Escape the Flattery Trap
“They flatter one another out of contempt, and their desire to rule one another makes them bow and scrape.” Marcus Aurelius
Using flattery invites people to look down on you. Neediness is obvious. (Adapted from Epictetus)
Why Flattery
Flattery is self-serving. It reveals we value wealth, position, and the approval of others.
Solomon said, “The one who flatters his neighbor spreads a net for his steps.”
We use smooth talk to:
- Gain advantage.
- Avoid pain.
- Manipulate.
- Elevate self.
- Hide truth.
Instead of Flattery
#1. Hold your tongue.
“Be mostly silent or speak only what is necessary.” Epictetus
- Listen without preparing a response.
- Release your need to be right.
- Replace comments with curiosity.
- Don’t fill silence.
Blabbermouths undermine their influence.
#2. Only open your mouth to make something better.
- Audit your intent. Don’t speak until you know what you’re working to achieve.
- Measure the impact. What direction are you taking a conversation?
- Aim for progress. Adding your two cents slows progress.
Positive intent earns trust.
#3. Speak truth with forward-facing kindness.
- Don’t aim at the past.
- Aim at what’s next.
- Deal with reality, not appearances.
Truth tells people where they stand. Kindness shows where to go.
Where are you using words to gain advantage instead of create value?
Smooth Talk Fools Bob Bumblehoof





Thank you for this post, Dan. (I’m resisting the urge to insert some mock-flattery here :)) Seriously though, this post speaks directly to me. As a pleaser, I constantly resist the urge to say things I don’t mean and to speak when I can just be quiet. Thank you for the reminder!
Thanks for jumping in today, Jenean. The connection between being a pleaser and flattery is eye opening. So helpful.
Hey Dan. Great post, as usual, but I’m mostly weighing in to compliment the new LF Lifting Leaders graphic! Nice!
Thanks Michael. I’m playing around with AI.
Interesting. What is the difference then between flattery and giving recognition. We want to recognize people…and could it not sound like flattery?
Wonderful question, Anna. Primarily the difference is motive. Flattery is self-serving. Recognition serves others. It’s true that recognition serves the interests of organizations. However, if that’s the sole motivation it’s manipulation. Thanks for asking. I wish you well.