T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
796.1 | | MAMIE::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Thu Sep 21 1989 15:56 | 8 |
| We must stop meeting like this!
Maybe the answer, as you implies/stated is in how we express our
disagrement/differences. Maybe we need a kinder and gentler notes
file while keeping the openness to differing views. Valuing differences
is essential, valuing safeness (actual or preceived) is also essential.
Steve
|
796.2 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | The quality of mercy is not strained | Thu Sep 21 1989 16:32 | 6 |
| But sometimes I just want to reach out of the terminal, and wring a noter's
neck, shouting "D***it, be nice!".
I don't know how to force, even to strongly encourage, nice-ness in a diverse
electronic community.
Mez
|
796.3 | Soft Answers Turn Away Wrath | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu Sep 21 1989 17:22 | 23 |
| One of the reasons this notesfile isn't safe space is because it has such
a divergent and diverse audience. Pop into something esoteric (and I
am thinking off the top of my head without getting into this note) like
Spelunking and what is there to get nasty about?
Womannotes and Mennotes and soapbox and anywhere people discuss people and
points of view you multiply and diversify the audience. This means people
with hostile opinions and even sometimes downright un-nice-ness to other
people.
I am afraid in this forum, you will not be able to get away from the
occasional person who is not nice. However, this forum does lead
many into forming new (or more concrete) opinions on various subjects,
and generally it also leads people into finding how they can
agree to disagree and still be friends.
This is the key: that despite my opinion that you have your head screwed
on crooked and you think that I have my head screwed on crooked, whoever
you and I may be, we can still coexist on friendly terms.
Is that possible? I have had it work on several occasions.
Mark
|
796.4 | The Best is Yet to Come? | HENRYY::HASLAM_BA | Creativity Unlimited | Thu Sep 21 1989 17:25 | 15 |
| The only ways I have found to do this, Mez, is to take disagreement
"with a grain of salt," or to take more personal comments to one-on-one
notes via electronic mail. In all honesty, I'm reading this file
less and less, hitting NEXT UNSEEN more and more, and generally
disassociating myself from a lot of "public comments." Instead,
I personally write to the person with whom I converse so my messages
don't end up questioned, or mangled in some way as so many seem
to in here. It's hard to feel supportive or supported when so much
time is spent defending opinions and comments. I regret that I
can't offer you a better idea, but that seems to be the way it is
these days.
Looking forward to better times,
Barb
|
796.5 | 'positive growth experience sought... will travel' | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Thu Sep 21 1989 18:03 | 33 |
| What is 'safe space'? That's hard to say.
But 'safe space' is _not_:
- a place to grow and explore. Without challenge and change,
growth cannot happen. Challenge and change by their very nature
are not safe.
- a place to explore the diversity of the human experience.
Exploring, understanding, accepting, and [finally] valuing this
diversity is a road rich in potholes and dead-end side paths.
'Safe space' can be found in solitude, but when the need is to make
contact that won't answer.
I believe that safe space can be built 'in a crowd' where there exists
trust and openness and a willingness. However, these attributes are, in
my opinion, impossible to guarantee in any public or semi-public forum
such as this.
I will hold my hand up now and be counted as one who thinks that all
too frequently people have been gouged in the process of growth or
trying to rebuild. I will also say here there seems to be more attempt
to convince than to understand.
On the flip side, I believe there needs to be more understanding of the
nature of challenges to ideas. Asking '_why_ to you feel <>?' is
_not_ the same as 'you shouldn't feel <>'. All too often it is treated
the same. Certainly one can accept that <> is felt; but if one doesn't
feel <> oneself, it is hard to understand and value if one is not
allowed to ask. To challenge is not to reject.
Ann
|
796.6 | ( <-- .-1 What she said! ) | SYSENG::BITTLE | healing from the inside out | Thu Sep 21 1989 18:15 | 10 |
| re: .5 (Ann Johnston)
OK, Ann, take the words out of my mouth/off my fingertips !!!
I second .5, and present as a recent example of someone who
has permitted herself to learn, explore, and almost even accept(!)
via challenge and thought is Lorna St.Hilaire's 775.82.
