It’s All Your Fault: High Conflict People

It’s All Your Fault: High Conflict People Trailer Bonus Episode 11 Season 3

The Art of Mindful Engagement: Using EAR Statements Judiciously

The Art of Mindful Engagement: Using EAR Statements JudiciouslyThe Art of Mindful Engagement: Using EAR Statements Judiciously

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De-escalating High Conflict People with EAR Statements: An insightful look at calming down difficult situations
In this episode, Bill and Megan dive into how to use EAR statements (showing empathy, attention, and respect) to de-escalate high conflict people and situations. They discuss the different high conflict personality types and when EAR statements can be effective tools. Bill and Megan also talk about combining EAR statements with limit setting, and when it's best to just disengage entirely.
EAR statements are a compassionate way to acknowledge someone's emotions while still maintaining professional boundaries. Bill explains how a short EAR statement can radically shift a tense interaction by making the other person feel heard and seen.
However, EAR statements aren't advisable in dangerous or abusive situations. Safety should always come first. Bill and Megan also caution that overusing empathy with manipulative personality types can backfire.
Questions we answer in this episode:
  • Do EAR statements work for all high conflict personalities?
  • How do you use EAR statements with the paranoid, narcissistic, and antisocial types?
  • When is it best to just disengage and set a limit?
Key Takeaways:
  • EAR statements show empathy, attention, and respect - this calms people down.
  • They work for most high conflict personalities, especially borderline and histrionic.
  • Disengage from aggressive people for your own safety. You have the right.
  • Don't over-empathize with manipulative personalities - set limits.
  • Compassion for people's histories can help you use EAR statements sincerely.
This insightful episode is essential listening for anyone who deals with difficult people regularly. Bill and Megan's wisdom and experience provide easy-to-implement communication tools that can transform volatile situations. Their compassionate approach promotes understanding on both sides of tense interactions.
Links & Other Notes

Note: We are not diagnosing anyone in our discussions, merely discussing patterns of behavior.
  • (00:00) - Welcome to It's All Your Fault
  • (01:35) - Are EAR Statements for Everyone?
  • (02:12) - Empathy, Attention and Respect
  • (08:06) - Does It Work With Everybody?
  • (12:08) - Acknowledgement
  • (14:53) - Paranoid
  • (17:02) - EAR and Limits
  • (20:36) - When Not a Professional Relationship
  • (23:17) - Knowing When to Protect Yourself
  • (24:49) - The Right to Disengage
  • (26:20) - Reminders & Coming Next Week: Grief Over the Death of a High Conflict Loved One

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What is It’s All Your Fault: High Conflict People?

Hosted by Bill Eddy, LCSW, Esq. and Megan Hunter, MBA, It’s All Your Fault! High Conflict People explores the five types of people who can ruin your life—people with high conflict personalities and how they weave themselves into our lives in romance, at work, next door, at school, places of worship, and just about everywhere, causing chaos, exhaustion, and dread for everyone else.

They are the most difficult of difficult people — some would say they’re toxic. Without them, tv shows, movies, and the news would be boring, but who wants to live that way in your own life!

Have you ever wanted to know what drives them to act this way?

In the It’s All Your Fault podcast, we’ll take you behind the scenes to understand what’s happening in the brain and illuminates why we pick HCPs as life partners, why we hire them, and how we can handle interactions and relationships with them. We break down everything you ever wanted to know about people with the 5 high conflict personality types: narcissistic, borderline, histrionic, antisocial/sociopath, and paranoid.

And we’ll give you tips on how to spot them and how to deal with them.