It can be oh, so quiet. Stealth. Unassuming. It winds it way
around to you. You barely hear the tail rattle, or the “S-S-S-S-S-S” emanate
from its forked tongue.
And why would you?
There appears to be nothing to it. You give “nice” people the
benefit of the doubt.
I once confronted someone about a reoccurring issue. I mentioned
how a deadline kept getting missed.
This person normally was quite jovial, pleasant, charming.
Therefore, their response to me was startling. Instead of acknowledging there
was an issue, taking responsibility for it, and then following through with
changed action, they sharply spat back…
“I think
I’ve been very nice about this.”
And still, following
that pointed remark, there continued to be inconsistencies, for which they avoided
ownership of their failings.
It was then and there I
received a gigantic lesson in “nice.”
Nice isn’t always so
nice.
Often, at best, “nice”
is passive-aggressive… and weaponized.
“I think
I’ve been very nice about this” is the nice response.
Nice is all
about pointing out just how wonderful it is.
Look at me.
But “Kind”
says nothing about how kind they are. Kind just is.
It has nothing to
prove. It has no one to please. It is largesse. It is freely given love, grace,
acceptance, forgiveness, without keeping score.
Yes, concerning “I think I’ve been very nice about this,” there,
indeed, was a keeping score element attached to it.
From my vantage point,
it felt like this person was awaiting my congratulations on just how nice they
were to me, this mere mortal. Forget about staying on topic. I felt like it was
my job to tell this person how fantastic they were… for failing in their responsibilities.
Nice has a
superiority to it, a judgment.
“I think
I’ve been very nice about this.”
Translation, perhaps?
“I am a better person than you. Look at how I’m tolerating your behavior,
daring to address what you think is a problem. You should be ashamed.”
Now, to be fair, I
cannot say, for sure, that’s exactly what this person meant. But that’s how it felt
to me, on a gut level, in the moment.
And, again, you stack
“Nice” up against “Kind,” and you see a dramatic difference.
Kind is
about decency, for decency’s sake, not getting accolades for doing one’s job.
Kind minds its own
business, does its own work. It’s not interested in being repeatedly told how
wonderful a human being they are for doing their job.
If talk is cheap, then
Kindness is priceless.
Nice has
strings. Agenda.
“I think
I’ve been very nice about this.”
Did you catch it? It’s
quite subtle, but it’s there. There is an expectation of getting something from
us. It’s implied that because “they” scratched our backs, we’ll be
obligated to do the same concerning them.
Nice is agenda-laden:
control, power, sympathy, “perks.”
Nice hisses with being
owed something. Nice places us in a debtor’s prison. We can, all too easily,
feel trapped, like we have no choice but to respond according to
specification.
But “Kind” is
not transactional.
Kind gives because the
spirit and the heart are willingly engaged in doing so. And there’s the key
word: willingly. No obligation, no strings, no expectation. Kind is not
interested in making a purchase. Kind, literally, is charity. There’s no
pay off expected. There’s nothing to earn. It’s about freely receiving.
Nice is
concerned with appearances.
Perhaps you know a
person who is always involved in the good causes. They’re constantly
volunteering at their church, their kids’ school. They regularly attend
fundraisers and walkathons. And they have the photos, plaques and adulation to
prove it.
A segment of toxic
individuals out there is collectively known as “Communal Narcissists.” It’s
probably a safe bet that many “nice people” are, indeed, these kinds of Narcissists.
They are the do-
gooders, not for doing good’s sake, but for how other people view and acclaim
them.
There’s nothing wrong
with worthy causes and volunteering. The key is the motive for doing it.
Is it to help others? Or is it for a photo op or the esteem others
lavish upon this person?
“I think I’ve been very nice about
this.”
It is about image. The
“nice” person my be overrun with the internal question, “How does this make me
look?”
But, again,
Kind is different; it gets messy and doesn’t care what it looks like.
Whereas a “nice”
response is looking for every camera, every bit of attention and publicity, the
Kind response is trying not to garner unnecessary attention. The Kind person
recognizes that would be a distraction to the cause and the work they’re trying
to do. There’s an element of anonymity involved. The phrase, “Never let your
right hand know what your left hand is doing” captures that spirit beautifully.
Kind is too busy to
worry about the appearance. Doing the worthwhile thing is what matters most to
them.
Nice is a
double standard.
There is a hypocrisy
within this state of being. In a certain toxic “nice” person, there exists both
the preferential treatment of some people over others, those deemed “more
valuable,” and the unfair expectation the nice hiss demand of us. Not just
expects. Demands.
Returning to the person
who uttered, “I think I’ve been very
nice about this,” I experienced both that preferential
treatment and the spirit of demand from them, determining I should defer
constantly, no matter what the situation was.
I was treated in an abusive,
dismissive way by this individual.
Yet, I repeatedly witnessed
their capability to treat someone else in a radically different manner. It
wasn’t about unique personalities or someone having a bad day. Rather, it was
the intentional assessment of how I was disposable, whereas another specific
person was someone assigned the value of opportunity and gain. Hence, the
different treatment.
To the outside world, I
encountered them, via fake cordial pleasantries. But, behind closed doors? I
got the real deal: disrespect and abuse.
But Kind is
consistent.
It responds with
universal respect to all. That doesn’t mean the kind person is perfect. It
simply means that their determination, from the start, is to view life and
humanity as precious. And then, that person acts accordingly.
There’s no preferential
treatment, no sidling up to a person for opportunistic gain. There’s no “angel
in public, devil at home” component to their natures. What we see and
experience of them is truly what we get.
They don’t hiss with
“nice” because “kind” speaks with dignity, humility and equality.
I once heard how the
great boxer, Muhammad Ali made it an
intentional point, at any of the high-publicity events he attended, to
purposely go out of his way, to go to the back kitchens and to the “lesser
rooms,” to meet the “common people,” over the celebrities.
He preferred spending
time with these people. Why? Because they were real; they were kind. He didn’t
need to worry about Narcissistic, “yes men” hisses emanating from them.
Kind doesn’t hiss. It
doesn’t need to.
So, it’s in our best
interest to discern what we hear and experience of a person. If we feel “nice”
is coming at us, what’s behind it? We’ll know if something is off. The “nice
hiss” trips our gut check. We can detect it. Just like we can detect genuine
kindness.
The homework then?
Start detecting.
Do we hear that
hiss?
Copyright © 2020 by
Sheryle Cruse
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