(I'm still getting over the shock of it all :-).
nancy b.
|
796.7 | i *am* being disagreeable today! | DECWET::JWHITE | I'm pro-choice and I vote | Thu Sep 21 1989 18:34 | 9 |
|
re: .5
sorry, but i must say that i feel you are presenting a false dichotomy.
growth in a supportive atmosphere is not the opposite of growth through
challenge. i also believe that this 'false dichotomy' is inbred into
our male dominated society. that is, i believe our society tells us that
the only way to grow/succeed is through struggle/competition and i further
believe that this is simply not true.
|
796.8 | Growth does just happen ask a tree. | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Thu Sep 21 1989 18:39 | 7 |
|
And I agree with .7.
_peggy
|
796.9 | I didn't put it in processing on purpose. | ULTRA::ZURKO | The quality of mercy is not strained | Thu Sep 21 1989 18:43 | 7 |
| I think some people (but thankfully not all!) have misunderstood my base note.
I want to talk about 'safe space', the concept. We can also discuss why
womannotes isn't (or, if you _must_ is :-) 'safe space', but I long ago dealt
with those itchy nasty conflict vibes (well, mostly). I'm much more interested
in exploring what 'safe space' is (hence my request for references), where it
has existed, where it hasn't, stuff like that.
Mez
|
796.10 | Depends a lot on *what* is to be made "safe" | STAR::BECK | The question is - 2B or D4? | Thu Sep 21 1989 19:11 | 30 |
| I think that before there will be any concensus on what "safe space" is, there
needs to be discussion of what attributes need to be made safe.
I see two different ways to view it, off-hand. There must be others, and
people may have variations on these categories, as well. Consider the following
to be "templates" rather than realistic descriptions of actual possibilities.
1. Safe opinions
In this view, the "space" is populated by people who are of sufficiently similar
opinions that they reinforce rather than challenge each others' beliefs and
opinions. This can be useful for bolstering positions, shoring up arguments,
and the like. It can also be somewhat illusory, since it tends to isolate one
from dissenting views.
2. Safe atmosphere or ambiance
In this view, the "space" may contain dissenting views, but they are always
presented in a positive light with respect to other views - that is, all
participants recognize that they may be wrong (except for me) and others may
be right.
Which of these two approaches is meant can have a profound effect on how the
space is created and/or administered. For example, even if =wn= were women-only,
"type 1" would imply multiple "spaces" to accommodate diverse opinions
(say, guns, violence, abortion, whatever) among women. It's more the "club"
approach, to my mind, with people only associating with people of like views.
"Type 2" on the other hand, allows all opinions, but imposes significant
restrictions on the articulation of those opinions.
|
796.11 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Thu Sep 21 1989 19:38 | 68 |
| I certainly understand that feeling, Mez. And I agree that
the essence of safety within the context of a NOTES conference
(open or closed) is how thoughts are expressed (vs. what thought
is expressed). It seems to me to be a matter of record that
nice-ness can't be forced; to the extent that this conference
is significantly nicer than many, it can be encouraged.
Ultimately, I don't think a NOTES conference can be a completely
safe space in the way I think of the phrase. To me, a safe space
is a place where I can say (or scream, or whine, or. . .) anything
and, more importantly, say it any way I choose. There are times
when I just want to vent in the manner of "&*%#$!. . .I *hate*
all ______!!!" Now, the truth of the matter (something I can only
get to when I've gotten past the explosive part of my emotions) is
that I don't in fact hate all _______. I've had an experience which
has yielded a forceful emotion in me and, in order to get to a
place where feeling and thinking are in balance, I need to let
off some steam. When I'm at a point of better balance, I can
express more accurately (and less caustically), what I think
and feel.
The problem is that this venting is extremely difficult to do
in a NOTES conference without being real disruptive. One key
to why I believe this can't be an entirely safe space is that
what I'm expressing in that venting session is not entirely
the truth; it's a momentary expression, often of pain, that's
only part of what I truly want to express. This isn't to say
it's not valid; it most assuredly is. But it isn't complete
and, without the complement of intellect, it's only partially
representative of what I want to say.
The other key has to do with the relationship between writer
and reader and the nature of what I'm trying to do when I
participate in notes. Some of my major goals are to learn
and grow: I wish to learn about women and grow my understanding
of them and how I, as a male, relate to them. To do this I
need to 1) listen and, 2) speak. Mostly I need to do the first,
but if I'm to learn and grow, from time to time I need to say
what I'm thinking and feeling and find out how others react
to those thoughts; a sanity check (I use the term loosely), if
you will.
