yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How to spot high-conflict people before it's too late | Big Think Top Ten 2018 | Bill Eddy


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

What's interesting is high-conflict personalities seem to—we've really boiled it down to four key characteristics. The first and maybe the most stunning is a preoccupation with blaming other people. It's really, "It's all your fault,"—and you may have experienced this—"and it's not at all my fault." That's zero. "My part of the problem is zero." And that's how high-conflict people talk. And they'll say, "Don't you get it? It's all your fault."

The second is a lot of all-or-nothing thinking. "Of course it's all your fault, but my way or the highway." Solutions to problems are: "There's all-good people and there's all-bad people." So they have this kind of all-or-nothing perspective. A third is often, but not always, unmanaged emotions. And you may see that; people that just start yelling or just start crying or just storm out of a room—that kind of behavior we're seeing, but it's emotions that they're not managing.

And the fourth is extremes of behavior. And one thing I talk about in the book 'Five Types of People' is this 90 percent rule, that 90 percent of people don't do some of the things that high-conflict people do. So if you see some shocking behavior and then the person makes an excuse for it, that's often the tip of the iceberg. So it's preoccupation with blaming others, all-or-nothing thinking, unmanaged emotions, and extreme behaviors. That seems to be the pattern for high-conflict personalities. People that have those we call high-conflict people. But, by the way, don't tell them that you think that—that'll blow up in your face.

So target of blame seems to be why these folks can become so difficult. If you're the target of blame, your life may be ruined by one of these folks, and that's what people need to become aware of. So the target of blame—each of these five high-conflict personalities tends to zero in generally on one person. It could change over time, but they see that person as the cause of all their problems.

And so they want to control that person or eliminate that person or destroy or humiliate that person. It's a fixation on one person, and all of their life problems they emotionally focus on that person. So you don't want to be one of those folks. How to avoid being a target of blame? First of all, if you see warning signs of this behavior, don't get too close to such a person. You may be a friend, but don't be the closest friend. You may be a co-worker, but don't be the closest co-worker.

Because what seems to happen is the people they get really close to are the ones that are most at-risk of becoming their targets of blame. But it could be anybody. They tend to target intimate others and people in authority. So this could be boyfriends, girlfriends, husbands, wives, parents, children, co-workers, neighbors they get close to. It also could be police, it could be a government agency or government official, it could be their boss, it could be the company owner.

So they tend to focus on intimate others and/or people in authority. Now the way to avoid becoming a target of blame is not getting too close to them but also not engaging in conflict with them. They often invite conflict, like they'll say outrageous things and you may feel like you've got to persuade them that they're wrong, and that's what I call a "forget about it." Just forget about it. You're not going to change their mind. If they're a difficult person, a high-conflict person, this is who they are, and you may not really even exist for them.

So if you argue with them, they're not going to change. So save yourself the trouble. But when people challenge them is often when they turn against you, and they see you in their all-or-nothing eyes as "all bad." And so you don't want to have that kind of relationship. So if you're in a personal relationship, family relationship, neighbor, co-worker, et cetera, you can manage relationships with these folks, but usually at an arm's length, and don't make it too confrontational.

Don't say they have a high-conflict personality. Don't argue with them or try to convince them. Don't try to give them insight into themselves. You can just say, "Oh well, that's interesting. Hey, I've got to go now." Something like that.

More Articles

View All
Phrases and clauses | Syntax | Khan Academy
Hello Garans, hello Rosie, hello David. So, okay, so you know the Schoolhouse Rock song, uh, “Conjunction Junction,” right? Classic, classic. Uh, so in that song, you know, the chorus asks, like, “Conjunction Junction, what’s your function?” And then thi…
Later stages of the Civil War part 1
All right, so we’ve been talking about the later stages of the American Civil War. In the last videos, we talked about the Battle of Gettysburg and the Gettysburg Address, which happened in November of 1863, as Abraham Lincoln went to the site of the Batt…
Compare rational numbers using a number line
What we’re going to do in this video is get some practice comparing numbers, especially positive and negative numbers. So for each of these pairs of numbers, I want you to either write a less than sign or a greater than sign, or just think about which of …
Determining congruent triangles example
We have four triangles depicted here, and they’ve told us that the triangles are not drawn to scale. We are asked which two triangles must be congruent. So, pause this video and see if you can work this out on your own before we work through this together…
The Ancient City That Mastered Water
It’s a cold, rainy night in the walled city of Cordoba, medieval Spain. Watchmen guard the city, unaware that an entire army of Christian soldiers are about to launch a surprise attack. In a single night, they conquer the entire city, bringing the Muslim …
Ecological succession | Biodiversity and human impacts | High school biology | Khan Academy
You look at a community that is in a given habitat. A natural question is to say, “Well, has that community always been that way? Has it always been there? Was there a time where maybe there was no life there?” And the answer is, well, yes, the communitie…