How to Handle Negative Reactions When You Speak Up

Episode 467 | Author: Emilie Aries

How do you lean into your assertiveness when someone doesn’t appreciate it?

Here’s a hot take that will surprise no one: the world is still conflicted about whether or not it likes assertive women.

I’ve received some not-so-hot feedback in the last few months that has me thinking a lot about how we react when our outspokenness or our willingness to be assertive is challenged. Mostly, I receive positive comments: sometimes, women approach me after talks to tell me they appreciate my ability to “own the stage,” take charge, and be heard. A couple of times—usually in smaller group settings where I don’t have that authority inherent in being the leader—I’ve heard that my straightforward approach to communication might leave a poor taste in people’s mouths.

I haven’t always been able or willing to run the very real risks associated with speaking up while female, and I won’t pretend I can always just shake off negative feedback. But I have developed some skills to deal with these interactions in a constructive manner in the moment, even while the rest of my brain is screaming that I need to run out of the room to nurse my shame in private.

Here are three tips to help you navigate your next experience with negative feedback about your communication style.

Get curious, not furious

The urge to become defensive in response to negative feedback is totally normal. Often, our faces flush and we feel embarrassed, but there’s a lot of potential in an exchange like this if you can fight that instinct and instead leverage your emotional intelligence to respond thoughtfully.

Ask for more specifics. Can they give you an example of what caused them to have this impression of you? By asking this, you’re showing you are open to discussing the issue and also putting the onus on them to think about their claim and get more detailed in their feedback. 

Pick your relationship battles

Last year, someone I was in an extracurricular group with became quite upset when I questioned his unilateral edict on something that should have been a group decision. 

Sometimes, it’s very important to delve into negative feedback on your outspokenness because the relationship in question is significant in terms of your current or future career or a personal connection. Other times, such as in the case of the put-out fellow above, you’ve sparked the ire of someone who you’re unlikely to cross paths with again after the project is over. 

I won’t pretend the micro-feud that sprung up from that interaction didn’t keep me up at night, but it’s a time when I should have taken my own advice: ask yourself whether the person presenting the feedback is someone whose respect matters to you. If the answer is no, give yourself permission to be disliked.

Tip #3: Take what serves you and leave the rest

Even once you’ve requested some more details and determined that this is a relationship you’re interested in maintaining, you aren’t required to address all the “problems” presented to you. 

Instead, take the nuggets of truth that serve you and leave the rest. When I received some negative feedback from someone I respect, I mulled over it for quite a while and ultimately decided there were some helpful grains of truth—things I would do well to be more aware of when I speak out in group settings. 

But it’s all too easy, especially as women, to assume that feedback should be implemented simply because it was shared. Every day, we come up against power, gender, and workplace dynamics that are beyond our control, and I’m not willing to shutter my authenticity or confidence to fit into a culture that is still celebrating the silent woman. I don’t want any of you to do that, either.

These tips are just the tip of a very complicated iceberg, and I’m not implying the shift to confidence and assertiveness is quick and painless. We don’t just flip a switch and become outspoken women. It takes focused integration of this approach, repeated time and again. Eventually, it starts to feel more natural to resist society’s ongoing attempts to turn down our volume.

The fact is, any time you set out to unleash your full potential, you’re going to come up against friction and get feedback you don’t like. If tips like these strike a chord, my book, Bossed Up: A Grown Woman's Guide to Getting Your Sh*t Together, has tons of thoughts and advice on owning your voice and taking charge.

Related Links From Today’s Episode:

Read “The Courage to Be Disliked: The Japanese Phenomenon That Shows You How to Change Your Life and Achieve Real Happiness” by Ichiro Kishimi and Fumitake Koga

Get Emilie’s book, “Bossed Up: A Grown Woman's Guide to Getting Your Sh*t Together”

SPEAK UP: An Assertive Communication Course

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

Learn how to SPEAK UP in the face of negative feedback:

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