When I enter a reply, my highest priority is to express my thoughts
in a way that's as clear, complete, and accurate as I know how. If
I don't exercise a certain care, I've made it difficult for the reader
to understand my meaning and I feel that the first burden of
understanding in NOTES is on the writer. If I say "____ are
worthless drool-buckets!", I've invited a firefight because any
____ individual reading that will very likely think I'm addressing
her/him directly and personally. And why shouldn't (s)he? In
letting out my emotional steam publicly, I've given clear reason
for another interpretation. If I yell in such a fashion, I think
the reader has every reason and right to reply with equal heat and
thus we begin (yet another) flame war.
I think that this conference is a *relatively* safe space compared
to some, but not completely safe in the sense that it's not o.k.
to say anything in any manner. And, to me, that's alright. I
don't think that it's feasible to create such a safe space in this
medium (even in restricted conferences). I think that it can be
made safer by exercising care in speaking, by taking some time out
to let the hottest of the steam escape by other means, then re-joining
the discussion with a calmer voice.
Geez, I rambled on a lot here. . .gah!! Oh well, sometimes this
happens. . .
Steve
|
796.12 | Individual commitment to shared growth | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Thu Sep 21 1989 21:23 | 44 |
| Bonnie Reinke posted this here last year; but I think it's worth
digging up again because it seems to speak directly to this
question. (Note that the line between "safe space" and "processing"
will inevitably be a thin one, if the only way to achieve "safe
space" is through the behaviour of individuals, which is a
"processing" concern.)
From _Parents as People: The Family as a Creative Process_, by
Franklin G. Kane:
So the real challenge is to enter a dialogue with the consciousness
necessary to express your point of view while at the same time
being open enough to 'truly hear' what others are saying. One of
the most difficult things to do is to 'truly hear.' This means to
listen with complete openness to the other; not forming judgments,
formulating answers, thinking about how to strengthen your own
argument. Here we are asked to really listen so openly and
intently that we become one with what we are hearing and even
further, we become one with the process behind what we are hearing.
The thought and feeling process and the content itself are only
imperfectly represented by the words spoken and we reach a much
higher state of involvement with the other when we can be part of
the process behind the words. Not easy! But it is something
towards which to strive as it is a way of breaking away from our
own 'locked in' position which creates barriers and obstacles to
the formation of a union that transcends the sum of its parts.
'When two or more are gathered in my name...' points the way toward
the raising of consciousness beyond the individual bound by
heredity and environment (and genes) to the potential of a
spiritual reality of a Christ-like light within. Interestingly, it
is not alone, but in communion with others where we have this
opportunity. If we can 'truly hear' and 'truly see,' we have the
possibility to go beyond our lower self and find the Divine in the
other. This is the basis for truly human interaction.
In entering the other's process and point of view fully and
uncritically, we can begin to experience the world from viewpoints
other than our own. It can be frightening and disconcerting at
first to experience ways of feeling and thinking that are not like
our own. The further realization that solutions to problems may be
quite right and yet be different than what 'I' might have come up
with is inwardly challenging. In fact, with active listening and
intensive dialogue, the chance is increased that a solution to a
given problem may emerge that is not 'mine' or 'yours' - but ours.
|
796.13 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | It's a hardship post | Fri Sep 22 1989 07:59 | 14 |
| I agree with .7 - growth comes from both stress and nurturing.
A simple example is a bodybuilders muscles. First the muscles
are subjected to strain, lifting heavy weights, then they are
given rest and good food so they can recuperate stronger than
they were to start with.
Sometimes this place seems too much like the lifting and not
enough like the recuperation phase. Sometimes you have to sit
back and let yourself 'heal', not taking on any more weight
for a few days (or whatever your recuoeration time is.) Just
don't get discouraged when the other people in the 'gym' are
still pumping - no two people lift on the same schedule.
Dana
|
796.14 | | CSC32::CONLON | | Fri Sep 22 1989 10:02 | 36 |
| Safe space seems to me like an opportunity for affirmation,
and empowering (and the chance to enjoy the richness of a certain
viewpoint with others who mostly share it.) Sort of like going
to Church, or to a meeting where people share a common goal or
Philosophy.
There *is* such a thing as growth by hearing from people who are
furthur along in their thought processes on a viewpoint with which
you already agree. I don't think that growth can only come from
confrontations with people who present a dissenting opinion, and
I think most of us get plenty of chances to get exposed to views
that *don't* agree with ours to allow the kind of growth that
*does* occur through being faced with alternate views.
