Artwork for podcast On Deeper Reflection
ODR 005 – NonViolent Communication
5th January 2023 • On Deeper Reflection • Scott D. Weingart
00:00:00 00:36:03

Share Episode

Shownotes


This episode is based on one of the most important books I have ever read: NonViolent Communication – A Language of Life by Marshall Rosenberg




Nonviolent Communication is one of the most powerful ways of speaking with people that I have ever come across. It eliminates useless strategies like judgment and proving yourself right and instead gives you absolutely tactical techniques to get the things you need for happiness for yourself and your interlocutor.


NVC is not a new, gimmicky set of dictum. It boils down the philosophies of Stoicism, the psychological approaches of CBT and cognitive psychology.


Marshall Rosenberg was a psychologist trained in the classical analytic, but found it unsatisfying and for the most part, unhelpful.


Speaking Giraffe vs. Speaking Jackal

NVC is not really a theory or a guide to behavior–it is a language!!!


Giraffes only hear feelings & needs, never thoughts


Jackal language is about judging, criticizing, analyzing, moralizing and accusing. When we feel unfairly treated, accused or when we want to impose our wishes, we tend to use the language of the jackal. Jackal language is separating. Giraffe language is unifying.


 


The System

There are essentially two major parts–The four component speech creation and emergency empathy


The Four Components

1. Observation without Evaluation

There’s nothing good or bad but thinking makes it so.

Shakespeare in Hamlet

Avoid generalization, only

specifics

(generally good to avoid the past as well)


Separate the observation from the evaluation or better yet, eliminate the evaluation


You are the most inconsiderate person–you are always late


J Krishnamurti: “observing without evaluating is the highest form of human intelligence”


See page 30 for more on pitfalls in observing


2. Feeling

Internal emotional states vs. thoughts/judgment


If you can replace I feel with I think–then it is not a feeling


If I feel is followed by: that, like, or as if then it is not a feeling


If I feel is followed by a name or pronoun (whether he, you, or I), then it is not a feeling


Eliminate the feel–and see if it still works I feel sad to I’m sad works. I feel


Could you feel it alone on a desert island–Ignored is not a feeling, unimportant is not a feeling, resentment is not a feeling b/c they require another to judge/act. It is a thought about how someone else is judging us




p.45 has a list of positive and negative feelings



Stoicism/CBT–We are the only ones responsible for our feelings


We are responsible for everything we do (Replace I have to with I choose to)


Do not connect the feelings to the observations through cause and effect. They relate–they are not caused by.


When I observe X, I feel Y


Even break it down to good/bad


People are disturbed not by things, but by the view they take of them –Epictetus














“There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so” from

“Hamlet” by William Shakespeare





3. Needs

Rosenberg identifies human needs as safety, understanding, respect, warmth,


autonomy, etc. When needs are expressed indirectly through assessments


and behavioural diagnoses, people are likely to hear criticism and


behave defensively or start talking back.

Needs




https://github.com/cognitivetech/Marshall-Rosenberg-NVC/blob/master/NVC-Training-3_The-4-Part-Model_Marshall-Rosenberg_transcript.md#universal-human-needs


 


To be Heard!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!




 


4. Requests

Make the request–would you mind repeating back what you heard me say–I want to make sure I am not causing any misunderstandings


Specific, Doable, Optional, Positive Language


not vague, sweeping, negative, or demands


If they refuse, then they must make a counter-request


Can you repeat back what I heard–I wasn’t as clear as I needed to be


You can never make anyone do anything!!!!


All conversation is transactional–when you think it is not, then it is usually b/c you are passively not acceding to the request


A request could be for the person to repeat back what they heard


I would like to know how you feel about what I just said


Or what they are thinking


Would you be willing…


Whatever is done is given with joy-never a sense of obligation or fear of punishment


 


Logistics of the 4-Parts

Rapidity / Laconic


Speed of Light-connect feeling to needs then immediately connect to request


40 words or less then check in with a request



  • When I see that __


  • I feel __


  • because my need for is/is not met.


  • Would you be willing to __?


  • Need to make NVC sound like normal language otherwise people begin to feel managed

My Take


  • Stop (Hand Out) (Stop the Amygdala Hijack)


  • Breathe (Hands Up & Down)


  • Space between Stimulus and Response from Victor Frankl. In the space between is our evaluation of events which creates feelings. Need to let go of this evaluation!


  • Emotions You are Feeling (Hand to Heart)


  • Your Needs or Wants (Hand to Head)


  • Your Request (Hand to Mouth)

Emergency Empathy and Empathic Listening

Self-empathy–When their Jackal language matches your inner jackals–that is the hardest to maintain giraffe ears


They are just (badly) expressing feelings and needs


Just ask–it is fine if you are wrong


Were you saying–give benefit of the doubt


Empathy for horrible acts–do you need to do this–only if you want communication and to effect change


A great tool for showing empathy is paraphrasing or the repeat-back. This means reflecting back what the other person just said in a way that demonstrates you understand, e.g., if your child says “I hate school!” then you can reply “Are you feeling sad because you’re not enjoying your classes?”


This type of question lets the person either agree that you understand, or they will clarify what they really meant. When you’re confronted by an angry person, this tool can be especially helpful. from: Nonviolent Communication Summary: 11 Best Lessons From Marshall B Rosenberg -)  Echos of Negotiation–Make paraphrasing a habit (Chris Voss)

Are you feeling X because you need Y


There is a reason that but is a homophone for butt, when you use it in conflict, it makes you an ass


Ask them to clarify their response in terms of a request


Do you want advice or for me to just hear you (just assume they don’t want advice until they tell you)


4 levels of response evolution

Blame yourself


Blame them


Communicate nonviolently


Care for their emotions and needs But never by putting yours aside Only if you can genuinely feel the space for it and your needs get met as well


 


Evaluation/Criticism/Praise

moralistic judgments are a dead end


Compliments are just as bad as criticism

Evaluation is by Observations and feelings


What the person did


What needs that fulfilled


What that made you feel


do not give praise only appreciation when i see hear saw heard actions


NVC for Conflict Resolution

Your Needs


Their Needs


Verify you both understand eachothers


Empathy


Strategies


 


Keep a list


Righting down conversation


Roleplay–let them take your role. mediator pretends to be 1 side


 


Ask yourself what was your intention


 


 


Anger

do not make judgments


Someone cut you off–their kid is in the hospital


Anger=unmet needs


express feelings and needs


Scream nonviolent


I feel sad b/c I need!!


has imago active listening component


The Giraffe No

Explain the need that prevents you from saying yes immediately followed by a counter-request that embraces both people’s needs


How to hear no: receive with joy, express need that prevents, give a counter request


Overall Maxims

There are only feelings and needs


The only things people say of any use are Please and Thank You


We must value the other person’s needs as much as our own


NVC doesn’t equal NICE!!!! NVC is not about pushovers–assertive NVC


Doesn’t need to be rigid. You can abridge steps or communicate nonverbally–it doesn’t need to be rote. Intent is what matters


Vids to Watch

San Fran Seminar


Now on to the Podcast…

Links

Chapters

Video

More from YouTube