Ratings5
Average rating3.4
**Entrepreneur Buster Benson's guide to having more honest and constructive arguments, featuring whimsical illustrations and real-world examples of arguments-gone-wrong.**
The way we argue is broken — whether we're arguing about immigration, gun control, the existence of ghosts, the best burger in the city, or who's allowed to sit in your favorite chair. We end up digging in our heels and yelling at one another or choosing to avoid heated topics entirely. Either way, problems continue to fester under the surface and inevitably return as even bigger problems later on. There has to be a better way.
Buster Benson, a Silicon Valley entrepreneur with 2-decades of experience facilitating hard conversations at some of the biggest and most controversial tech companies in the world, is on a mission to help us see disagreement differently. He recommends 8 things to try in order to make disagreements more productive. The way we talk is laden with old conversational habits that need to be re-examined — and by practicing these 8 new habits we can flip frustrating, unproductive disagreements into ones that bear fruit and bring people closer together. Instead of dreading arguments, or avoiding them at all costs, we'll even start looking forward to them as one of the most rewarding parts of our lives.
In this book you'll learn practical skills to make your disagreements more fruitful by:
* Learning to see and appreciate four other fruits of disagreements that are more valuable than "winning," and easier to harvest.
* Identifying the kind of argument you're having so you can know how to best approach it.
* Articulating the best possible version of your opponent's argument before attacking it.
With this new toolkit, we can learn to see the world as a less frustrating and more interesting place. Gone will be the days of mentally gearing up to attack people and defending ourselves from people we disagree with. Instead, we can explore more possibilities and perspectives in the world, simply because we'll no longer be afraid to wade into scary topics of conversation.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book is not perfect. But it does a very good job of 1. Breaking down the things that make arguments so frustrating or scary, and 2. pointing out how our adamant shouting about our own beliefs makes it impossible to move ahead with anything but more fighting. It's already made me act differently during disagreements. Lots to ponder, especially in these divided days.