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People Want to Help You

Give them an excuse to do so.

Conor Dewey
2 min readJan 24, 2020
Photo by Jeremy Yap on Unsplash

It’s hard asking for help. Whether it’s something big or small, it’s never been easy for me. Recently, I thought some more about why this is the case. It’s not the feeling of inadequacy — I think most of us can come to terms with the fact that everyone asks for help. Rather, it’s the feeling that I’m wasting someone’s time.

I’ve been searching for ways to frame things more productively, and I found one exercise that helps. Simply put, you flip things around.

What happens when someone asks you for help? How often do you walk away feeling worse than you did prior?

I almost never walk away feeling frustrated that the person asked. Instead, I find that I’m more likely to feel useful, smart, and important afterward. I react a certain way when others ask me for help, but I expect others to react in a completely different way when I’m on the other side of things. There’s a gap between my perception and reality.

I should actually be thankful that they came to me in the first place. This is a different interpretation that we started with, where asking for help is “wasting someone’s time.”

Things shift from making someone’s day worse to making it better.

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Conor Dewey
Conor Dewey

Written by Conor Dewey

Product at Metabase. Previously growth at Hugo and data science at Squarespace. Writing here now: https://www.conordewey.com

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