Few of us live in a vacuum, after all. The chances of our existing
in a safe space most or all the time are pretty slim (unless we
live in a convent or a commune of some sort,) so most of us have
*more* than ample opportunities to hear opposing viewpoints in one
form or another.
It can be comforting at times to know that there are moments when
one can be in an environment where everyone understands the basic
premises of one's favorite viewpoint (and where one doesn't have
to waste one's time in endless haggling over issues that exist
at Square One of the philosophy.) If one isn't required to argue
the stuff at Square One on a constant basis, it's possible to move
on to other sorts of things that are much more interesting, and
enriching.
Of course, all this makes Safe Space that much more precious and
harder to find for some/most of us. I wish I had more of it in
my life than I do.
The only "safe space" I currently have is through non-public
communication with women I've known or met (outside of Digital,
and through womannotes.) When it happens, it's wonderful!!!
|
796.15 | to re-state | SELL3::JOHNSTON | bord failte | Fri Sep 22 1989 10:33 | 27 |
| re.7
I presented no dichotomy at all.
I presented my assertion that growth is not possible without challenge.
A supportive atmosphere would be my preferred setting to face this
challenge; however, I take it as it comes. I cannot have presented
'growth in a supportive atmosphere' in opposition to 'growth through
challenge' if I feel no growth takes place if our perceptions are not
challenged.
I presented no absolutes in terms of the 'only way to grow/succeed'
either. I do not feel that struggle/competition is essential, merely
challenge. Neither did I speak of success.
If I do not agree with an idea and reject it out of hand without
challenging both my own perception and the why behind the new idea, I
have walked away from a growth experience.
A supportive, or at the very least open, atmosphere is much more
conducive to learning and growth than a confrontational one.
Now, this response so far is not to interpreted as Ann Johnston
implying that there is no value in competition/struggle. I didn't say
that, nor do I belileve it.
Ann
|
796.16 | "Safe spaces" can't exist (IMO) | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Fri Sep 22 1989 10:44 | 30 |
| Well, rankly, I don't think such a thing as a "safe space" can exist. Or
rather, I don't think a multiple person "safe space" can exist.
The problem is that no two people are *identical* in their views. If you talk
long enough and hard enough with someone, being totally open about your own
opinions and feelings, eventually you will say something that will hurt someone
in your space, or scare them...everyone has their "sore spots" - an area about
which they are not able to be rational. What's more, I don't think even two
people can have *no* intersection in their sore spots. I believe the
personality is infinite - therefore the number of sore spots, while perhaps
only a small fraction of the personality, is also infinite. So the chance of
two people having spots that overlap is 100%.
Eventually, given enough time, the conversation *will* wander into an
intersecting sore spot, and then the space is no longer safe. At least one
person will be hurt, or judged, or criticized. When you start bringing more
than two people into your safe space, the odds of crossing "sore spots"
increases exponentially.
I do believe that you can functionality get something close to a "safe space",
by admitting people who's sore spots more or less are either in different
places than yours, or who's spots more or less exactly coincide with yours,
so you can both avoid them. (By avoid them I mean avoid prodding them -
two people could have exactly the same sore spot, and they can *sooth* it...
but only if it's identical, and that's rare.) Then you have to set up rules
(spoken or unspoken) abuot what areas to avoid. And for that reason the space
is not totally safe, because there are areas where you *can't* be open and
honest.
D!
|
796.17 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Fri Sep 22 1989 11:04 | 46 |
| Why do some women in this file feel so sensitive that they actually
want to create a string where all the responses must be "Yes, ok"?
That sounds awfully stagnant at best, rather egotistical at worst.
What does it serve? It makes me think that the author merely wants
to hear the sound of her/his own voice, see his/her own words in print,
and continue on in the fantasy of the world as he/she sees it with no
one questioning it. "Only those who agree with me need respond".
I don't know, but I just don't like the idea of it. Maybe a notesfile
should be created that didn't allow replies. Then we could all
drop our pearls of wisdom completely challenge-free.
On the other hand, I know full well and first hand that challenges
are often created as smokescreens - that many of the so-called
"challenges" really stretch ideas to the breaking point in an attempt
to weaken a point made. The most common example of what I mean
is when someone argues semantics when everyone knows what the real
point is.
Person A: "How come you're in a bad mood?"
