Be careful too of over justifying yourself. For example, ‘I wouldn’t normally mention this but I’m without the car tomorrow, my husband’s had to take it to work because he’s got to go to London on business and the trains are on strike and I was wondering if you’d mind giving me a lift into work?’
Instead simply say, ‘Could you give me a lift into work tomorrow Alan as I’m without the car?’
If you need to apologize don’t do it profusely, simply say, ‘I’m sorry’. Or if you wish to sound more assertive, then ‘I apologize’.
Practise using ‘I’ statements, which are assertive, for example:- I feel
- think
- my idea is
- I prefer
- I feel
- as I see it
- my view is
- ‘I’m hopeless at this.’
- ‘You know me, I seem to be useless at ...’
- ‘I can’t seem to ...’
Powerful and persuasive words are often those with many vowels in them, for example need and please.
‘We need to do something’ implies urgency and people respond to this rather than ‘We could do something’, which implies a question mark in its structure. We must do something sounds more like a command possibly prompting the response ‘Do I have to?’ or ‘Must I?’ While, ‘You must appreciate’ can prompt the response,‘Why must I?’
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