You’re not struggling with “people” as an abstract idea. You’re dealing with pride, fear, status, and the hunger to feel important—your own, and everyone else’s.
When those pressures rise, most conversations turn into contests. Someone must be right. Someone must win. Then relationships quietly tax you: resentment, distance, silence, and unnecessary enemies.
The alternative is not charm or tricks. It’s a set of simple behaviors that reduce friction and increase goodwill: fewer ego battles, more cooperation, more doors opening without force.
Treat these principles like tools, not slogans. Use them in small moments—complaints, disagreements, introductions, requests. The results show up where life is lived: in tone, in trust, in outcomes. Keep it practical, and watch what changes.