Person B: "I am *not* in a bad mood"
The use of the phrase "bad mood" is being challenged to avoid dealing
with the issue that person B has recognized a problem person A knows
but doesn't want to admit to. These kinds of "challenges" bore me
to tears and usually infuriate the "challenger" because I rarely
take the bait.
Person A: "OK, how come you're in the mood you're in, whatever
you'd like to call it?"
And person B will usually then respond with aggression, angry that
the sidestepping didn't work.
This is the majority of the kinds of "challenges" I see in notes
here and if that's what you mean, I heartily agree. It's a waste
of time and betrays the "challenger" who, in my opinion, might as
well have admitted he/she doesn't want to hear it/deal with it.
The best defense is *not* always a good offense - especially in
a diverse community such as this one where one's words are more than
likely being read by people more articulate and more versed in the
subtleties of human interaction. Such challengers fool only themselves.
But healthy challenge, i.e. paraphrasing a speaker's sentence as
you have understood it, definintely has a place in human discourse
and I don't advocate any attempts to eliminate it.
|
796.18 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | The quality of mercy is not strained | Fri Sep 22 1989 11:46 | 5 |
| > Why do some women in this file feel so sensitive that they actually
> want to create a string where all the responses must be "Yes, ok"?
Do you think that's what 'safe space' is?
Mez
|
796.19 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | You've crossed over the river... | Fri Sep 22 1989 12:05 | 33 |
| I feel that growth is stimulated by challenge. Without any form of challenge,
one's ability to grow is disempowered. For many years, everyone thought the
world was flat until one day, someone challenged that belief. It allowed
intellectual growth.
Suzanne's point about rearguing the square one arguments is well taken.
However, I feel that there is value to be added when the premises are
_occasionally_ revisited. Sometimes we find they have changed or evolved.
I do agree that if we constantly argue the premises, the finer points, the
second order of thinking is never reached. And that is tragic.
As far as a safe space is concerned, it is difficult to imagine the existance
of that space. The only way I can see it (in a notes context) would be where
all replies were anonymous and dissenting views were not allowed. To me, this
would only be useful as a supprt mechanism, like the =wn= flotation tank. The
learning potential would be limited, but the spiritual potential would be
maximized. Both aspects have their times and places.
Like Steve Mallet, I find that I sometimes write reactively. And a reactive
writing, given the limitations of electronic media, only shows a slice of the
truth. I may be very angry at a certain point in time, and say "Can you see
how ridiculous this is?" when I really mean "I can't believe you're saying
that given the facts as we know them." or another less vitriolic thought.
One of the reasons why notes cannot be safe is because it is not always
possible to see the context in which a noter writes. This is especially true
when one writes about their feelings.
And I can understand how Mez feels about "reaching through the terminal
and shaking someone while telling the 'Be nice.'" (I have felt these nerdy
hands around my neck on occasion... :-)
The Doctah
|
796.20 | Some thoughts on trees... and perhaps also on safe space. | JURAN::FOSTER | | Fri Sep 22 1989 12:27 | 27 |
| re .7
Peggy, maybe this seems crazy, but trees really struggle to grow.
Trees have to fight for sunlight and water. Especially when competing
with other taller, more branched trees and rooted plants. They have to
survive those first few years when they are only saplings and anything
from a hungry deer to a flood can uproot them. They frequently must
endure parasites and develop defenses.
And in the cities, the roots must find a way to get water and expand
through concrete and brick.
I wanted to be a tree in my next life. Once. I thought about how
majestic and beautiful they were. I thought that they did not have
a challenging life.
And then I saw a tree outside the HLO tunnel which had been split in
two from a freak frost storm in the middle of spring. Its sap had
risen, and it couldn't take the weight. Poor judgement on the tree's
part perhaps for trusting New England weather. But that tree suffered.
And died.
I look at life as a struggle and a challenge now, for all things
living. Perhaps there are exceptions, but I don't think trees have
it easy.
|
796.22 | | LOWLIF::HUXTABLE | Who enters the dance must dance. | Fri Sep 22 1989 13:15 | 37 |
| re: MEZ's question of "what is a safe space?"
I'm not sure I can define it...but I recognize it when I find it.
