You’re allowed to say you don’t like it

A client said:
“I don’t like it. You hear every step.”

About a house.
And its wooden floors.

Clear. Calm. Direct.

No apology.
No softening.
No disappearing halfway through the sentence.

In English, clarity isn’t rude.
Vanishing opinions cause more tension than honest ones.

You don’t need stronger language.
You need a full sentence.

Quick win
Use:
“I don’t like it because …”
Then stop.


Optional alternative (slightly softer, same power)

If you want a gentler tone for some days:

Quick win
“I’m not comfortable with it because …”

Still clear. Still confident.

Date: 11. February 2026

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Foto Christine Sparks

Stuck on something in English? Tell me, and I might turn it into a Spark.

9 + 14 =