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How We Communicate with Ourselves - Session #2 - Nonviolent Communication Training - Marshall Rosenberg

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Contenido proporcionado por Joe Public. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente Joe Public o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.

Working with anger, depression, self-judgement, and not giving away our power to cultural programming

In this session, I would like to focus on how we apply non violent communication within ourselves. Then violent communication requires quite a transformation from how many of us have been programmed to communicate. Many of us have been programmed to communicate in terms of a language of categorizing people and their actions to judge what they are for doing what they’re doing.

Excerpt:

OJ Harvey at the University of Colorado, went around the world and took samples of literature from different cultures to see how often this verb “to be” was used in judging people’s actions good, bad, right, wrong, etc. And he correlated this with measures of violence - violence toward oneself, violence toward others, and he finds a high correlation the more cultures think in terms of what people are and their actions, the more violence in those cultures.

We have four friends that can help alert us that we are thinking in a way that contributes to violence.

These four feelings are very helpful because when we feel these feelings, we can use them as an alert, that we’re thinking in a way that’s contributing to violence on the planet. And here is an opportunity for us to transform that thinking.

So what are these four friends that we have?

anger, depression, guilt, and shame.

Whenever we’re feeling those feelings, we are thinking in a way that we have been taught to think for about 10,000 years. A way of thinking designed to make us obedient to authority, but a way of thinking that is not conducive to safety and peace on our planet. So we can use those feelings as a wake up signal. Wake up, we’re thinking in a way that’s not conducive to peace, on the planet. Let’s transform the thinking into one that promotes peace on our planet.

So let me show you what I mean.
Training Session # 2 Marshall Rosenberg CNVC org (youtube)

Full Transcript
Leave a short voice message to be included on this podcast:
https://anchor.fm/nvc-archive/message

For longer voice recordings, episode length recordings, or other NVC content to be shared on this podcast,
contact cognitivetechniq@yahoo.com to discuss content ideas.

  continue reading

43 episodios

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Manage episode 256729420 series 2640698
Contenido proporcionado por Joe Public. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente Joe Public o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.

Working with anger, depression, self-judgement, and not giving away our power to cultural programming

In this session, I would like to focus on how we apply non violent communication within ourselves. Then violent communication requires quite a transformation from how many of us have been programmed to communicate. Many of us have been programmed to communicate in terms of a language of categorizing people and their actions to judge what they are for doing what they’re doing.

Excerpt:

OJ Harvey at the University of Colorado, went around the world and took samples of literature from different cultures to see how often this verb “to be” was used in judging people’s actions good, bad, right, wrong, etc. And he correlated this with measures of violence - violence toward oneself, violence toward others, and he finds a high correlation the more cultures think in terms of what people are and their actions, the more violence in those cultures.

We have four friends that can help alert us that we are thinking in a way that contributes to violence.

These four feelings are very helpful because when we feel these feelings, we can use them as an alert, that we’re thinking in a way that’s contributing to violence on the planet. And here is an opportunity for us to transform that thinking.

So what are these four friends that we have?

anger, depression, guilt, and shame.

Whenever we’re feeling those feelings, we are thinking in a way that we have been taught to think for about 10,000 years. A way of thinking designed to make us obedient to authority, but a way of thinking that is not conducive to safety and peace on our planet. So we can use those feelings as a wake up signal. Wake up, we’re thinking in a way that’s not conducive to peace, on the planet. Let’s transform the thinking into one that promotes peace on our planet.

So let me show you what I mean.
Training Session # 2 Marshall Rosenberg CNVC org (youtube)

Full Transcript
Leave a short voice message to be included on this podcast:
https://anchor.fm/nvc-archive/message

For longer voice recordings, episode length recordings, or other NVC content to be shared on this podcast,
contact cognitivetechniq@yahoo.com to discuss content ideas.

  continue reading

43 episodios

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