I didn't expect anything. Not a thing.
The trick to finding out where you're manipulative is to look for where you DO want something to happen.
As an example, I am currently manipulating my son like crazy.
I could just be honest & direct; "Get off the computer. Go outside. Get healthy. Lose weight. Do better in school. Feel better about yourself."
I'm not. Instead I am manipulating the situation so that;
- he has active fun things in his life to do.
- he has people in his life who encouraging, inspirational, fun, grounded, healthy
- he has limited amounts of time to be on the computer.
- he has healthy food around
- etc.
I am laying the path of least resistance, building up routines and patterns for him, so that the natural course for his life to take? Is where I want it to. That's pure manipulation.
Could he pick a different path? Yep. His life is his own. But as a parent & a teacher? The way I was instructed is that it is not the failure of the student, but the failure of the teacher, for not adequately preparing them. There are ways to set someone up for success (manipulation) and ways to set them up for failure (manipulation). This doesn't mean that I'm ignoring what
he wants. I am, however, passing it through the filter of what I want. Signing a sports-kid up for sports is no different than signing a drama-kid up for drama classes. Both are healthy / active / social activities. He gets what he wants. (Sports, or drama). I get what I want (him involved in a healthy/active/social activity). Gradually increasing levels of responsibility? Another manipulation. Building self-confidence? Another manipulation. Creating a "safe" feeling environment? Another manipulation. Teaching empathy? Another manipulation. Deliberately cheering them up when they've had a bad day? Another manipulation, as well as laying the foundation for them to be able to self soothe. I could go on all day. For real. Because I manipulate the hell out of my kid. And I am having to SUPER-manipulate him at present, because he's got an abusive schmuck for a father who keeps tearing him down every chance he gets.
Raising children is clearly a long-term thing. If you don't have kids, or don't manipulate them at all -which I concede is possible, although I'm not sure how- a shorter term thing could be dressing up. Or down. In any way altering your appearance in order to manipulate the opinions of others. Any way you do something in order to "blend in" or "stand out" or "look respectable" is an attempt at manipulation. This is a super common one, as most people want to "look respectable" in court, or "look pretty" on a date, or "be taken seriously" at a job interview. Shrug.
Look at where you care about the outcome. And the steps you take to ensure at outcome to the best of your ability. Those steps? Are usually some form of manipulation. Even "I wanted him to be happy, so I gave him a train ride." = (an attempt) to manipulate someone else's emotions.
Manipulation really isn't all bad.
But then, very little is, IMO.
Or as a girlfriend of mine (attorney, human rights) who was taking a summer job as a waitress said after her mouth watering description of today's special -after the manager said that was the best spiel he'd ever heard / hired on the spot- said;
"I convince people not to kill others, for a living. I think I can sell the fish."
<ETA> I'm sorry for all the words. I can usually concise things up. Not so much, at the moment. :wtf: