The Columbus Dispatch

Reader wants to stop the habit of crying during conflict

- Write to Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com

Adapted from an online discussion. Dear Carolyn: I have to have a difficult conversati­on with my doctor next week.

Due to my mix of frustratio­n, worry and the fact that I will likely not be wearing pants, I am almost certain I will start crying. I really don’t want to cry — I am justifiabl­y angry and don’t want this doctor’s comfort and reassuranc­e, and don’t want my concerns dismissed as over-emotional. How do

I stop a lifelong habit of crying during confrontat­ion by next week?

— Stop Crying!

I’m so sorry, this sounds stressful and exhausting.

Two things to try: 1. Rehearse what you’re going to say. If you have a friend easygoing enough to role-play this with you, then there’s your plan for an hour this weekend and a tuneup the night before; if you don’t have that friend (they’re pretty rare), then spend some time feeling ridiculous in front of a mirror. Work on the phrasing, write down the key points.

2. Make this the first thing you say to your doc: “Warning, I cry when I’m angry, upset, stressed and during most confrontat­ions. Please ignore it because I don’t want the distractio­n.”

So, short version, do what you can to preempt the tears, then make room for them if they show up anyway. Trying too hard to fight them often just makes them worse.

You didn’t ask for this, but: time for a new doctor?

Or this: Make sure you have a lot of distractio­ns lined up for your free time between now and the appointmen­t.

Even if you were totally fine with crying, you’d have little to gain from perseverat­ing your way to next week. Hope the appointmen­t goes well.

Readers’ thoughts:

“Write it down! Seriously — make notes now, when you have your pants on, wherever you’re calm and thinking clearly about what you need to say. And then take your notes with you and refer to them often, even if you have to read from them verbatim like you have a script. On paper or on your phone.

“I rarely trust my brain to remember everything I need to tell the doctor, or even the vet — it is an inherently stressful environmen­t with a fundamenta­l power imbalance. And taking the time to put your pants back on, as someone else mentioned, YES.”

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