Profits of Praise
不要吝啬您的赞美
我们是不是在责备他人时都不吝其言而在应该赞美时却又惜语如金呢?
It was the end of my exhausting first day
as waitress in a busy New York restaurant. My cap had gone away, my
apron was stained, my feet ached. The loaded trays I carried felt heavier
and heavier.(注1)Weary and discouraged, I didn't seem able to do anything
right.(注2) As I made out(注3) a complicated check for a family with several
children who had changed their ice-cream order a dozen times, I was
ready to quit.
Then the father smiled at me as he handed
me my tip. "well done," he said, "You've looked after
us really well."
Suddenly my tiredness vanished. I smiled
back, and later, when the manager asked me how I'd liked my first day,
I said, "Fine!" Those few words of praise had changed everything.
Praise is like sunlight to the human spirit;
we cannot flower(注4) and grow without it. And yet, while most of us
are only too ready to apply to others the cold wind of criticism, we
are somehow reluctant to give our fellows the warm sunshine of praise.
Why - when one word can bring such pleasure?
A friend of mine who travels widely always tries to learn a little of
the language of any place she visits. She's not much of a linguist,
but she does know how to say one word - "beautiful"- in several
languages. She can use it to a mother holding her baby, or to a lonely
sale
sman fishing out(注5) pictures of his family. The ability has earned
her friends all over the world.
It's strange how chary we are about praising.
Perhaps it's because few of us know how to accept compliments gracefully.(注6)
Instead, we are embarrassed and shrug off(注7) the words we are really
so glad to hear. Because of this defenisvereaction, direct compliments
are surprisingly difficult to give. That is why some of the most valued
pats on the back are those which come to us indirectly, in a letter
or passed on by a friend.(注8) When one thinks of the speed with which
spiteful remarks are conveyed, it seems a pity that there isn't more
effort to relay pleasing and flattering comments.(注9)
It's especially rewarding to give praise
in areas in which effort generally goes unnoticed or unmentioned. An
artist gets complimented for a glorious picture, a cook for a perfect
meal. But do you ever tell your laundry manager(注10) how pleased you
are when the shirts are done just right? Do you ever praise your paper
boy for getting the paper to you on time 365 days a year?
Praise is particularly appreciated by those
doing routine jobs: gas station attendants, waitresses - even housewives.
Do you ever go into a house and say, "What a tidy room"? Hardly
anybody does. That's why housework is considered such a dreary grind(注11).
Comment is often made about activities which are relatively easy and
satisfying, like arranging flowers; but not about jobs which are hard
and dirty, like scrubbing floors. Shakespeare said, "Our praise
are our wages." Since so often praise is the only wage a housewife
receives, surely she of all people should get her measure.
Mothers know instinctively that for children
an ounce of praise is worth a pound of scolding. Still, we're not always
as perceptive as we might be about applying the rule. One day I was
criticizing my children for squabbling(注12). "Can younever play
peacefully?" I shouted. Susanna looked at me quizzically(注13).
"Ofcourse we can," she said. "But you don't notice us
when we do."
Teachers agree about the value of praise.
One teacher writes that instead of drowning students' compositions in
critical red ink, the teacher will get far more constructive results
by finding one or two things which have been done better than last time,
and commenting favorably on them.(注14) "I believe that a student
knows when he has handed in something above his usual standard,"writes
the teacher, "and that he waits hungrily for a brief comment in
the margin to show him that the teacher is aware of it, too."
Behavioral scientists have done countless
experiments to prove that any human being tends to repeat an act which
has been immediately followed by a pleasant result. In one such experiment,
a number of schoolchildren were divided into three groups and given
arithmetic tests daily for five days. One group was consistently praised
for its previous performance; another group was criticized; the third
was ignored.
Not surprisingly, those who were praised
improved dramatically. Those who were criticized improved also, but
not so much. And the scores of the children who wereignored hardly improved
at all. Interestingly the rightest children were helped just as much
by criticism as by praise, but the less able children reacted badly
to criticism, needed praise the most. Yet the latter are the very youngsters
who, in most schools, fail to get the pat on the back.
To give praise costs the giver nothing but
a moment's thought and a moment's effor(注15)- perhaps a quick phone
call to pass on a compliment, or five minutes spent writing an appreciative
letter. It is such a small investment - and yet consider the results
it may produce. "I can live for two months on a good compliment,"
Said Mark Twain.
So, let's be alert to the small excellences
around us - and comment on them. We will not only bring joy into other
people's lives, but also, very often, add happiness into our own.
1. 我的帽子歪了,围裙脏了,脚也疼了。堆满了盘子的托盘也越来越沉了。
2. 我疲惫又沮丧,好像什么都不可能做好似的。weary:疲惫的。
3. make out:写出,开出。
4. flower:成熟,繁荣。
5. fish out:掏出,拿出。
6. 真是很奇怪,我们对赞美总是那么吝啬,或许是因为我们很少人懂得如何得体地接受它。chary:节约的,吝啬的。
7. shrug off:对……不屑一顾。
8. 这就是某些最可贵的赞美总是间接传达给我们的原因——写在信里,或经由朋友传达。pat
on the back:赞美的话,恭贺。
9. 令人遗憾的是,相比于坏话的传播速度,似乎人们并没有在传送令人愉快、讨人欢喜的赞美上做更大努力。
10. laundry manager:洗衣店老板。
11.dreary grind:枯燥的工作。
12. squabble:口角,争吵。
13.quizzically:揶揄地,嘲弄地。
14.一位老师写道,如果老师从学生的作文中找出一两处比以前有进步的地方并加以表扬,而不是通篇划上红杠,结果会有效得多。
15.赞美不花费给予者什么——只需要他们的一点点关心和努力。