I think it would be *extremely* difficult for any electronic
medium to be a "safe space" for me. (I can think of one notes
conference that is, and another that is fairly close, and =wn=,
while fun, is not even close.) How can someplace be a safe space
if we can't hug each other? For me, I need the physical
reassurance, the hugs, to know that I'm still valued as a person,
even when my beliefs or ideas may be challenged.
I have a "safe space" that I get to about every week or so. Many
of the people there have different values and lifestyles from
mine. I have once or twice gone there straight from work, wearing
my "corporate drag," which is not at all what most of the other
people there wear to work. One of the women in the group
describes herself as an unemployed hippie bum. (The first time I
saw her she was wearing *feathers* in her hair! I was really
weirded out!) She gave me a hard time about "climbing the
corporate ladder--and did you ever think that perhaps that ladder
is up against the wrong wall?" and we got into a reasonable
discussion about lots of things...but I think the discussion was
reasonable only because I already had lots of assurance that she
valued *me* and she was assured that I valued *her*, even though
neither one of us could live the other's lifestyle. And as I said
earlier, for me, hugs are a great way of solidifying that
assurance, that feeling of being valued. It *can* happen without
hugs...but it's much harder for me.
By the way, the above-mentioned safe space is not for women only.
In general, women seem to find it easier to let each other know
that they value each other while possibly disagreeing, so my
chances of finding a "safe space" in a women-only group are
higher, but obviously not limited to that.
-- Linda
|
796.23 | "SAFE" IS SO PERSONAL | DONVAN::MUISE | | Fri Sep 22 1989 15:19 | 26 |
| Safe is different for everyone.
Someone asked why some noters only want "yes, i agree" responses
to their notes. Well, for some that is the only response that
feels safe to them. It was asked, "are they so insecure...?"
Well, we are all insecure and unsure about different things.
Some of us are less eloquent than others. Some of us do not have
the strength of conviction that some other noters seem to have.
It is not as easy for some to attempt to be controversial or
argumentative as it is for others.
I, for one am usually more of a (very interested) reader of
most notesfiles than a contributor. Though, when in a one-on-one
situation, I am considered very opinionated and out-spoken.
There are notesfiles that I absolutely feel *safe* in contributing.
But those are not the ones that discuss feelings, opinions,
reactions, or controversial issues.
I would like to add tho, that this notesfile has served as a
tremendous source of information and insight for me. I thoroughly
enjoy (and feel perfectly safe!) reading it regularly.
jacki
|
796.24 | brainstorming? | ULTRA::ZURKO | The quality of mercy is not strained | Fri Sep 22 1989 17:40 | 4 |
| I was thinking about brainstorming as safe space for a part of me. It seems
like a good, strong, nerdly, defined paradigm. No criticism, build off each
other, wildness is encouraged.
Mez
|
796.25 | | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, Aerospace Engineering | Sat Sep 23 1989 10:13 | 17 |
| I think a "safe space" is *exactly* how Mez described it. One where
you are in a constructive environment, where people simply respect
differences of opinion and go on from there. Where you can say, "This
is a sensitive subject for me, can we please not discuss it?"
You can grow in a "safe environment", at least growth in a personal
sense. A place where you can just communicate an idea or belief which
you're forming, and not get beat up by others. Even in the act of
agreement, your own mind will be refining that position without all the
anguish of having people call you a "fool."
I've been forming a hypothesis related to this subject, that gender
seems to affect what is a "safe space" and what isn't. The more
combative (growth through challenge) seems to be more male-oriented;
whereas the more supportive environment I would classify as
female-oriented. Given the responses thus far, though, these stereotypes
don't seem to hold unanimously ;^).
|
796.26 | | RAINBO::TARBET | Sama budu polevat' | Mon Sep 25 1989 10:46 | 4 |
| Is it possible for us as a community to make this a space that's both
"safe" and interesting? How?
=maggie
|
796.27 | Gee, =wn= is safe for *me*... | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Mon Sep 25 1989 12:42 | 25 |
| To the person who said that what is a safe space is so personal: yes! I
have seen all these notes that say how people feel so intimidated writing
note to =wn=. I just don't relate. Although I do believe, as I said before,
that there is no such thing as a 'safe space' I think =wn= is pretty damn
close, for me. There are a few topics that get me going, burning, on
which I am very sensitive. And a few people who's noting styles irritate
and offend me. And there are a few topics that I won't discuss here, because
I don't think the people here would open their mind to what I have to say.
But overall, I would say that =wn= is for me one of my "safe spaces".
