In this heartfelt episode of Speak In Flow, we dive deep into a powerful and emotional journey with our host, Melinda Lee. Melinda opens up about her personal experience with the loss of her mother to mouth cancer. Her mother was a true pillar of selflessness, always putting her family's needs before her own. Melinda shares her story as she reflects on the importance of advocating for oneself and how this tragic experience has shaped her perspective on compassionate communication.
Episode Highlights:
1. The Selflessness of Melinda's Mother:
Melinda starts by recounting the touching story of her mother's battle with mouth cancer. Despite her own suffering, Melinda's mother always prioritized the well-being of her family. This selflessness left a lasting impression on Melinda and became the catalyst for her exploration into the importance of self-advocacy.
2. The Need to Advocate for Yourself:
Through her personal journey, Melinda emphasizes the significance of advocating for oneself. She explains how her mother's reluctance to advocate for her own needs ultimately had a profound impact on her health and well-being. Melinda's story serves as a powerful reminder that advocating for oneself is not selfish but necessary for one's overall well-being.
3. A Framework for Compassionate Communication:
Melinda introduces a simple yet effective framework for compassionate communication. She outlines steps to navigate conversations that allow individuals to express their needs and desires while maintaining respect and empathy for others. This framework can help listeners start honest and meaningful dialogues.
4. Inviting Others to Help Meet Your Needs:
In this section, Melinda shares insights on how to create an environment where others are more likely to assist in fulfilling your needs. She highlights the importance of vulnerability and how it can foster genuine connections. Melinda encourages listeners to open up and allow others to be a part of their support system.
5. Conclusion:
Melinda concludes the episode with a heartfelt message, urging everyone to embrace self-advocacy with compassion and understanding. She reflects on her own journey and how it has inspired her mission to help others learn the importance of advocating for themselves while maintaining respect and empathy.
Closing Thoughts:
This episode of Speak In Flow with Melinda Lee is a touching and inspirational exploration of the profound impact of selflessness and the importance of advocating for oneself. Melinda's personal journey serves as a powerful reminder that compassion and honest communication can transform our relationships and enhance our well-being. Tune in to this episode to learn how to advocate for yourself in a way that is respectful and compassionate, and start having the conversations that invite others to help you meet your needs.
Listen to the full episode on Speak In Flow Podcast to delve deeper into Melinda's heartfelt story and gain valuable insights into advocating for yourself with compassion
About Melinda:
Melinda Lee is a Presentation Skills Expert, Speaking Coach and nationally renowned Motivational Speaker. She holds an M.A. in Organizational Psychology, is an Insights Practitioner, and is a Certified Professional in Talent Development as well as Certified in Conflict Resolution. For over a decade, Melinda has researched and studied the state of “flow” and used it as a proven technique to help corporate leaders and business owners amplify their voices, access flow, and present their mission in a more powerful way to achieve results.
She has been the TEDx Berkeley Speaker Coach and worked with hundreds of executives and teams from Facebook, Google, Microsoft, Caltrans, Bay Area Rapid Transit System, and more. Currently, she lives in San Francisco, California, and is breaking the ancestral lineage of silence.
Website: https://speakinflow.com/
Facebook: https://m.facebook.com/speakinflow
Instagram: https://instagram.com/speakinflow
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mpowerall
Thanks for listening!
Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page.
Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below!
Subscribe to the podcast
If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app.
Leave us an Apple Podcasts review
Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.
In 2016, my mother passed away with cancer. And of
Melinda Lee:all places those found in her mouth. She did not speak up for
Melinda Lee:her needs. She was doing things for everyone else. Typical
Melinda Lee:immigrant, came here to the United States, just in survival
Melinda Lee:mode trying to do things for others find food, get money,
Melinda Lee:and, and doesn't that feel like what we do. I we're constantly
Melinda Lee:working and doing things for other people. And my mother
Melinda Lee:didn't stop. And this is one of her deepest regrets. As she was
Melinda Lee:laying on that hospital bed. She said, I wish I had more time for
Melinda Lee:myself. So this episode is for all of you who are on the go all
Melinda Lee:the time, and really not considering your deepest needs.
