One day, a bully turned to Andersen on the street: “Tell me, do you call this miserable object on your head a hat?” “And that pitiful object under your fashionable hat you call a head?” – immediately responded the storyteller.
One day, a bully turned to Andersen on the street: “Tell me, do you call this miserable object on your head a hat?” “And that pitiful object under your fashionable hat you call a head?” – immediately responded the storyteller. Those of us who have often envied such easy answers and dreamed of learning how to parry verbal thrusts (or blows) will finally receive the long-awaited guidance. It turns out that rudeness is not so diverse, it can be reduced to several basic “techniques”, which, in turn, have counter-techniques. The main one is to switch attention from yourself to the “enemy” and ask him a question about himself. The psychologist Vladinata Petrova’s manual also provides various specific examples, typical situations, and discusses the subtleties of verbal self-defense.
EKSMO, 160 p.