Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Real Friends Say "No", Part 2
A story to illustrate yesterday's conversation about boundaries...
I have a very good friend who was once going through a hard time. Job, health, relationships, and finances were all weighing him down.
He had been there for me during a hard time, and I wanted to be there for him too.
So when he came to me, excited about the new job he had just applied for, I shared in his excitement.
The truth is, I didn't think it was the right job for him. While he was fully qualified for the position, it seemed too political and not creative enough for his gifts. I had concerns about how it would affect him spiritually, relationally, mentally and emotionally. But he came to me looking for a friend to share in his excitement. Not one who would tell him it would never work. So I celebrated with him and kept my concerns to myself.
That is, until he asked if I would be willing to serve as one of his references.
And I had to say "no."
Actually it came out more like this: "You can list me as a reference. But if they call me I am going to tell them not to hire you."
Not very sensitive of me, I know.
He was obviously shocked, and rightfully hurt by my blatant rejection.
But because he respects me and our friendship, he allowed me to share my concerns. And because I respect him and our friendship, I left the decision of what to do about the job up to him.
It wasn't going to change our relationship if he took the job or not. It wasn't going to change our relationship whether or not he listed me as a reference. But it could have changed our relationship if we hadn't respected each others' boundaries.
He honored my boundary - that in order to be true to my word I couldn't recommend him. And I honored his - that the choice of whether to take the job or not was his alone.
In the end he didn't take the job. Because my concerns pointed him to his own uneasiness about the position.
But shortly thereafter, another job came along. This one perfectly suited for him. Where he could be creative and independent, experience growth and challenge. And truly make a difference. (He didn't ask me to serve as a reference for this one!)
Our friendship was made stronger through this experience of exercising boundaries and trust. And in the future I know that if I need help in wisdom and decision making I can call on him. Because he will be honest. Blatantly so if necessary. And I will give him the same respect.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment