ISBN-13: 9783565236886 / Angielski / Miękka / 244 str.
This book explores the psychology behind why certain conversations feel impossible to have, even when silence creates more damage than honesty ever could. It examines what makes conversations "difficult"-not the topics themselves, but the fear of rupture, rejection, or emotional escalation that accompanies speaking uncomfortable truths.Rather than offering scripted responses or communication formulas, this book reframes difficult conversations as opportunities to practice staying present with discomfort while maintaining relational integrity. It investigates the role of conflict avoidance in perpetuating resentment, the difference between protecting peace and abandoning your needs, and why we often prioritize other people's comfort over our own truth. It explores how past experiences with conflict shape current avoidance patterns, what emotional regulation is required to navigate disagreement, and how to discern between conversations worth having and battles not worth fighting.Through compassionate inquiry, the book navigates the fear of being misunderstood, the guilt that accompanies disappointing someone, and the vulnerability of expressing needs without guarantees of being met. It offers insight into recognizing when silence is self-protection versus self-abandonment, preparing yourself emotionally before entering hard conversations, and staying grounded when the other person's response isn't what you hoped for.This is an invitation to approach difficult conversations not as conflicts to win, but as moments where honesty and connection are tested-and where your willingness to speak truth, even when your voice shakes, determines whether relationships deepen or remain superficial.
The conversation you're avoiding isn't difficult because of what needs to be said. It's difficult because saying it means risking that the relationship can't hold your truth.