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"It's Just
Not Fair!" by Steve Andreas Years ago, conservative TV talk
show host Joe Pyne, who had a wooden leg, had Frank Zappa as a guest. He began
by saying, "So I guess your long hair makes you a woman." Without missing a
beat, Frank replied, "So I guess your wooden leg makes you a table," and Joe
Pyne looked stunned. A young woman once said to me,
"NLP is a crock." I was particularly curious about her statement, because she
worked for an NLP institute. When I asked her why she thought NLP was a crock,
she replied, "Because I can't use it on myself." When I said, "Yeah, I guess
brain surgery is a crock, too," she threw up her hands and said
"Ohhh!" The simplest way to describe the
pattern that underlies these two examples is that:
Because the counterexample is
stated in the exact same linguistic form as the initial belief statement, the
person holding the belief has to process it with exactly the same
meta-program sorting principles or other biases that apply to the belief. Like
the Trojan horse, it is welcomed past all the cognitive defenses right into the
heart of the belief. Only after this is it recognized as a counterexample
that weakens or destroys the belief. To appreciate the power of this
conversational pattern, compare it to the kind of answer most people might give
in the two situations described above: "No, I'm not a woman; I just like long
hair," or "Some women have short hair." "Some people use NLP with themselves,"
or "Even if you can't use it on yourself, it can be useful to use with
others." This is a really easy pattern to
use, because there is no need to characterize the meta-program sorting
principles that are used to maintain the belief. All you have to do is identify
a content counterexample and embed it in the same linguistic form. Since the
form is an expression of the processes underlying the belief, this ensures that
the counterexample will be processed in the same way as other supporting
examples. Now let's turn to the title of
this article, "It's just not fair!" People invariably say this when they are
narrowly focused on a situation in which someone else has more of something
valuable (dessert, money, good looks, etc.) than they do. "It's just not
fair--that she is pretty and I'm not" "--that he is rich and I'm not," etc. It
is then a very short trip to feeling victimized and sorry for yourself, and
complaining that someone else should do something about it (an "ill-formed
outcome" that I have little or no control over). I have found it really useful to
apply the same principle of feeding counterexamples through the same structure.
Since "It's just not fair" depends on examples in which someone else has
more of something good, a counterexample will be any way that the other
person has less of something good (or more of something bad). "It's just
not fair--that he is in a wheelchair and I'm not," "--that she is poor, and I'm
not," etc. Whenever I fall into thinking that life is not fair, I use this as an
internal mantra, filling in whatever convenient content I see around
me. To summarize this
pattern:
II For those who might be curious
to know more about how we get lost in generalizations like "It's just not fair,"
let's take a closer look. There are only four words--or five, really, since the
full statement is "It is just not fair." "It's" or "it is" is the
familiar "lost performative." The person making the statement is lost, and the
object of the statement is also missing. Expanding "It's" into its full meaning,
we get "I'm saying it's not fair to me." Of course the "it" is not
specified, but that is usually clear by the context, or specified by statements
that precede or follow the "It's not fair." The "is" also specifies that a
belief, in the form of a complex equivalence, is present. (It = not fair.) "It"
is some event or condition, while "not fair" is the meaning attributed to
it, joined by "is," which is equivalent to "equals." "Is" is also the word we use to
describe being or fact (in contrast to appearance or opinion). When we say
"That is a cat," it carries the implication of incontrovertible fact, not
to be questioned. When a single word has many meanings like this, it is said to
be "semantically packed," because so many meanings are packed into it. Usually
most of the many meanings are processed unconsciously, and the person responds
to most of them largely unconsciously. "Fair" is also a
semantically-packed word. My dictionary lists the following meanings: "light,
pleasing, beautiful, free from stain or blemish, open, frank, honest, equal,
just, reasonable, equitable, good, unobstructed, smooth, even, according to the
rules, frank, candid, characterized by favorable conditions, clear and
sunny." These meanings can be grouped
into three basic categories:
Although the last meaning is the
one that is most applicable, the other meanings are also being elicited in our
minds when we hear the word "fair." What may not be obvious is that
"fair" in the sense of "equitable and honest" can only be applied to human
agreements, exchanges and transactions, not to the natural physical world, which
just is. If I say, "It's not fair that I'm short and he is tall," that is
actually a "selectional restriction" violation, equivalent to saying "the
pregnant rock," or "the angry storm." Rocks can't be pregnant, and storms can't
be angry. (A storm may seem angry to us, but that is only because we project our
emotion into it.) Being short or tall has nothing to do with being
fair. While occasionally someone may
use "It's just not fair," to describe a human agreement or transaction, more
often it is used to describe things or events in the natural world that we
simply don't like. While it's fine to say "I don't like something," (and better
yet to do something about it when I can), it's inappropriate to say "It's not
fair," just because I don't like it. We might as well scold a rock for not
getting pregnant! To say "It's not fair" just makes us into whimpering victims,
and diverts us from finding and taking useful actions to make things
better. Milton Erickson told of
examining patients and staff at a mental hospital. On one particular day he
first examined a 75-year-old alcoholic who was in excellent health, but had been
a burden to his family and society for many years, and would likely live another
ten or twenty. Next he examined a bright young woman who was a volunteer at the
hospital. When he examined her retina he saw the unmistakable signs of Bright's
disease, which meant that she had only about six months to live. Erickson had to
leave the room to regain his composure before returning to tell her what he had
found. As he described it, he said to himself, "Get this through your head,
Erickson; life is not fair." We can do our best to make life more fair, but
moaning about its being unfair only makes it worse. "Just" is a fascinating word,
even more semantically packed than "It's" or "fair." The main meaning here can
be best characterized as "only." "Just" is a "tunnel vision" word that says
"Don't pay attention to anything else; this is the only thing that
matters." "Just" can be used either as an
adverb to modify the verb (in this case "is") or as an adjective to modify an
object, in this case, "not fair." I don't know how a grammarian would decide
"just" is used in this case. I'd say it is ambiguous, which means that our
unconscious language processing will process it in both ways (no matter
how the grammarian decides). When "just" is used as an adverb
it can mean "barely" as in "I just missed the train," or it can mean "a short
time ago," as in "He just left." Although both these meanings are inappropriate
here, all the other meanings do apply: "only," "quite,"
"exactly." When used as an adjective,
"just" has even more meanings. My dictionary lists eight: "Synonyms: exact, honest,
impartial, precise, proper, upright." In short, "just" means all that is valued
as right and good. "Not" has the simple meaning of
negation, and although it really negates "fair," "just not" also can be easily
read as "not just" which has the same meaning as "not fair." If you negate all
the meanings of "just" listed above, we find that "It's just not fair" means
that all that is right and good has been negated. Putting all these pieces
together we can see how "It's just not fair" can transform a situation in which
I don't like something into a situation in which all that is good and fair has
been violated, even if fairness doesn't actually apply. Life is not fair.
Recognizing this, we can seek out ways to make it more fair for all of
us. Originally
Published in Anchor Point Magazine, March 1998; reprinted
with permission http://www.nlpcomprehensive.com/articles/not_fair.html
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