As for 'safe spaces' in general, I was thinking one thing that makes all
spaces (with multiple people) 'unsafe' is a lack of guaranteed confidentiality.
While you can feel assured that (in general) the people you talk to will
accept and validate you, you can't be so sure that someone they might happen
to mention what you said to will respond similarly. I have one other
"public" safe-type space, so much so that I often forget that the things I
say are heard by upwards of 20,000 people, and that while most of the people who
*participate* are "safe" other may not be. I have been burned for openning up
my heart and soul to these people...
Perhaps I feel "safer" than most people because I do not view disagreement
as "unsafe" (except in aforementioned "sore spots".) You have to be *really*
bitter and nasty and closed-minded for me to feel threatened.
D!
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796.28 | | RAINBO::LARUE | An easy day for a lady. | Tue Sep 26 1989 17:32 | 15 |
| I haven't read each and every reply here since I was sidetracked by the
comments about challenges and safe space. My thoughts have savored
this subject. I think that there is a internal/external difference
about exploration versus challenge. My sense of safe is in direct
proportion to my sense of control over my own choices. So I consider a
challenge to be externally imposed and an exploration to be more
self-initiated. If I should be in the midst of placidly and
thoughtfully ruminating over a subject and I put that subject out for
discussion then I think that I would like discussion. If what I get
instead is argument, then it becomes a challenge and the space is not
what I had anticipated and probably not safe.
Dondi
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796.31 | may never happen again! | DECWET::JWHITE | I'm pro-choice and I vote | Tue Sep 26 1989 20:57 | 4 |
|
re: last two
oddly enough, i agree with mr. thompson
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796.32 | | MOSAIC::R_BROWN | We're from Brone III... | Tue Sep 26 1989 22:29 | 8 |
| DECWET::JWHITE:
Frankly, your agreement doesn't suprise me.
-Robert Brown III
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796.33 | Co-counseling offers safe spaces to many | CARTUN::WALKER | | Wed Sep 27 1989 15:29 | 66 |
| Perhaps it would be helpful to talk about a safe space I've known.
For three years or so I was a co-counselor [as an aside, I wonder how
many other =wn=ers have been?]. I was in the Boston area community,
which had internationally-known co-counselors in it.
There are several things about co-counseling that make it safe. One of
the most interesting is that, in a way, feelings are not "important."
Someone may be counseling about how she despises/wants to kill/intends
to leave immediately her SO, and if she were met at a co-counseling
class or workshop she would not be asked "how her marriage was doing."
If the next time you counsel with her, she talks about love and
happiness, she would not be asked about conflicts with her earlier
counseling. What I'm trying to say is that it is understood that
feelings are transitory. They are expressions of "distress" which we
all many causes to have stored.
This "distress" is not in fact what a person is all about. It is
something to be "discharged" to make it possible to think clearly and
to make it possible for what the person really is, i.e. loving,
cooperative, living in "present time" to be seen.
To give fictitional noting example, if we know that a person has been
through a lengthy and acrimonious divorce battle, and feels that he/she
has gotten the shaft all around, and his/her notes seem to express alot
of anger about any control exerted by the opposite sex, we'd take that
noting not as an example of the fundamental and unchanging character of
that noter.
Here's another co-counseling idea: when several of the
teachers/leaders considered the idea "how far should be go in approval
of another person," they found that they could not set a limit. Nor
could they set a limit on self approval. I don't know whether I've
made this clear, but in counseling -- at least with the best counselors
-- I've gotten the feeling that they think I'm wonderful, funny, smart,
beautiful. And this kind of thing gives the freedom to grow like
nothing else I've ever seen (the freedom to get at those feelings we've
hidden from ourselves and others).
A woman I wanted to counsel with on a regular basis declined to counsel
with me regularly, because she said she had tried before to counsel
with people to whom she gave alot but who could not give her what she
needed. She was working on very deep and sensitive material, and what
she said she needed was for her counselor to adore her, and she felt
(rightly) that I was not capable of this, although I had great liking
and respect for her.
Other aspects of co-counseling that make it a safe space is the
emphasis on confidentiality. But I think most important -- and perhaps
most translatable to this community -- is the belief that we are not
our distress, but are something better than that. And we are all
working on approaching that something better as fast as we are able.
