Discomfortable cover image

Discomfortable

Getting Discomfortable with Nonviolent Communication

May 22, 2019
39:00
 

About a year ago, I listened to an audiobook called Nonviolent Communication, as read by the author Marshall Rosenberg, and it immediately struck a chord with me. So much so that I listened to it twice! (You know, before my free Audible trial ended). In his slow, silky southern(?) drawl, Marshall outlined a very clear and simple structure for communicating in a way that minimizes conflict and maximizes connection (in theory, at least). His ideas dovetailed so nicely with what I was already thinking about shame-free communication, that I immediately wanted to learn more. After some googling, I discovered that there are Nonviolent Communication (or NVC as most people call it) practice groups all over the world and I decided to try one while I was in Vancouver.

And the NVC meetup did not disappoint! It was fascinating to watch these skilled communicators in action. After every session I attended, I left feeling as if I had just had a really great therapy session (while NVC is definitely not a substitute for therapy, if you can’t afford a real therapist every week, attending a free NVC practice group near you certainly wouldn’t hurt)! Check out the Center for Nonviolent Communication to find practice groups in your area.

A year later, I’ve just completed a 9-day NVC Internation Intensive Training (or IIT) on an island off of Stockholm, Sweden. It was a fully immersive residential retreat where I spent every day and every meal practicing and learning surrounded by 50 other Nonviolent Communicators of all ages and skill levels. It was intense, emotionally draining, and highly insightful! I will almost certainly do another IIT in the years to come. 

While I am still very much learning about NVC and how to internalize it and apply it to my daily life, I figured this was as good a time as any to do an episode that tries to explain what NVC is and how it works. Listening back to the episode, I already notice a few things that I mixed up (saying “I feel” when I really mean “I think”, for example), but if any of what I’m saying intrigues you, then I highly recommend you check out the audiobook, a class, or a practice group for yourself.

This episode is also a fitting follow-up to last week’s podcast on Authentic Relating because there are many similarities between the two practices. Both classes made me realize that I haven’t been living my life with the goal of “aliveness” — that exciting, electric energy of really connecting honestly with other humans. That means I’ve mostly been what NVC practitioners might call “nice, but dead”.

Note: this episode makes more sense if you listen to my podcast on Wisdom 2.0 first.

Remember Everything You Learn from Podcasts

Save insights instantly, chat with episodes, and build lasting knowledge - all powered by AI.
App store bannerPlay store banner