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The body in the suitcase and the conflict stories we tell

the long view

“Maybe he’s got a body in there,” mused my husband.

I watched the man walking toward us, dragging something heavy behind him. Even from a long distance, it was easy to see he was burdened by the load. “Yep,” said I, “maybe so.”

We were walking our dogs on one of the local rail trails and as the distance between us and the man lessened, we began to make up a story about him and the body inside what now appeared to be a large rolling suitcase. Perfect for body moving, we agreed, warming to our task.

As the man grew quite close to us, we could see he was elderly and that the rolling suitcase was almost too heavy for him to drag behind him on this paved portion of the trail. “He may need our help,” I said. My husband nodded, considering. He said, “But then wouldn’t we be complicit in his crime?” We chuckled and went on with our storymaking.

We do this in conflict too, of course — make up stories. We make guesses to fill in blanks about things we don’t understand in the situation or the other person. We take prior conclusions about them and use those conclusions to feed our guesses and judgments, forgetting that conclusions are just opinion, not fact. If we already have a poor history with them, our stories tend to be tinged with darker tones. We tell our stories to ourselves and to others, forgetting after a while that only some part of what is relayed is what happened and that the rest is stuff we made up by way of explanation and self-protection.

Our conflict stories can get us into trouble because we treat them like The Truth.

As the man approached us, we looked to make eye contact. He said hello tersely, then turned his head away from us and continued on. It was clear he didn’t want to talk to us. As he passed, I glanced down at the heavy, bulging rolling suitcase. Strapped to it with bungee cords was a chainsaw.

My face swiveled back toward my husband faster than Linda Blair’s. His eyes were as wide as mine. “Did you see that?” I hissed. “He has a chainsaw!” Talk about stating the obvious. “Nothing leaking out of the suitcase,” said my husband, walking backward to scan the suitcase’s path.

We started to giggle a little nervously, then roared as we thought about the shock of seeing the chainsaw after making up the dead body story. “Do you think we should do something?” I finally asked, “like follow him to see where he goes with it?”

By now the old fellow was quite a distance from us, just a speck, really. We’d reached the part of the trail where we usually turn around, so we began to head back with the dogs.

As we passed a part of the path during which we’d been in deep conversation about the chainsaw, we saw what we’d missed on our first pass: Sawdust on the pavement and the remains of a fallen tree that had been cut back from where it breached the trail.

The fellow was hauling the wood he’d cut from the fallen tree. A poor old man struggling under a heavy load he probably needed to heat his home during a cold New Hampshire winter.

I wish our conflict stories could be so easily torn asunder and exposed for what they really are…something we partly (mostly?) made up in less than our best moments.

About the author

Dr. Tammy Lenski helps individuals and organizations resolve conflict more simply and stay calm in conflict.

What others are saying...

  1. Great, great story. The chainsaw! Too much. I love how you didn't see the sawdust until much later, so that this little fact didn't mess up an otherwise an excellent tale. Thanks, Tammy!

  2. You and your husband make a deadly pair of storytellers – riveting writing & an enjoyable reminder of bad habits!

  3. oh.my.goodness. I would have loved to have been in on that one!!

    I was in line behind a woman at Walmart last night-too late for the average human to be in line at Walmart- and I was very aware that I was making up a story as she inspected each and every item in her cart. I made up that she was thinking tenderly about the people she was purchasing for. Pondering whether or not they would like that dashing pair of Christmas socks or the red Christmas shirt. I was feeling warm and cozy with my thoughts. Until I decided she was taking too long…

    I started feeling a sense of urgency to get back to my car. Saving all of my Christmas shopping until the last minute meant that I had a lot of presents in the car already, and I suddenly knew that someone was out in the parking lot with a crow bar taking everything for their own Christmas tree.

    Just like that my brain made up stories- one lovely and one ludicrous!

    • Deborah, I can picture you on that line with those two stories showing up in your head! So funny. I guess your subconscious thought you were getting just a bit too comfy with your first story and decided to jolt you awake.

  4. Tammy you are such an engaging story teller – no wonder your blog is so well read. I once spent a sleepless night in a hotel for work which, for various creepy reasons, in my head became Bates Motel. In the morning there was an axe on the hallway table and I checked out. Tools clearly create very visceral reactions when our imagination works overtime. Keep telling those stories and engaging us.

    • Ros, I'm picturing the look on your face when you saw the axe on the hallway table — too funny! Thanks for stopping in and the very kind comment.

  5. Harry Manasewich :

    Hi Tammy. Your insights are always so pithy! This one particularly resonates (in my personal life and in my practice). It can also be an issue of perception (perception is reality). I’ve found that people “filter” what they see, hear, or experience through their perception vs. what was actually said or done (perhaps filling in the gaps as outlined in your story) which becomes their reality. This is strengthened each time they tell the story to others or run through it in their mind.

    • Hi, Harry, hope all is well with you! I agree with your point about perception being reality in conflict situations — For years I've said to new mediators I'm teaching that they need to stop fact-finding in the Quixotic quest for "the truth" — the truth is what each person in the conflict perceives and experiences it to be.

  6. Hi, Tammy – this is one of my all-time favorite stories. One of the things I do when grocery-line standing is to figure out what people are making for dinner based on what they have in their baskets. One day a woman was piling up cakes, cookies, salad ingredients, meats, potatoes in bulk. I said to her, ‘you must have a very large family.’ She replied, ‘this is for after my husband’s wake.’ I’ve been very careful since.

    • It’s one of mine, too…a lot of folks have loved this one!

      Yours is a great example of what I’m talking about here. Thanks for sharing…we’ve all had moments like this.

Links from other posts and sites...

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