nonviolent communication sr. ana elídia caffer neves brazil north province
TRANSCRIPT
Nonviolent Nonviolent CommunicationCommunication
Sr. Ana Elídia Caffer Neves
Brazil North Province
Communication for peace
Compassionate CommunicationNonviolent communication
Personal ReflectionGet in touch with your heart
Identify the feelings you have experienced more strongly during this seminar.
Also identify your main needs during this seminar.
Were your needs satisfied?
Learning Nonviolence
New Perception: We recognize that violence exists in and among us and that we are part of the violent systems.
Direction: Build communities and societies of Gospel justice, reconciliation and healing where personal and social violence in any form has no place.
13th General Chapter Directions
Triangle of ViolenceJohan Galtung
Visible
Direct Violence
Cultural Violence
Structural Violence
Invisible
Human Needs Maslow’s Pyramid
It is a form of interpersonal communication inspired by compassion and solidarity.
It helps to improve relations and to act with practical and effective means to promote peace.
Founded by the psychologist Dr. Marshall Rosenberg, it is used by a world network of mediators, facilitators and volunteers.
What is nonviolent communication?
North American Psychologist of Jewish origin;
From the 60s on, he developed Nonviolent Communication (NVC) to help resolve conflicts.
At present Non Violent Communication serves as a tool for resolving conflicts in more than 65 countries.
NVC is also applied:
- in the development of new social systems,partnership and in power sharing;
- in the field of Education,
- in Restoratives Circles and in the practice of the Restorative Justice
Who is Marshall Rosenberg?
Marshall Rosenberg:
He travels around the world to mediate in conflicts and proposes programs of peace to regions devastated by war.
He offers courses and conferences on calm response to the verbal conflicts in our daily dealings.
He sees the key to overcoming disagreements and quarrels in the way we speak and listen to others.
Introduction
The jackal and the giraffe
In childhood we learn to communicate in a violent and aggressive way to achieve our goals/aims.
This is head level communication which does not take into account our feelings.
Moralist (classifies everything as “good and bad”, “true and false”)
It is tendentious and judges people. And always blames others.
It is demanding and thinks that others have the obligation to satisfy our personal needs.
The language of the violence
The language of love
This communication comes from the heart.
It is in contact with our feelings and needs.
It is true and honest
It neither judges nor looks down on others;
It lets us assume responsibility for our own emotions.
It enables us to state clearly what we wish without imposing or demanding.
We can learn another way to communicate which makes for peace.
The secret of Giraffe:
Faced with any
kind of violent
communication
the Giraffe only
listens:
“Please help me!”
The starting point of NVC:
To recognize in ourselves and in the others the presence of
God, which Dr. Marshall calls “Divine Energy”.
This divine presence in me is what recognizes the divine
presence in the other person.
“We human beings act to satisfy
our needs, principles and basic and universal
values.”
Heart of the NVC: cooperation
How does NVC function?As an alternative to face the
day to day conflicts
Personal Exercise
Think of a person with whom you find it difficult to
relate.
Observe:1.Why do I have this difficulty in
relating to her/him?
2.What did this person do to displease me?
Look at your notes:Are they objective observations of reality and descriptions of the facts?
Are they judgments about another person;Are they judgments about another person;your criticism of her way of being; your criticism of her way of being;
your opinions or prejudices about her?your opinions or prejudices about her?
Group sharing
How does NVC Function?As an alternative to face the day to
day conflicts
When we overcome the destructive logic of anger, punishment, shame
and blame.
Conflicts with companions, family,
members of the same community ,
persons with different opinions
and cultures.
Cycles of Painful
emotions
For this:We need to communicate
clearly and honestly.
To communicate honestly and clearly means always to state the truth and express objectively:
What did the person do? How did I feel? What need of mine was not met?What do I want this person to do for me?
Opinions
Judgments
Criticism
Prejudices
Aggression violence
resentment conflicts
How to tell the truthclearly and honestly without attacking
another person?
