Compassionate Communication and Empathy's Awakening Booklet - Nonviolent Communication
Compassionate Communication and Empathy's Awakening Booklet - Nonviolent Communication
Compassionate Communication and Empathy's Awakening Booklet - Nonviolent Communication
I want to acknowledge Linda Wemhoff. She gave me support in 2002 when I first thought to do a booklet. She proofread, offered suggestions, simplified all of my heady stuff, and helped keep the layout open and light. Six years later, when I set about this revision, once again she generously gave support. I shower her with heartfelt thanks. If you appreciate this booklet, kindly go express it by visiting her website: www.RecipeForPeace.com. As always, I close with gratitude.
C OMPASSIONATE C OMMUNICATION
A ND
To contact John:
PO Box 2011 Nevada City, CA 95959 phones: (home) 530.274.2356 (cell) 541.210.1553 email: [email protected] web: www.empathy-conexus.com
E MPATHY S A WAKENING
By John Cunningham
Revised in Spring 2008
When the will becomes receptive, then consciousness becomes participative. It is when the will is assertive that the scientist is separated from the phenomenon, and consciousness becomes onlooker consciousness. Participative consciousness means conscious participation in the phenomenon. Henri Bortoft, The Wholeness of Nature It is that man can in his soul dive down into sense-perceptible reality and experience thereby the spiritual aspect of sense-perceptible phenomena in such a way that he grows together with this spirit creatively living and weaving everywhere in nature. That is the greatness of Goethes way of looking at the worldthat it is directed towards this diving down into reality, and has the conviction that, insofar as one dives down into this reality, one arrives at its spiritual aspect and thus discovers the spirit inherent within it Rudolf Steiner (lecture on 11.10.1919) Now the time has come to enliven and spiritualize the intellect which is already hardening again. The time has come to transform the formal power of thought through love into its intuitive form and to intensify the power of will, active in thinking, into clairvoyant thinking (Imagination). Upon this fact, that the ideas of the human being do not remain only thoughts but become a seeing within thinking, immeasurably depends. Sigismund von Gleich, The Sources of Inspiration of Anthroposophy He rose to his feet again and asked, Uncle, what is it that ails thee? Wolfram von Eschenbach, Parzival
in the future no human being is to find peace in the enjoyment of happiness if others beside him are unhappyEvery human being shall see in each and all of his fellow-men a hidden divinity that every human being is made in the likeness of the Godhead. When that time comesevery meeting between one man and another will of itself be in the nature of a religious rite, a sacrament
Rudolf Steiner, The Work of the Angel in Mans Astral Body
ANTHROPOSOPHICAL RESOURCES
Dieter Brll, The Mysteries of Social Encounters Henri Bortoft, The Wholeness of Nature Baruch Urieli & Hans Mller-Wiedemann, Learning to Experience the Etheric World Nigel Hoffman, Goethes Science of Living Form Harry Salman, The Social World as Mystery Center Henning Khler, Difficult Children: There is No Such Thing Baruch Urieli, Male and Female: Developing Human Empathy Margreet Van Den Brink, More Precious Than Light Michael Luxford, Loving the Stranger Georg Khlewind, Star Children
inner ruler and to awaken this inner faculty. Through its awakening, we discover
how to choose the meaning we see, particularly in our relationship to ourselves and others. Through that choice, we find we learn to increasingly suffuse our daily lives with greater understanding, equanimity and compassion.
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New Meaning
What do you see in the graphic below? A chaotic pattern of black and white blotches? That's usually the first impression. At some moment, however, we
GOING FORWARD
What I want in my life is compassion, a flow between myself and others based on a mutual giving from the heart.
Marshall Rosenberg, Nonviolent Communication
We use the four phenomena of communicationobservations, feelings, needs and requestsin order to be understood, in order to understand others as they want to be understood, and to create the quality of connection that enables everyone to get their needs met through natural giving. At first, the step-wise structure of Compassionate Communication might seem a bit awkward. I would like to suggest a couple of ways to think of the model in the beginning. If it seems formulaic, think of it as a scaffolding that youll use to build the temple; once the structure is secure, you can take it down, and move inside. We speak of it as the transition from classic giraffe to street giraffe. Each of us who seeks to learn this language longs for the day when we can begin to speak it with some fluency. When it sounds stiff and clunky, you can remind yourself youre learning a new language which at first, of course, youll speak with a very thick accent. Think of it as empowering you to first visit and then reside in this new, compassionate land. I assure you that as you master these elements, you will naturally foster greater compassion in your life. You saw in the parent-teacher examples given earlier that there are two reciprocal activities involved in a conversationexpressing what lives in us and seeking to read what lives in the other. At any moment we can choose to listen for feelings and needs. Every conversation becomes a weaving back and forth. We move from a self-connected inner emptiness to giving our presence unto the other, seeking to connect our becoming to their becoming, and participating together in the unfolding moment. As we weave this dance of presence, those core needs we have for understanding, connection and meaning come to be met with greater simplicity and ease. And for that, we celebrate. I hope this booklet has opened a door as you go forward in your life. To keep that door open and develop a fluency in Compassionate Communication, I recommend taking a moment, three or four times a day, to practice self-empathy. I encourage you to attend workshops with a variety of trainers, find a local practice group, watch Marshall Rosenbergs videos, or study on your own. If you want to create your own practice group, many find Lucy Leus book, Nonviolent Communication Companion Workbook, a useful resource. May empathy awaken in our heartsnot I, but the other in me.
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suddenly see something else. We see a giraffe. The sensory information hasnt changed but we see it differently. We see meaning, meaning that was at first hidden. This meaning reveals the giraffe that was at first hidden. This revelation arises by way of an organizing ideathe concept giraffean idea we bring to our perception. TheE same idea holds true-E in MPATHY our speaking and listening. Compassionate MPATHY , S ELF & COMPASSION Communication gives us the new organizing ideas that enable us to see and read new meaning in our encounters with others and in the dialogues we have with ourselves. It gives us greater capacity to foster understanding, connection and compassion. That is its intention, goal and possibility.
A CHOICE BEFORE US
O NLOOKER
I NTENT TO C ORRECTGoal is to
P ARTICIPATORY
I NTENT TO C ONNECTGoal is to
alienate us from what is alive in the moment in ourselves , in others and in the world.
H EADThinking, speaking and listening from the head. Making judgments. D EFY OR C OMPLYReacting to
reconnect us to what is alive in the moment in ourselves, in others and in the world..
H EARTThinking, speaking and listening from the heart. Sustaining connection. C HOICESelf-initiated activity in line with my own feelings, needs and values. B ECOMING Life is a process of becoming. We participate in the coming-into-being of the life. I NTRINSIC M OTIVES Creating
Often, however, were neither present nor clear about these four aspects. Its as if were embedded in a matrix of language that mixes and muddles these basic phenomena and we end up languaging whats happening in ways that separate us. Were born into a matrix of languageour cultural default setting where evaluations mix with observations, thoughts with feelings, strategies with needs, and demands replace requests. We end up with expressions that focus on right/wrong, good/bad, spiritually tactful appropriate/inappropriate and the love affair with being right, defectivism and pathologizing. We excel at diagnosing whats amiss, analyzing, labeling, blaming and criticizing. In the onlooker matrix were often left with crippled understandings, sabotaged connections and the fractious friction of all against all.
A Participatory Vocabulary
In being human, each of us is gifted with universal human needs. An awareness of these needs grounds us in our common human experience and offers us a vocabulary to unlock a hitherto hidden dimension of human experience. It is a vocabulary that reveals and celebrates that each of us is simply in the process of becoming, and doing the best we can.
Individuality is always in the process of coming to be. The closer we can get to this sense of individuality, the more possible it becomes to also experience the world as always in the process of coming to be... The challenge of encountering the world through individuality is to meet the world through what we are coming to be, not through what we already know. This challenge is particularly acute in the domain of relationships.
Robert Sardello, Love and the Soul
From our first breath to our last, these human needs are rising: the need for meaning, understanding, connection; for safety, autonomy, integrity; the need to matter, to be seen, to be heard, as well as the profound need we have to serve life, to enrich life and to contribute to others; and, of course, the need to play. These needs come to presence in, and form a vocabulary for, our becoming. They are alive within us at all times and stir us to action. As we gain literacy in reading these needs, we see with new eyes. Our feelings are rooted in our needs and let us know how our becoming is going. They ground us in the present and, with practice, can become cognitive, a way of self-knowing. Together with needs, they form an archetype of human experience. As we practice Compassionate Communication, we discover that when seen in terms of our feelings and needs, we feel understood and connected. In that, empathy awakens.
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Empathys Awakening
The Nonviolent Communication Model
Baruch Urieli defines empathy as interest in and compassion for our fellow human being; it enables us to extend our inner being into that of the other person and directly experience something of his essential nature. Surprisingly, the word empathy has only recently entered our language. Originally coined in 1912 as a translation for the German word Einfhlungto feel into Carl Rogers introduced the expression into the wider culture in the 1950s when he used empathy to describe a capacity he saw emerging in the younger generation. If we can track the evolution of consciousness through the emergence of new words in a languageas Owen Barfield suggests in History in English Wordsthe arrival of the word empathy in our everyday language marked the arrival of a new reality in our midst. This new realityempathyis now opening up within our human community a new threshold in how we can meet, interact and inter-recognize each other. As a result, we can take this nascent capacity in hand and develop it into a social craft, becoming craftsmen of the heart. This is the threshold before us.
