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Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
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JetBlue and The Final Straw
PsychologyToday blog: The Myth of Stress
by Andrew Bernstein
August 11, 2010

3 Tips to Keeping Your Cool When Faced with Challenges

1. Own it. First, recognize that stress doesn't come from what's going on in your life. It comes from your thoughts about what's going on in your life. So when something bothers you, look for the thought running through your head, such as, "The customer should apologize to me." Though it may sound odd, that's where your stress is coming from—that thought, not the customer. The proof for this is that other people experience the same situation, but not the same level of stress, because their thoughts are different. So first, own that regardless of what is happening externally, your emotions are produced by your own thinking.

2. Challenge it. Once you've identified your stress-producing belief, if you want to defuse it, ask yourself, "How could it be false?" Can you think of any reasons why the customer should not apologize to you? Maybe she feels that being a paying customer excuses her behavior. Maybe she didn't mean to hit you, and is too uncomfortable and embarrassed with what happened to say anything. Maybe your reactions put her on the spot and she's being defensive. This isn't about justification—it's about seeing the world honestly. If you want to blow up with anger, keep thinking the way you think. But if you want to stay cool, you need to look at the flipside of your belief and deflate your emotions. Coming up with ways that your charged beliefs may be false is the fastest way to do this.

3. Broaden it. Beyond the acute situation, most of us tend to have other stressful beliefs in our lives (about relationships, money, etc.). This pushes us to our stress threshold. Slater's mother, for example, is supposedly dying of cancer, and Slater may have been redlining before the passenger ever said a word. If you want to stay cool, identify the other areas in your life pushing you toward your stress threshold and take care of them. You can use the same technique above, finding your charged beliefs and challenging them (though, admittedly, for a topic like cancer it will be harder). That way, you'll have more headroom so that when acute situations do arise, they don't push you over the edge.

Andrew Bernstein is the founder of ActivInsight. His book is The Myth of Stress.
 
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David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
There may be more to this story than the romanticized "take this job and shove it" version first released:

Some passengers dispute jetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater's claim that he was provoked

More Evidence Steven Slater Concocted JetBlue Blowup | TMZ.com

A passenger on Steven Slater's JetBlue flight tells TMZ there was no evidence of any altercation between Slater and a passenger before the now-famous flight attendant got on the loud speaker and then got on the slide.

Gib Mendelson tells TMZ ... he was sitting in the middle of the plane, near an emergency exit. Gib says, "The first indication we had of the issue was his [Steven] coming on to the PA system with his diatribe. I did not see anything that precipitated the meltdown."

Gib adds Slater was in a bad mood during the flight -- "He obviously had a bad day."

As we first reported, authorities have not yet identified the passenger who allegedly went for the overhead bin prematurely and then cussed out Slater. Several people involved in the investigation tell us flatly ... they doubt Slater's story.
 
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