inevitably we end up chatting the whole time like two kids. I guess the old saying is true: silence is golden. Ha ha

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  2. I have that same gene, Brian. I’ve always been a people pleaser. As time goes by and we get older, we learn how best to use our words. As we get wiser, we learn how to give advice on life. God has a perfect plan for each of us. He is using you through both of us through our writing. Thanks for sharing yours.

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  3. I’ll have to remember that one. Keep my mouth shut on something I am zero interested in doing. I get myself into trouble all the time for this. Ugh.
    And I used to always become the socialite in gatherings. As I get older, I become a tad less so.

    Liked by 1 person

      1. Or am not smart enough to shut up when it’s time. 😏
        I’ll take your definition.
        Right now, I am working in a company. I enjoy the job, I enjoy my coworkers. I do NOT enjoy my boss who is a royal pain in the ass and is not-so-slowly alienating everyone… She needs to retire, though she is only 63.

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  4. I really liked this post, Brian. You do a great job of describing some aspects of my personality as well. I love my quiet time, and yet when I’m in a group setting, especially work-related, keeping quiet isn’t something I’m prone to. Bravo for staying the course!! 😊

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  5. I have learned over the past 10 years or so that quiet is like tucking myself under my favorite soft throw. I have a dear friend whom I swear cannot tolerate more than one minute of silence, and perhaps also likes to hear herself talk. Often, she talks about people I’ve never met (and most likely will never meet) and I have fight not to roll my eyes or let my face reflect my boredom.

    With 20+ years of being the face of authority in the hotel business, I mastered a different persona to use when dealing with people in general. I did it well, having only ever ‘disturbed’ one guest in all of those years because I’d asked their granddaughter if she could use her inside voice while waiting the grandparents to finish the check-in process.

    I believe that we each have a lot of personas, necessary to fit time and place with others. A good parent has to wear the persona of authority with his/her children, but it’s not the same persona when we’re around other people’s children. Someone who hits their thumb with a hammer and lets out a stream of frustration that may include some swearing would under no circumstances use those words when inside a church.

    That’s why quiet is so important, a time when we are allowed to take off all of those masks and revel at being content with who we are when there are no expectations to act differently!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, I’m much more talkative at work than other parts of my life. And yes, I think you’re right, location plays a role. My natural area though tends to start out with silence, let my mind wander, and then join others and find my social norm. If only it were that easy. Ha ha, thanks for sharing!

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  6. “The good and the wise lead quiet lives.” Amen to that! I tend to be shy, introverted, and uncomfortable in many social settings. I’m always ‘the quiet one,’ as in your case, it often works out for the best.

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  7. I had to learn the silence trick with my final boss. She assumed I was always the go to person when others flaked out on things. It was so empowering to look at her, say no- can’t help you with that, and then just sit silently. Very out of character for me but it needed to be done. Nice job Brian- nothing wrong at all with standing up for yourself when you know it’s right!

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  8. Oh yes…”silence as a best friend”. Love that wisdom. Thank you for all of this, Brian. It was one of my teaching mentor’s favorite lessons (and one I needed to learn, over and over again…and I’m still learning). That purposeful pause? Power right there. 😎

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh I forgot about that term: the purposeful pause. Such a great term! And oh yea, I race right through them! You like my comparisons …. It’s like everyone else is slowing down for the police alongside of the road with their radar gun and I’ve got my foot on the gas, honking my horn, and yelling at the other cars to get out of my way! Ugh! Yea, way to go Brian!

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    1. Yea, well I have lots of examples of talking when I shouldn’t have been. You know how it is with PR and Comms – things that others don’t always understand the amount of time that is needed to create a great piece! “Yea, let’s cut the deadline down by a week, you don’t really need all that time, right Brian?” Ha ha

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yes! I remember those deadlines and lack of understanding so well. I had to write a magazine article for a client and I was only allowed so many words. I spent as much time editing to fit the word count as I did on the rough draft. The client complained that I billed too many hours on the piece! It was short and should have been easy, they thought.

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  9. Oh wow – what a great lesson. Powerful and intimidating! It’s amazing how much respect silence commands as well – probably because we have to control ourselves to maintain it. Love it! ❤ ❤ ❤

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  10. Hands down on this Brian: “Noise creates illusions, silence brings truth.” I too have struggled through the years at being a people pleaser, little Ms. Dependable, ouly to find that my countenance takes a bit of a nosedive from my confidence level. It’s a struggle, but you learn to speak up, when it is time to. Or, sometimes you need not say anything in order to get your due. People would rope me in with “But Kym, no one can do it as perfectly as you can.” That’s my cue to say, “Honey, who needs perfection?” Then I smile, wink my eye, and walk away! LOL 🤣😜😂

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  11. I needed to read this today! I over explain myself sometimes and I can’t see it’s not necessary! Silence. I too love the quiet, gives me time to hear my own thoughts. Another important message here, thank you Brian! Hugs, C

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Insightful writing, Brian. I have a quote nearby, by Ram Dass, that reads: “The quieter you become, the more you can hear.” ✨ I am not a fan of networking or small talk either. I am good for about an hour. 😁

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m really bad at networking. Just horrible. Yes, some of it is shyness, but then it’s also my sarcasm: why am I here, why is this worth my time, etc. I’ve gotten better, but mainly it’s just frustration with the small talk. Absolutely love that quote. So very true!

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  13. Somewhere in my sales career, in a land long ago and far, far away, I seem to remember hearing something about “he who speaks last and shuts up wins.” It takes discipline to put forth a proposition then sit in awkward silence that forces the other guy to come up with an answer. He who speaks first loses! 😉

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