O BSERVATIONS
Here were listening for what may be triggering the others reactions. What are they noticing?
F EELINGS
Here were sensing what they might be feeling and checking to see if we understand. We participate in their present moment.
N EEDS
Here were seeking to identify the needs that lie at the root of their feelings. What needs matter in the moment?
Im wondering if ?
R EQUESTS
Here were guessing what they might be requesting. What might meet their needs?
The Pioneer
Marshall Rosenbergs life work, laid out for us in his basic book, Nonviolent Communication: A Language of Life, has pioneered the means to language this threshold. He uncovered the secret that enables us to accelerate the development of empathy. He did this by realizing that, at the heart of every packet of communication, there lies a universal human need. He then modeled EMPATHY , fluency S ELF-E &ofC OMPASSION for us how, by gaining in MPATHY the vocabulary needs, we can change our way of seeing and co-create a participatory reality in becoming. We can see human becoming in its arising, and meet on that basis. In empathy lies the seed for a new imagination of how we can meet in our shared humanity. Rumi spoke of the land beyond right and wrong. Compassionate Communication offers us the languaging to meet and live in that land as we forge empathy, the art of leaping beyond oneself.
...man is beginning in our time to cross the threshold of the spiritual world in the natural course of his development. This means that our present-day consciousness, which is limited in its perception to the physical world alone, is gradually supplemented by a capacity to perceive the world of living process.
Baruch Urieli, Learning to Experience the Etheric World
What am I observing? Is it muddied with evaluation? Is there spin? Can I frame it so I can create common ground?
Im feeling
F EELINGS
What am I feeling? Is it a feeling or a thought? Is it a faux feeling? Am I sharing myself with the other?
N EEDS
What am I needing? What needs are calling for attention? Am I confusing it with a strategy?
R EQUESTS
Am I asking for what I want? Do I want understanding, or do I have a specific, presently doable request? Am I open to either yes or no?
As we bring our intention into how we choose to participate in lifes arising, we cultivate the inner faculty of allowing the impressions of the outer world to reach [us] only in ways [we] have chosen (Steiner). We gain self-mastery.
...[participatory consciousness] can be entered into by plunging into looking, which means by a redeployment of attention into sense perception and away from the [onlooker] mind.
Henri Bortoft, The Wholeness of Nature
ONLOOKER CONSCIOUSNESS:
BEING RIGHT, AT ODDS & ALONE
This language is from the head. It is a way of mentally classifying people into varying shades of good and bad, right and wrong. Ultimately, it provokes defensiveness, resistance, and counterattack. It is a language of demands.
Marshall Rosenberg, Nonviolent Communication
The first request I call the air traffic controllers request. Its about message sent, message received. We might frame it thus (and there are a variety of ways to phrase it): Would you be willing to tell me what youre hearing me say? We have taken some care in how weve spoken and we want to check to see that weve been heard as intended. The second is an invitational request. Weve shared whats going on for us in the moment and with this request, we invite the other to share whats alive for them. It sounds something like this: Would you be willing to tell whats coming up for you in hearing what Im saying? Or more colloquially: Whats coming up for you now? With this request, we are saying that, yes, we have something coming up for us and, at the same time, were interested in whats coming up for the other. In making this request, we prepare inwardly to give empathy.
Gratitude
Marshall Rosenberg has said that all we say is please and thank you. When we speak we either have a request arising out of one of our needs, or we are expressing our gratitude for something someone has done. Compassionate Communication enables us to deepen and bring precision to the practice of gratitude. We do this by being specific about what was done or said (the observation), we share the feelings that were stirred in us, and identify those needs that were met. For example: When you arrive at the kindergarten whenever it snows and shovel a path for the children and families (observation), I feel relieved and grateful (feelings), because it meets my need for support and consideration (needs). Thank you! Rather than the positive evaluationYoure so thoughtfulwe say what they did or said. We give them useful information. Through this practice, we come to recognize the many and various ways that we contribute to each others lives. We also come to realize the power of the smallest deeds. When we receive such a gratitude we know exactly what we said or did that worked for the other person, and we tend to feel joy.
It is important to develop the life of feeling. Gratitude, reverence and holy awe are feelings that in later life come to expression as the power of blessing, as out-streaming human love.