Melinda Lee:And I invite you today to really consider are your needs your
Melinda Lee:deepest needs being met? And how do you communicate that in a way
Melinda Lee:that is compassionate, that is empathetic for yourself and also
Melinda Lee:others. So we're going to go over a very simple structure on
Melinda Lee:how to do that. And it's by Rosenberg, and the book I invite
Melinda Lee:you to get is called nonviolent communication. And Rosenberg
Melinda Lee:advocate that says that while most of us are using violent
Melinda Lee:communication, we might not really be aware of it. But when
Melinda Lee:we go into exhaustion, burnout, and we start fingerpointing
Melinda Lee:saying you never helped me, or you don't care, those type of
Melinda Lee:words and language will cause a divide and, and be considered as
Melinda Lee:violent. And so alternatively, you have an opportunity to say
Melinda Lee:what you need in a very empathetic way. And in the book,
Melinda Lee:it talks about our deepest needs, my mother needed rest, my
Melinda Lee:mother needed support. And so there are basic ones that all
Melinda Lee:humans need. And Rosenberg talks about connection, love, empathy,
Melinda Lee:joy, creativity, rest fun. All of these when we're depleted
Melinda Lee:from it, we start to have emotion, we start to build up
Melinda Lee:emotion on top of that. And then when we have a lot of emotion on
Melinda Lee:top of that, we start to spew out words, if we don't get what
Melinda Lee:we want, it becomes passive aggressive, or we start to use
Melinda Lee:words and language that is violent and pointing fingers
Melinda Lee:because you're not getting what you deeply need. So here's a
Melinda Lee:simple framework that you can use to start advocating for
Melinda Lee:yourself compassionately. four parts, first is stating an
Melinda Lee:observation. Second, is stating your feeling around the
Melinda Lee:observation. Third, is stating your needs just like I talked
Melinda Lee:about, and fourth, is requesting not demanding. I'm going to
Melinda Lee:break down each of them. The first one is stating an
Melinda Lee:observation. You want to open up the conversation with facts,
Melinda Lee:facts that are indisputable, versus blame, or evaluation.
Melinda Lee:Start off with the fact like the observation, the action that you
Melinda Lee:noticed, I noticed that you turned in the report 15 minutes
Melinda Lee:late over the past week. Right. So being very specific. I
Melinda Lee:noticed that you didn't do the dishes for the fourth time this
Melinda Lee:month.
Melinda Lee:And so those are very specific actions. Alternatively, you can
Melinda Lee:start off with saying something like you're always late, you
Melinda Lee:never helped me. Right? How do you think that that's going to
Melinda Lee:be received, even if the observation and action you
Melinda Lee:notice validates your point, when you come at someone with
Melinda Lee:language like that, because you've been holding it in for so
Melinda Lee:long, and you can't take it anymore, that will cause
Melinda Lee:defensiveness in the other person, and then you'll break
Melinda Lee:the opportunity to even understand or come to some type
Melinda Lee:of solution together. And so I invite you to to really open up
Melinda Lee:the conversation with just observation. And not fact, there
Melinda Lee:is an Indian philosopher who said, observing without
Melinda Lee:evaluating is one of the highest forms of human intelligence. So
Melinda Lee:encourage you to start observing. And then once you
Melinda Lee:stated the observation, the fact that action that you've observed
Melinda Lee:And then you can move into stating your feeling around it.