If there is one thing I wish for the male noters in this conference, it
would be to consider how deeply all women have been hurt -- what it's
like to be defined as only a useful body, with an unimportant spirit
and intellect, and how deeply we take these feelings in -- and how
deeply we would like to deny them. I don't feel that I'm primarily
here to listen to how men have been hurt. I'd really like to see them
consider this in their own safe space. In the same way that a lesbian
woman told me that everytime a gay man is bashed, she feels it, I think
that it is horrid and almost unbearable how commonly we read about how
women are slaughtered and raped because some man thinks it is a really
good idea.
Briana
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796.36 | Sorry for tangent, but this interests me... | TLE::D_CARROLL | On the outside, looking in | Thu Sep 28 1989 10:51 | 3 |
| Briana, what is co-counseling?
D!
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796.37 | Re-Evaluation Counseling or RC | CARTUN::WALKER | | Thu Sep 28 1989 15:58 | 51 |
| Co-Counseling, short for Re-Evaluation Co-Counseling or RC, is a growth
system, or some might call it a therapy system.
Basically, people are trained in classes to assist other people to
"discharge" stored emotions. Classically, these emotions are
discharged through crying, laughing, shaking or trembling, and talking.
People start to arrange sessions with their classmates from the
beginning of class, and if there are two hours available, one person
acts as the facilitator and one as the "patient" for half the time.
There are also specialized workshops, group, and weekend workshops.
The basic idea is that we are not our distress, no matter how chronic
or constantly visible it may be, but loving and cooperative people
whose ability to think, function, and feel has been covered up by the
stored pain, shame, and other distress.
I've seen some wonderful co-counseling. There are some geniuses out
there. I'll never forget when I was a new co-counselor seeing Harvey
(last name escapes me), one of the founders, counsel on stage before
perhaps 300 people, a woman whose father had sexually used her through
her young life.
I remember her asking him how she could stand forth with pride and
stop cringing. And he asked her to show him what cringing looked like.
She cringed away from him, and he said to her in a perfectly matter-of-
fact voice, "and of course a little girl would have no reason for
feeling that way." Well, she cried and screamed for half and hour, with
his assistance. I'll never forget seeing her regular counselor sitting
near me and just beaming throughout--knowing that this was what she
needed. At the end of the half-hour, with some botched attempts, he
had her saying to the audience, again in a perfectly matter-of-fact
voice "There was all kinds of abuse in my family, including sexual.
There was a young man who was cooking staff present during this
session, and you can imagine what he thought, never having seen
anything to even approach this. The woman said she would ask him
periodically through the rest of the weekend, "Well, have you recovered
from my session yet?"
What I've found differs from other therapy sessions in RC is that
people will give you as much time as it takes to get through your pain.
And some things take years of discharging.
I don't really know how to find co-counseling classes right now,
although someone else may. Contact persons throughout the world are
listed in "Present Time," their bi-monthly publication.
Of course, there is lots more to say and I'd be glad to try to answer
questions directed to me at my node.
Briana
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796.38 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Knight of the Iguana | Thu Sep 28 1989 20:44 | 2 |
|
What is "bashing"?
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796.39 | BASHING | CARTUN::WALKER | | Fri Sep 29 1989 10:36 | 9 |
| American Heritage Dictionary says to bash is "to strike with a heavy,
crushing blow," but I suspect this is also used sometimes for verbal
attacks.
In the way I used it, "everytime a gay man is bashed," it relates to a
"sport" as in several young men, several 6-packs, and "let's go find
some [expletive deleted] to bash."
Briana
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796.40 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Knight of the Iguana | Fri Sep 29 1989 20:53 | 4 |
|
Well there you go.
Clearly it is impossible to wield heavy objects in the notesfile.
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796.41 | | SYSENG::BITTLE | nancy b. - Hardware Engineer; LSE | Fri Nov 03 1989 17:00 | 24 |
| re: .0 (MEZ)
> A safe place. What it is.
o Both a community that encourages self-assertion and an
experimental model for life pursued beyond therapy's doors
o a sanctuary that embraces the individual's experience of
solitude and society and that attempts to hold these often
conflicting needs in a nurturing balance
o the elusive therapeutic environment within which
psychological healing most effectively takes place
" A psychologically safe place permits the individual to
make spontaneous forceful gestures, and, at the same time,
represents a community that both allows the gestures and is
valued for its own sake."
All from Lester Haven's
_A Safe Place_, Laying the Groundwork of Psychotherapy.
nancy b.
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