Rudolf Steiner, Rosicrucian Esotericism
Classifying & Categorizing Sexist, Racist & other Stereotypes Making You into an It
The view that evaluates and assesses always does harm, whether it leads to positive results or not The judgmental view forces a You into the world of It.
Henning Khler, Difficult Children: There is No Such Thing
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PRACTICAL SUPPORT
Self-Empathy
Compassionate Communication begins with self-empathy, when we self-connect. Whenever a feeling arises, we can ask ourselves these two questions: What am I feeling? What am I needing? When we are able to self-empathize, we create a space of freedom between the stimulus and response. We deepen our presence in the moment. In relationship, when something happens and we take a moment to identify our own feelings and needs, we become freer to choose whether to express ourselves compassionately, or empathize with the other. To learn Compassionate Communication, developing a daily practice of giving oneself empathy is an effective way to become literate in the vocabulary of feelings and needs, and disentangle from our habitual thinking and ways of reacting. Through self-empathy, we stay responsibly present to our own needs, and thus present for our life as it comes into being.
PARTICIPATORY CONSCIOUSNESS:
FOSTERING UNDERSTANDING & PARTNERSHIP
...we learn to dwell imaginatively in the form of living beings with a thinking that participates rather than remains as the external observer.
Nigel Hoffman, Goethes Science of Living Form
OBSERVATIONS
Are discriminated from evaluations. State what is, without spin. Are factual, observable phenomena. Are what a video camera might record. Support seeking common ground. Welcome clarification from the other person.
FEELINGS
Geography of Presence
Where is our presence in the moment? Is it in our thoughts, or in our perceptions? In Compassionate Communication, there is a geography of presence. When we give ourselves self-empathy, our presence is here with ourselves. When we meet another person and give them empathy, our presence is over there. This is the geography of presence. Our work in groups can foster deeper connections when we consciously choose where we are giving our presence. When we are able, as a community, to give our undivided presence to the speaker until they have been understood, healing, simplicity, connection and efficiency will follow. When the speaker is complete, we can move our presence either to ourselves or another.
Are discriminated from thoughts. Give us information; thoughts interpret. Voice how our becoming is going. Are not caused by outer impressions. Are not I feel that & I feel like, or I feel you/she/they etc
NEEDS
EMPATHY,
REQUESTS
Are discriminated from strategies. Are universal; strategies are personal & specific. Language our human becoming. Are at the root of our feelings. Connect us to our shared S ELF -EMPATHY & Chumanity. OMPASSION Foster compassionate connection
Requests
For requests to be effective, they need to be concrete, presently doable, and framed in positive language. When we think about making a request, we usually think of requesting an action that would meet our needs. However, there are two helping requests that are very useful in serving the intention to connect.
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Are discriminated from demands. Have conditions; requests dont. Best be positive, concrete & presently doable. Strive to meet everyones needs. Clarify whats been heard, what feelings are present, or what action might meet the needs.
The social aspect of the spiritual life demands that I open myself to the other, invite him to express himself in me. In this way I am able to experience his questions of inner development as my own.
Dieter Brll, The Mysteries of Social Encounters
Adventurous Curious Affectionate Delighted Alive Determined Amazed Eager Amused Ecstatic Astonished Encouraged Calm Excited Confident Fascinated Content Friendly
FEAR & ANXIETY
Afraid Alarmed Anxious Apprehensive Bewildered Cautious Concerned Confused Disconcerted Disturbed Dubious Embarrassed Impatient Nervous Overwhelmed Panicky Perplexed Puzzled Reluctant Restless Scared Shocked Stressed Terrified Worried
Aggravated Agitated Angry Annoyed Appalled Cranky Disgusted Exasperated Frustrated Furious Impatient Indignant Infuriated Irritated Resentful Upset
FAUX FEELINGS
Bored Depressed Disappointed Discouraged Disheartened Dismayed Despairing Exhausted Helpless Hopeless Hurt Lonely Melancholic Sad Tired Troubled
Interpretations masquerading as feelings
Ignored Neglected Intimidated Put Upon Invisible Rejected Let Down Rushed Manipulated Unappreciated Misunderstood Used
AFFECTION Companionship Intimacy Kindness To Matter to Someone IDENTITY/MEANING Acknowledgement Appreciation Challenges Clarity Integrity Learning New Skills Privacy Self-Development Shared Reality To Be Seen For Ones Striving To Be Seen For Ones Intentions To Be Seen In Ones Biography To Be Someone To Make Sense of Ones World LEISURE Celebration Comfort & Ease Play & Fun Recreation FREEDOM Autonomy Choices To Speak Ones Mind UNDERSTANDING Consideration Empathy Peace of Mind To Be Heard TRANSCENDENCE Beauty Love Peace Rhythm