RE: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Rob Sandelin (floriferous![]() |
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Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2000 14:23:26 -0700 (MST) |
Working with conflict caused by individuals is an interesting and often untravelled road. From my experience, cohousing groups have some unstated but often very tangible boundaries which define how much energy the group is willing to expend to work with individuals who cause conflict. Often actions which cause problems within the group process get ignored because that is the easiest thing to do. Conflict work is like a swimming pool. There is a whole bunch of water involved, and even the shallow end of the pool can be scary to someone who is not a swimmer. There is also a deep end, which requires some skills to stay safe in. Here are a couple, very shallow end process methods for dealing with group conflict caused by individual behaviors. 1. What? Observe and clarify exactly what behaviors are occurring. Use as few labels as you can. For example: A facilitator team writes down the following: Jess spoke in a non-neutral tone and put emphasis on the words incompetent, irresponsible, and outrageous. The next 12 speakers all spoke about these words, Sally, Jim and Rob spoke in non-neutral tones about them. The group then spent the next 38 minutes talking about the words and the reactions to them. Whew....This seems like a bit much right? But it you really want clarity you have to understand what behaviors are causing what reaction. And if you ever want to intervene with the individual you will be best served if you can find specific concrete examples of behaviors that led to reactions by the group. Often these are words and tones so you need to try to describe these as best you can. 2. Do a general public intervention which covers the behaviors but does not single out the individual. In the example above, the public intervention that was done was a general article in the groups newsletter about words and their effects. The individual read the article and realized that it often applied to him, and thus he began changing his behavior, choosing his words more carefully and checking his tone. For a specific set of process ideas about how to use interventions, see the Conflict and Connection issue of Communities magazine, Fall 1999, issue #104, page 47. The article is called, Working with difficult behaviors in meetings. (If you live in a community you really should subscribe to this magazine. Its a great deal at $20 a year and full of very relevant and useful information)) See the resources on the Intentional Communities Resources Pages at http://www.ic.org/nica/resource.htm Rob Sandelin Community Works! Group process workshops for social change non-profits
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing, (continued)
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Matt Lawrence, November 1 2000
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Kay Argyle, November 7 2000
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Judy Baxter, November 7 2000
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Berrins, November 7 2000
- RE: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Rob Sandelin, November 8 2000
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Robyn Williams, November 8 2000
- Re: Problematic Controlling Personalities and Cohousing Mary E. Faccioli, November 8 2000
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