I am getting negatively charged
By Dick Wolfsie
Guest Columnist
Yesterday, I walked in the house and casually asked Mary Ellen, “You haven’t had a chance to call the plumber yet, have you?”
“Why do you have to be so negative?” she asked.
“I’m not being negative, Mary Ellen. I don’t know what you mean. Didn’t I just ask a question?”
“See, there you go. In that one response you used three negative words. You could have said, ‘I am a positive person. I’d like to know what you mean. I always try to be agreeable.’”
This was not a discussion I was looking forward to. Not then, not ever. Oh dear, three nots.
Time for lunch.
“Mary Ellen, we don’t have any peanut butter, do we?”
I did it again. Maybe Mary Ellen was right. I asked for advice on how to change.
“Next time, Dick, simply ask: ‘Do we have any peanut butter?’” I was guilty as charged, of course, and she was not about to drop the topic. Not while she was on a roll.
“Mary Ellen, this is not fair. We’ve been married a long time, haven’t we? You haven’t ever mentioned this issue before.” Okay, that was three negatives right there. “This is not an easy thing to stop doing. Don’t you agree?”
I decided to show my wife that this was not really an uncommon way for people to communicate. Before she returned from shopping this afternoon, I purposely didn’t shut the garage door and I didn’t turn the lights off in the kitchen. I also didn’t check the dishwasher contents before starting it. And I didn’t feed the cat. When she returned, I’d hear about all the things I didn’t do. And I’d be told, “don’t do them again.”
When Mary Ellen walked in the door, she approached me. I was ready for her to explode with negativity. “In the future, Dick, please remember to close the garage door when you come home. And you left all the lights on in the house. Let’s try to save on electricity. By the way, the cat is meowing. Make sure to feed her when I am gone. It also appears you ran the dishwasher half loaded. We should always try to conserve water.”
“No, no, no, Mary Ellen; a typical wife would not respond that way when her husband messed up so many things.”
“That’s four negatives, Dick. You’re getting worse at this.”
I told Mary Ellen what I thought most wives would say in a similar situation.
“Don’t leave the lights on in the middle of the day, Dick.”
“Don’t leave the garage door open when you get home.”
“Don’t forget to feed the cat.”
“Don’t run the dishwasher half-loaded.”
“Sorry, Dick,” she responded, “I’m a positive person. I would ne…ne…
“Yes, say it, say it, Mary Ellen! Say the word ‘never.’ It will help you get out of this positive rut you are in.”
“Ne…nearly every day I strive to be optimistic. And I do that by using positive words. Do you see the difference?”
I wanted to say “I don’t,” but that would have really gotten me in trouble.
Instead, I decided to play it safe and repeat something smart I said almost 44 years ago: “I do.”