Melinda Lee:When I saw that you turn in your report late for the third or
Melinda Lee:fourth time, I feel disappointed. I feel concerned,
Melinda Lee:because I'm not sure what's going to happen. I feel sad. So
Melinda Lee:these are feeling words using very specific language, sad,
Melinda Lee:concerned, disappointed. And the person is going to be hard for
Melinda Lee:them to get defensive, because this is your feeling. They
Melinda Lee:there, it's like, I'm owning my feeling, and I'm letting you
Melinda Lee:know about it. If someone had come to you and say, and said to
Melinda Lee:you, you shouldn't feel like that. I want you to really think
Melinda Lee:about how you started the opening? Did you start off with
Melinda Lee:a fact? Or did you start to do an evaluation, and then telling
Melinda Lee:them your feeling. So when you can start off with an opening
Melinda Lee:that is open, and not evaluative, then go into your
Melinda Lee:feeling, then it's more genuine, and people are more open to
Melinda Lee:hearing it because you're not there, they don't need to put
Melinda Lee:their defences up. So observation, then your feeling
Melinda Lee:around the observation, and then finally, staining your need. And
Melinda Lee:I noticed that you didn't do your chores over the last three
Melinda Lee:weeks, like you said you would. And that makes me so
Melinda Lee:disappointed. Because I need to trust your words, I need to be
Melinda Lee:able to trust you, I need to be able to know and I can count on
Melinda Lee:you. So you stating the needs. And if you need more support, go
Melinda Lee:into the book and look at all the basic needs, I need to rest,
Melinda Lee:I want to be able to count on you to do the dishes so I can
Melinda Lee:rest. So the more you're claiming your needs or claim
Melinda Lee:your feelings or your needs, the more you're going to have a
Melinda Lee:chance to get them and achieve them and obtain them. And you're
Melinda Lee:seeing it in a very compassionate way. Finally, you
Melinda Lee:go into requesting, can we talk about how you can do the dishes
Melinda Lee:more often? Can we talk about how we can help you with getting
Melinda Lee:the report done on time, not a demand. A demand causes
Melinda Lee:defensiveness again. So if you say I want you to do the report,
Melinda Lee:and I want you to be on time, people get defensive. So when
Melinda Lee:you say there's a question, people at least have an
Melinda Lee:opportunity to comment, people have an opportunity to give them
Melinda Lee:give you their story, and give and then you can have a
Melinda Lee:dialogue, right start to do deep listening, and start to
Melinda Lee:understand perhaps if they're resistant, they might not have
Melinda Lee:their needs met. And so you want to start asking questions about
Melinda Lee:what are their needs? Maybe they are, they're not getting their
Melinda Lee:need of autonomy met. They're a teen and they don't want to do
Melinda Lee:the dishes because they want to be autonomous. And so really
Melinda Lee:asking the questions about what are their deepest needs, not
Melinda Lee:just the feeling, but also a need underneath that. The need
Melinda Lee:is the root of all feelings. If you think about a plant, you
Melinda Lee:have the plant and then you have the roots, the emotions that are
Melinda Lee:happening at the top are all the feelings and then deep down
Melinda Lee:inside, the feelings are coming up because a deep need the root
Melinda Lee:is not being met. So I encourage you to go deep and find out what
Melinda Lee:need is not being met. Using this powerful, simple framework
Melinda Lee:that will allow you to speak compassionately, speak,
Melinda Lee:empathetically, can you know being more compassionate, using
Melinda Lee:this framework, to be compassionate, to advocate for
Melinda Lee:your needs, your deepest desires, it is only when you
Melinda Lee:advocate for your deepest desires and your needs, that you
Melinda Lee:have the opportunity to be met by somebody. And when you say it
Melinda Lee:in that way, you start to open up your heart receive with
Melinda Lee:compassion, know that when you can believe that you are so
Melinda Lee:deserving of receiving all that is available to you then other
Melinda Lee:people will receive and want to get it's a beautiful universal
Melinda Lee:law, the giving and receiving and most of us are constantly
Melinda Lee:giving and then when you can only give yourself what you
Melinda Lee:want. Other people will also want to give you what you
Melinda Lee:deserve. So remember that. Remember, by using nonviolent
Melinda Lee:communication, you can start to receive and receive what you
Melinda Lee:desire. i I wish that my mom advocated for her needs. I wish
Melinda Lee:that she was able to understand take A time to understand her
Melinda Lee:deepest needs and allow herself to speak and allow herself to
Melinda Lee:receive help people to support her. And I know that she's not
Melinda Lee:here with us today. But it is my passion and my duty and my
Melinda Lee:responsibility to impart how we can all do this together in a
Melinda Lee:very empathetic way, so that we can better understand each
Melinda Lee:other, better understand each other's needs, so that we can
Melinda Lee:all be closer, have deeper, meaningful relationships, even
Melinda Lee:when there's chaos, complexity, and know that by understanding
Melinda Lee:each other more deeply, that you can build a more meaningful
Melinda Lee:relationship and a better worlds. So take that those four
Melinda Lee:simple tips and a framework to speak non violently. Until then,
Melinda Lee:until I see you on the next episode, I wish you best and I
Melinda Lee:am your sister in flow. Much love to you