This is a really good time with what's happening in the world for people to balance and redefine their relationships with everyone in their lives. Asking is a great way to do it.
Elayne: Do you think when you have women do the exercise of filling in a name and then an ask, even though as you said it's just imaginary or an exercise for the imagination, do you find that most women get more caught up on the person they're asking or what the ask actually is? I ask that because I think sometimes it is the ask itself, sometimes it is worry about the judgment of the person that we might be asking, or sometimes it's both. I just wonder if you've seen women get caught up on one part or the other more?
Kasia: The specific nature of this exercise is to open up the inner landscape. So we encourage women to include as many names as possible, as many requests as possible, and branch out even to your third grade teacher because this is an exercise in the imagination. If they're getting caught up on a particular person or a particular ask, it's because they're not asking broadly enough, in terms of what they could possibly want, or who they're including – who makes the cut, who doesn't make the cut. Usually the first thing is you only get family members, significant others, co-workers. The people who are closest and not going further out. It's actually easiest to practice some of these things with people who are a little bit further out. The idea is to open up the inner landscape. Every woman will see something in this exercise that has her go, ‘Wait a minute, this is an imaginary prison. I could totally ask that. Why? Hmm.’
The other thing in the class is, we give instruction that nobody actually make any of the asks for the first week or two, depending on how long the class is. And the cool part is, in those first two weeks, the things that are written are oftentimes offered by the person that was on the list.
Elayne: They put it out into the universe.
Kasia: Yeah, I mean, you could have a magical approach to this. Like, ‘Wow, that's such a coincidence.’ But really what you do when you do that is you clean up your inner signal.
Elayne: Yep.
Kasia: You regard the other person. It's very easy for, especially the most powerful, independent women who have done it by themselves and do everything, to regard others as how they've shown up in response to that. Useless. Once you put someone on a list and start regarding them as potentially not useless, how the subtlest signals get sent and received start to change. You become more open to receiving that and they can feel that it's safer to offer some of that.
Elayne: They can sense that even if they don't know that you've just done this exercise where you put their name on the list.
Kasia: After doing this exercise with 1000s of women over the years, we have not had a single class where the first two weeks things on the list did not happen by themselves. It always happens.
Elayne: I believe it. I remember a friend of mine, Dawn Shadrick – I took this workshop, called Momentum, in New York a few years ago, changed my life totally – and we were talking about relationships. She told me about creating space in your life when you're looking for a partner. Even from the point of, ‘Do you have room in your closet for this person to be in your space? Where does this person fit into your life?’ In my mind, I was thinking, ‘What do you mean? That doesn't make sense?’ I'm being more practical, like they're not gonna move in right away. But it was this idea of in your mind, in your energy, just like you just said, creating space for this person that you want to come into your life.
Kasia: That is the perfect metaphor.
Elayne: And I am very conscious of that now. My closet has a little bit of room in it. Somebody could squeeze in there.
So I want to ask you, Kasia, before you go. We've talked about asking making an outrageous ask, but what about hearing, ‘no’? How do we handle ‘no’ and how do we not think that ‘no’ says whatever we think it says about us?
Kasia: First thing, how one feels about ‘no’ is dependent upon your previous experiences with it. So getting my students to have positive experiences with the word ‘no’ is challenging, number one.
To backtrack a little bit. Remember that I mentioned that we are raised to police ourselves? We are raised to have our attention inward? Women will often times default to an inward state of attention, which can be beautiful because it means we tend to be more attracted to meditation, yoga, and inward practices. But also the dark side of this is that when we hear ‘no’ we don't hear no to the request, we hear ‘no’ to us. The pain of hearing not just ‘no’ to the request, but, ‘You had no right to ask.’ So what we need to do is uncross those wires, and have a woman have a positive playful relationship with the word, ‘no’.
How do you do that?
Well, the first thing is realizing really basic truth. When somebody says ‘no’, most of the time it's not because they're trying to be a jerk. Most of the time, it's because it's bringing up something that may threaten something they want to protect, something they care about, something that's important to them. It doesn't matter if it's unimportant to you. It's important to them. Their vanity, order and the rules, or something much more tender. So when someone says ‘no’, I'm not saying to go violate without consent and go, ‘Why not? You're stupid.’ Right? I'm saying ‘no’ is actually where a very new conversation begins. Because if they're saying no to protect something they care about, that is an opportunity for an immense amount of intimacy. You wouldn't call it intimacy in a professional situation; in a professional situation you’d call it potential for collaboration, for strengthening the relationship, for understanding what the goals are. When you're faced with ‘no’, the first thing to do is make sure you're keeping your attention on them. When a woman hears ‘no’, her tendency is to attract all of our attention back onto herself, feel the pain, go, ‘ow’. The other person feels energetically dropped. If you stay with them and get curious. Don't use the words, ‘Why not?’, because those words feel very attack-like. But get curious about what this ‘no’ is trying to protect. What does this person care about that this ‘no’ is necessary for?
If you show care and interest in the thing that they're trying to protect, a lot of the time the ‘no’ will vanish on its own. The person themselves will feel safe enough with your request that their ‘no’ becomes a ‘yes’. Other times you have a desire, they have something to protect meaning they have a desire, you can start a new conversation that gets both of you what you want and you're on a whole other level.