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Dedicated Nonprofit Promoting Best Collaborative Practices for Remembrance Initiatives, Racial Healing & Restorative Justice
If you’re like many of us we’re overwhelmed nowadays by the enormity of addressing the current state of political issues in our country. A remedy we propose here is to speak the truth to one another without accusation. We’ve identified accusation as the key dynamic that snares us. By pitting us against one another it robs and cheats us out of the unity that could resolve our polarized debates. We may think we want to win over the other side to our point of view. Irrationally we believe that accusing them will force them to concede. We keep trying despite the proven reality that it nearly never happens. Instead we forfeit the unity that will move things forward beyond our same old cycles of contention and discord. Mutual recriminations are the deep enemy of our civic unity. No one gets heard by the other side, but only by those who already agree.
An effective alternative to accusation is to lament about common crises and offer mutual aid for resourcing each other to achieve shared, incremental goals. Until we’re able to exercise those key skills of speaking truth without accusation, voicing lament and offering mutual aid, our cycles of discord will continue to operate, intensify, and accelerate exponentially. So-called ‘speaking to our base’ and ‘speaking truth to power’ are self-indulgent traps in that regard. They are seductive: masking a covert ‘will-to-power’ that feeds on and plays into the cycles of accusation, instead of liberating us from accusation as the real enemy.
But communicating the truth-power and urgency of an alternative approach can be challenging. Recall for example medical officials who, during the current pandemic, are required to say the same thing over and over again about the solutions. Yet repeating the same thing over and over again is key to the remedy. For we actually need conversation partners to help sustain this perspective, and to keep us from collapsing back inside of an energy well or vortex of doubt, confusion or hopelessness—not to mention collapsing back into our resentments, bitterness or anger. Those dynamics will drain our will-to-concord and misdirect our energies. Instead, best practices for skilled, disciplined listening are called for here.*
Naming ‘all that’ provides the perspective we need to partner and collaborate. Join us in private conversations as well as public speaking to make a decisive contribution to civic restoration. Let us commence together this next stage of ongoing conversations as soon as we can. And thank you, as you implement best practices like the Skilled Conversations model below.* Thank you for ‘being there’ as friends, associates, and fellow citizens.
Theophus ‘Thee’ Smith for STAR Inc.
Here are three simple guidelines or ground rules that are commendable as a best practice for the kind of private or organized group conversations that can achieve and foster skilled listening.
Anywhere from one minute to half an hour or more is good. The time that is available is divided equally, and turns are timed so that each person gets the same number of minutes to talk.
Listeners are often tempted to do these things with the best of intentions. For skilled listening, however, such interruptions interfere with each person doing his or her own thinking: the heart of why shared listening is so effective.
Never mentioning it anytime or anywhere, even to the speaker (!) —without the speaker’s say so, gives us all a rare but powerful safety to explore our innermost issues or troublesome thoughts and feelings. Then appropriate action can follow!
If relaxedly but intentionally followed, these ground rules can enable people with sufficient good will to hear one another’s most heartfelt and strongest commitments across major differences and tough issues. Topics can include everyday experiences and range through thorny political issues as well as lifestyle choices, faith matters, life cycles and identities like youth and aging.
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Adapted from Russ Vernon Jones: ‘Support Listening for Teachers’ and www.russvernonjones.org
Artist: Andrew Sheldon
The Symposium is entitled “Reconciliation and Technology: Neutral Resources for Social Good,” Dr. Thee’s presentation is entitled “Trustbuilding & Truthspeaking vs. ‘Deepfake Justice.'” You can register and see all of the presenters on the website at https://www.jhfnationalsymposium.org/
We are excited about the screening event of Always in Season that Georgia Public Broadcasting will host at the GPB headquarters next Tuesday, February 11 at 6pm. Look for this very important discussion around racial terrorism, violence, reconciliation and repair. We will be recording (audio) the panel discussion for future broadcast on GPB Radio’s “On Second Thought” program.https://www.gpb.org/events/2020/02/11/always-in-season-film-screening-and-discussion
Presenting
“THE FIRST RAINBOW COALITION”
A film by Ray Santisteban – The brief and powerful history and legacy of the groundbreaking Chicago multi-ethnic coalition that so poignantly informs the work that is happening right now in Georgia!
Click below
Sat, December 14, 2019
3:00 PM – 5:00 PM EST
Atlanta Shambhala Meditation Center
1447 Church St.
Decatur, GA 30030
The auction has ended. Thank you to Andrew and the bidders!
Announcement of Highest Bidders will take place on December 14th
2019 STAR Membership & Fund Development Drive – 12/3 -12/14
Benefiting the STAR Youth Activist Program & Scholarship
And Professional Support to EJI Remembrance Coalitions
The auction has ended – thank you to all who support us, especially artist Andrew Shelton and the bidders!
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