• Home
  • Recent articles
  • Archives
  • Why conflict zen?

Conflict Zen

conflict resolution for organizations, teams, executives and managers

You are here: Home / Organizational conflict management / Lessons from the Cold War: How to Clean Up the Fallout

Lessons from the Cold War: How to Clean Up the Fallout

21 May 2007 by Tammy Lenski

Remember “duck and cover”? If you’re in your 40s or older and grew up in the U.S., you probably do. I recall those classroom drills designed to help us survive a nuclear attack by hiding under our desks. Yeah, right.

Rod, a child during the height of the Cold War, was going through old scrapbooks last night and found his 1958 copy of the government-issued “Handbook for Emergencies.” Included were disaster preparedness tips for fire, flood hurricane and tornado…and nuclear fallout.

I found myself particularly drawn to the page excerpted here (click to view entire page), initially for its sheer lunacy: Shower to get the radioactive “dust” off of you, and vacuum up the remainder.

But then I got to thinking…It’s darkly ridiculous advice for surviving nuclear fallout. But it’s not half bad for another kind of fallout, the kind that follows a painful argument with someone important to you.

Radioactivity decays as time passes. The pain of an old hurt can diminish with time, if you let it. But if you replay the circumstances that lead to the pain frequently, you keep it raw. Better to let some decay happen so you can regain your strength for dealing with the initial fallout.

The danger in decontamination lies in exposure. Allowing repeated exposure to a conflict is like running a marathon with your socks chafing the whole time. Ouch. When you don’t confront the conflict and keep allowing yourself to be exposed to it, your avoidance contributes to further contamination.

Radiological monitoring will determine the intensity of radiation in your area. Knowing the hints and symptoms of a conflict that’s getting destructive helps you take steps to reduce the intensity or move away from it for a time.

Decontamination should be carried out only under official instructions. While not always the case, I would be remiss as a conflict management coach and mediator if I didn’t comment on this one. Sometimes, turning to a professional can help you get your balance back and engage the difficult conversation so there’s no more damage done.

How do you recover from and address the fallouts in your life? Do you remember other Cold War-era warnings that we’d get a chuckle or some learning from?
Tammy
Copyright © 2007 by Tammy Lenski. All rights reserved.

Filed Under: Organizational conflict management

Additional comments powered by BackType

Loading

Share this page

  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
Print Print

About

Conflict Zen ® is about the simple yet powerful habits of mind and word that radically shift problems and turn conflict into opportunity. Dr. Tammy Lenski, a conflict management consultant for 15 years, shares what really works for organizational, management, business and executive conflict resolution.

Subscribe

Subscribe via RSS
Get new articles by email
7 top reasons to subscribe

Resources

Talking It Out in Ten   Making Mediation Your Day Job

Recent articles

  • You can’t train your way out of organizational conflict
  • Business seminar for Georgia conflict resolution professionals
  • Change your negotiation and conflict habits
  • 8 common reasons agreements fall apart after workplace negotiations
  • Organizational conflict increased by entitled workers, new study suggests

Featured at

9rules member alltop featured blog

Copyright © 1997-2010 by Tammy Lenski LLC, Peterborough, NH 03458 | 603.565.2279 | Site powered by the Genesis Theme Framework and WPMU DEV
ISSN 1942-7174 | Terms of Use and Disclosure Statement