A few years ago I
shared some strategies I used against the inevitable psychopaths and scammers who floated in among Chowhound's million users (particularly one troublingly metallic individual named, among other things, "Julie").
They are strongly counterintuitive, which was the whole point. If you do the expected thing in battle, response will be quick and escalatory. Playing the other person's game likely leads to stalemate or loss unless you have the time, persistence, and resources to match their investment. But if you play
your game, aloofly declining to be baited into the blunt oppositionalism favored by the persistent and/or psychotic, you can win your game without their even noticing.
In fact, if you do it right, it's win-win. They can win the contest they've imagined themselves in against you while never noticing that you're winning the contest you're playing against
them. Because they don't even understand what that is. Because it's counterintuitive, and not just rotely, bluntly oppositional.
Here's the thing about people settled into a game-playing mental frame: they will assume, unquestioningly, that the other side is playing the same game. Like military leaders throughout history, we discovered the secret: it's a huge advantage to flip the script and find a way to play a different and higher-level game, unbeknownst to your adversary. This relocates the adversary to a sealed box, under a bright light, where they can unknowingly be examined, manipulated, and disarmed. They carry on their fight, and may even feel they're winning, but you can't lose because the conflict's been transparently reframed on your terms.
Of course it's never quite that antiseptic and seamless. Periodically, Julie would become faintly cognizant that our game did not match hers. At such moments, we were forced to switch tactics and shift protocols, leaving us momentarily vulnerable to further escalation. But she never quite got the best of us.
Julie assumed the game was a simple cat-and-mouse. She'd try to post, and we'd try to detect and delete. If we tipped our hand by rapidly and thoroughly deleting her, that would provide her with juicy, useful feedback regarding our capabilities, and she'd develop countermeasures. Escalation! Julie's prickly antennae were perpetually tuned to this dance. Again, she was no mastermind (for example, she could never quite fully organize her myriad personas), but, like any sentient organism, she could absorb feedback and use it to learn and to grow.
We recognized early on that we were under no compulsion to play the same game. Honestly, we didn't care much if Julie posted, so long as she wasn't damaging the site. Her attempts to ingratiate with the community - to blend in, apparently defeating our defense systems by posting like a normal harmless Chowhound user - actually didn't bother us at all. So we left those up.
Most of them, anyway. We'd randomly delete a few, after waiting a random amount of time, just to confuse her feedback curve with noisy data. Consistency on our end would teach her things.
Two followup thoughts:
1. Persistent and psychotic people are
Strong Drunks.
I picked up a book about "urban survival", which turned out to be pretty silly, though highly amusing. But it did contain one insight which I've retained. In the chapter about surviving bar fights, it explained that drunk people are sluggish and clumsy, so it's easy to outrun or outmaneuver them. But if they ever get their hands firmly on you, watch out, because drunks are stronger than sober people.
I've never been in a bar fight, but the image of the strong drunk has become a touchstone for me. Time and again I've found myself confronting people (or institutions) functioning as Strong Drunks, and who therefore needed to be finessed or adroitly outmaneuvered. The mantra is: don't ever let them get you in their clutches!
Cops, for example, are strong drunks. If a policeman decides, rightly or wrongly, that you're on the wrong team, and has you within his grasp, you will be out of options. There's ample maneuvering room in defusing that determination, but if it goes the wrong way, and you're within their range, you'll find yourself utterly powerless.
Cockroaches are the opposite. A roach can't hold or harm you...but they hide well and they run fast. If you manage to catch one, it can be effortlessly stamped out, but there are always more of them craftily evading you, and you can't do much about it. To a cockroach, you are the strong drunk.
Even if you deem yourself smarter, stronger, and in a superior position, you must avoid getting caught in a clench with a Strong Drunk. Rather, the move is to skamper wildly between their legs, like a cockroach. You need to smell the scent of a Strong Drunk and avoid clenches at all cost, because that only plays to their strength.
2. This is a broad strategy for life—at least those parts of life where you're forced into some sort of competition.
Note: if you are competitive by nature, every word of this will strike you as nonsense, because you are viscerally compelled toward blunt oppositionalism. Toward clenches. Best regards, you strong drunk you, from me here in my cockroach hidey hole.
It particularly explains my investment philosophy.
I never try to outsmart other investors. I know my limits, and I recognize that there are many people who will beat me in a clench every time. There are smarter, more powerful people (institutional, professional investors) and there are more rabidly persistent ones (day traders). I can't beat either at their own games, so I don't try.
As I've written many times, I've paid my bills by buying Apple whenever its stock dips (circa 25% every couple of years) and then riding it above its previous high. This strategy isn't secret or brainy, yet almost no one seems interested in it. Why? Because they're playing different games.
Day traders are occupied with hourly and daily results, while my approach requires thinking in months and years (with the added benefit of low taxes on the long term gains). Meanwhile, professional and institutional investors pursue massive jackpots with no interest in the comparatively modest gains that attract my attention. To them, I'm like a dog nibbling discards beneath the dining table.
If I tried to compete with either group, I'd be ground into hamburger meat. Instead, I play my game, on my terms. And the curious thing is that everyone would readily concede that my way works. It's just not of interest to them. So I operate in my own little ecosystem, quietly picking ripe fruit from low branches, with no predators to contend with.
I think I've always done things this way.