Example:Tell the truth and honestly express…
What did the person do to me?This morning, when you shouted at me…What did I feel? ... I felt very angry... What was my need that was not met? ...
Why do I feel the need to be treated with more respect and to dialogue with you?
What do I want this person to do for me? I ask this of you: even though you are angry
with me, talk to me without shouting.
Personal Exercise
Get back to the person with whom you have difficulty relating and describe:
What did the person do to me?How did I feel in relation to this person?What is the need that I perceive in me and that causes the way I feel?
What do I want this person to do for me?
Share two by twoObserve:
1. How do I feel talking about my feelings and needs?
2. The quality of listening.
3. What do we discover from this exercise?
NVC’s goalsTo help us connect with what is alive within us and in others
To establish relationships founded on
cooperation and compassion
To build relationships from the
heart:Giving and receiving so that
one's own life and
that of the other
person is enriched
Changes in our usual way of communication
“Do not judge and you will not be judged. For as you judge, so you will be judged,” (Mt 7,1).
Communication that blocks compassion
It is natural to receive and to give with compassion.
We learn different forms of “alienating” communication in life which lead us to speak and behave in a way that hurts others and ourselves.
Communication that blocks compassion
• Moralizing judgments• Making comparisons• Not assuming responsibility for our own thinking, feelings and actions. • Communicating our wishes in a demanding manner.
A few steps of NVC:
1. Observe without judging: When we mix remarks with judgments, others tend to perceive this as criticism and resist what we say.
2. Identify and express feelings:
When we state what we feel in a clear and specific
way, we connect more easily with other persons. Allowing ourselves to be vulnerable and expressing our feelings, we help solve
conflicts.
A few steps of NVC:
3. Assume responsibility for our feelings:
What others say and do can be a stimulus, but never the cause of our feelings. When someone communicates in a negative form, we can receive the message in different
ways: To blame ourselves; To blame others; To notice our own feelings and needs; To perceive the feelings and
needs hidden behind the negative
message of the other person.
A few steps of NVC:
I’m sorry
4. Ask what will enrich our life:
• When our needs are not being met
1. Express what we observe, feel and need without criticizing, analyzing, blaming or interpreting the motives of others;
2. Carry out specific actions that could satisfy our needs.
A few steps of NVC:
5. Give and accept empathy:
Empathy is the respectful perception of what others are experiencing.
A few steps of NVC:
6. Be compassionately connected with yourself:
When we commit errors, we can use the NVC processes of mourning and pardon through which we can grow, instead of moralizing, getting entangled in judgments of ourselves.
A few steps of NVC:
7. Express the anger: To express our anger fully, the first step is not to place the responsibility for our anger on the other person. Instead, we view our own feelings and needs in the light of our conscience.
A few steps of NVC:
8. Become free so as to be able to help others
To become free of our conditioning
To solve interior conflicts
To take care of our inner life
A few steps of NVC:
9. Express gratitude:
Gratitude is very important in NVC and it must be celebrated, not with praises, but with the honest expression of how I feel
enriched by another person. Instead of saying that a person is this or that (judgment), tell her/him how she/he has benefited me and how she/he has contributed to my happiness and well-being.
A few steps of NVC:
Thank you!
Attentive ears
To do good is the best way of making our life more significant and of enriching the life of other
persons.
Prayer for PeaceSr. Ana C. Elídia Neves SSpS
LORD, we bring before you the pain of humanitysuffering, searching and struggling for peace.We bring the anguish of the victims of violence,injustice and oppression. We bring the despair of those who have losttheir loved ones in conflict situations.We also bring our wounded hearts,Thirsting for your peace and your love. God, we want to consecrate this dayto the cause of peace, so that all our days will be days of peace.
Prayer for Peace / cont.
Give us, Lord, your light to buildpeace in our relationships.Give us, Lord, your peace to learn howto welcome without prejudiceand to respect the dignity of every human being. Give us, Lord, your peace to recognizeeach person as our neighborand the generous gift of your love in all creation.
Turn the violence and injusticethat dwell within us into a gift of lovethat generates compassion and peace.Amen.