Handling the know betters.
joelchmielak1
Posts: 48 Member
What do you all do when confronted by the know betters. Those folks that tell you how great you’re doing, ask what you’re doing, then tell you you’re doing it wrong? For many months I said I’ll check that out or oh good idea, but it’s getting harder. Lately I’m catching myself saying well my results say you’re wrong, but I don’t want to be snarky or sarcastic all the time lol. The one that gets me all the time is not to eat fruit or brown rice. Ugh. Almost a hundred pounds of weight loss says I might have a good idea of what works for me. It’s getting harder the closer to goal I get.
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Oh I got to a point to say straight out. "Well I think that is BS and my results should tell you more than some vague book by a writer only interested in getting a fat wallet".
Yep snarky but got them off my back.
But usually it was more of "Thanks, but I think you can see I have a handle on this one".7 -
Truthfully, I've learned to avoid the topic altogether. Minds don't get changed. You keep up the good work and stay with what works for you! !!3
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I just want to congratulate you on your great results. As @lauracups said, where possible it's best to avoid the subject.
If others broach the subject, or "then, don't want to listen".
As you stated your results speak for you, I tend to just say
"I'm doing what works for me" and leave it at that.2 -
I usually say "I eat whatever I want, just count the calories, and it works," and eventually they run out of steam. I think they mean it to be kind and helpful, they just want to share in your success.
Eventually this will stop, because your weight loss will become "old news" and people will stop commenting entirely. That takes some getting used to, too!1 -
Typically if someone says something like that I gauge the type of person they are and what response will work.
If I think they're actually willing to have a discussion I'll ask if that's something they read somewhere or if it is something they've found is what works for them personally. Then we go from there about calorie counting and personal struggles with moderation.
If they're just telling you to show they know something and aren't the listening type I say, "Interesting, I've personally found that to not be an issue." I then change the subject.3 -
Why are people so stupid??? Are they blind??? Why are they not asking you for your ever impressive opinion? You deserve snarky1
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I do the same as was stated above by usmc . I first try to judge if it's even worth my time to explain or not and take it from there.
The know it all types are frustrating to deal with for sure and there's plenty of them out there! What I've come to realize is that most of the time they are just bitter contrarians. They'll have a come back for everything that isn't done their way and will pick apart everything just for the sake of picking.
Choose your battles wisely and try to change the topic. If that doesn't work, let them have it.1 -
joelchmielak1 wrote: »For many months I said I’ll check that out or oh good idea, but it’s getting harder.
yeah; you shouldn't have to pander to intrusive and pushy people. they're the ones being rude, so why should you have to be polite to them? if i like the person or think they're being fairly sincere i might just drop the whole idea of getting any words in for myself, and switch over to totally 'them' mode for a while.
but i'm severely allergic to people who think they have supervisory rights to my life, and i deeeeeeeply resent being played by that social manipulation that goes 'let me use something you said as a pretext for banging on about me', so i use this universal shut-down phrase that goes 'well that's fine. but that's you' quite a lot.
basically, try not to get into any engagement with their implicit undermining of you. just close the door like they're jehovah's witnesses and you already have something else planned for the day.3 -
I sort of had to deal with something similar with a health issue. One couple that my parents are friendly with are both doctors. Both are GPs; one tends to act as though she's an authority on all medical issues.
In September, I was diagnosed with bladder cancer. And I was extremely fortunate that the uro-oncologist to which I was referred happens to be a top name in the field, not just in this city, but all over. Well, I told my parents about the diagnosis and that they were going to set a date to get the tumors/lesions removed (TURBT surgery) and then they'd be able to see where things stood.
My parents talked it over with this couple and "she" started in with, "How could they not do a biopsy at the time of the cystoscopy? Why didn't they do this? Why didn't her doctor order that? She needs to tell them to..."
Well. Fortunately, I'm 45 and not living in the same city. I got why my parents wanted to talk things over with a medical professional who was a personal friend. But at the same time... Yeesh. I ended up saying, "Dad, honestly? Here's my uro-oncologist's name. I'm going to email you a link to some stuff he's put online to help patients and their families understand more; he told me to check them out when everything had sunk in. Please, Google this guy. I know Dr. S. is your friend and I know she knows her stuff, but... I think I'm going to take the specialist's recommendations over the family doctor's on this one. Especially when, if you look at his credentials, he seems to know what he's doing."
All of a sudden the panicked phone calls stopped. Oh, and the surgery went well, I'm taking my last immunotherapy treatment this week and then... it looks like I'll probably have to be monitored over the next few years to make sure nothing grows back. (Thankfully, it's a non-invasive cancer 92-93% of the time, but if the lesions come back, I'll need more surgery to make sure it doesn't stick around long enough to morph into the other 7-8%.)
tl;dr, If you're getting results doing your thing, a polite but firm, "I hear what you're saying, but I think I'm going to stick with what's working for me," seems to work well. Invoke authority if you must, but stick to your guns.
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You can just say 'I have a plan that has been working for me, but thanks'. No further explanation needed. If they push you further than that, you can explain that you already lost 100 lbs (congrats, btw!) without help. Honestly, though, they don't deserve an explanation. If you want to snarkily shut them down, that is fine. They are being rude.4
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Just smile, say thank you and turn your attention away from them. You don't owe anyone an explanation of your choices. Don't let someone's boorish behavior ruin your day4
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Ditto iowalinda. I do my best to avoid conversations about diet and fitness. When losing my response to questions about how I was doing it was “old fashioned diet and exercise.” And move on.
Media is loaded with noise about diet and fitness. People hear it and are happy to repeat it. This week’s great idea will be discredited next Monday. Will make you crazy.
Keep your own counsel.1 -
Practice and perfect this response:
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Just say "thank you" or nod. Let them have their moment if "expert", ignore their advice in your mind, and move on to the next topic.1
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The high road is always the best and smartest road......I am not very smart, I absolutely hate those attitudes and sometimes, when I’m weak, I will challenge them. Usually it only takes dropping a nugget of science on them and they shut up. Seriously, educate yourself so that when the polite response doesn’t work you can defend (I hate using that term) what you are doing. They will never go away and you will always have to listen to how you’re doing it wrong/you look sick/you’ve lost too much......etc. good luck to you. You probably should not listen to my advice.1
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As with many situations at work I smile, nod and say thanks. Ignoring what they said or in my mind wondering where they come up with this stuff. Keep doing what you are doing!2
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kommodevaran wrote: »Practice and perfect this response:
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