One strategy I use is to simply ask the person about their situation, how they feel about it, and what they are planning on doing about it. If the person is willing to talk, I am able to direct their attention to things I think are important.
But if they don’t want to talk, or cling tightly to a belief that I think needs questioning, then I’m not sure what to do. Give up? Confront them with an explicit statement of my beliefs and reasoning?
What I usually do in that situation is talk about my own related experience(s) and the conclusions I’ve come to based on it. (Assuming I have related experience. If I don’t, I tend to not trust my own beliefs very much in the first place.)
One strategy I use is to simply ask the person about their situation, how they feel about it, and what they are planning on doing about it. If the person is willing to talk, I am able to direct their attention to things I think are important.
But if they don’t want to talk, or cling tightly to a belief that I think needs questioning, then I’m not sure what to do. Give up? Confront them with an explicit statement of my beliefs and reasoning?
What I usually do in that situation is talk about my own related experience(s) and the conclusions I’ve come to based on it. (Assuming I have related experience. If I don’t, I tend to not trust my own beliefs very much in the first place.)