 |
"The Four Basic Steps of
the Language of Peace. . .
and a brief example of their use." |
Article by Kristin Denton
Thursday 8:25 PM
Estes Park, Colorado
August 7, 2006
If you
practice LOP until you can apply these skills with mastery,
you will create a magic in your relationships that others
only dream about.
The four steps are:
-
State
whatever event happened in the form of an OBSERVATION
-
followed
by how you are FEELING
-
next your
NEEDS which were either met or not met by the event
-
and
lastly end on a REQUEST
Step one is to clearly state the observation...
(what
happened) that stimulated the upset without any evaluation
(our judgments about what happened).
Our example begins with an excited husband who came home
early on his anniversary to cook a special surprise meal for
his wife.
With the food prepared, candles lit, table set, wine poured…
he waits and waits and waits. His wife arrives home two
hours later than normal.
By this time the food is cold, the candles have burnt out,
most of the wine is gone.
The once happy husband is now rather
disappointed, hurt and upset .
He meets her
arrival like this: “I can't believe you are late
on our anniversary! Why didn't you call? All you
care about is work. You don't care about
our relationship any more…”
This is an evaluation (case building) not an observation and
most likely will be heard as an attack, requiring either
defensiveness or a counter attack.
An observation may have sounded like this: “When I came
home early and prepared a romantic dinner for us and you
didn't get home until two hours after I was expecting you, I
felt….”
Notice there
is no judgment of her behavior here (and yes, this does take
practice).
On
step two, state how you are feeling about what
happened...
...rather
than saying what you are thinking about what they did. if
you say what you're thinking, instead of feeling, you'll
only bring up defensiveness and create arguments.
From the way the husband communicated to his wife you can
guess what his choice was: building a case.
He spent two hours gathering evidence, evaluating and
judging her behavior, thinking she had betrayed him,
preparing his attack…
“You are
always doing stuff like this, only thinking of yourself. You
are so inconsiderate!” These are thoughts and they are
not improving the connection at all.
Let's look at how we would've done using LOP instead. “…
I felt worried for your safety and once I knew you were safe
I felt hurt and disappointed because I …”
Think about
these two scenarios so far. If this was happening in your
home, which approach would you want your spouse to use? The
first approach or the Language of Peace approach?
Step
number three, connecting your feelings to your
needs...
This is an
important step where we let someone know what needs of ours
we're trying to meet and how that would make us feel.
This ties into one of the basics of LOP, that what causes
our feelings is not other people, but whether our needs are
being met or not being met.
What people normally do in this area rather than connect to
their needs, is get hung up on a specific strategy, hoping
that it will meet their needs.
They start using words and phrases like; you
should do this, you shouldn't have done that, you must, have
to, this is right thing to do and you are doing the wrong …
With a
belligerent tone the husband says, “You should
apologize and you should quit that stupid job of yours!!!”
These statements are almost guaranteed to create resistance
and resentment. Even if she did either one of them, which is
doubtful, she would end up doing it with an energy they both
would regret later.
So let's see what happens when he uses LOP. Following up on
the last statement “I felt hurt and disappointed because
I was needing some acknowledgement for how
much I contribute to our relationship and
celebration for how much we love each other. ”
Now onward to the
fourth and final step of the LOP...
...making a clear, do-able
request stated in the present tense .
This can be the hardest step of all for some people because
they are being vulnerable, asking for what they truly want
and risking hearing that scary, two letter word,
“NO.”
So instead of risking the no, people are often
tempted to make demands instead .
Angry and
hurt by her lack of apologies and no admissions of wrong
doing, he presses on, making a demand he knows will break
her heart. “Either you quit your job or I'm
filing for divorce!”
At this point she is backed into one corner and he has
backed himself into the other corner, guaranteeing no one is
going to be a winner and someone is going to sleep on the
couch tonight.
How could he have approached this differently using what
you're about to learn at one of our workshops?
His request would be simple since he understands that
“the message sent” (what he said) is rarely
“the message received” (what she thinks she heard).
So to try and understand what she heard he would simply ask
, “Can you tell me what you heard me say?”
I have tried
both ways of communicating; I also have the divorce to prove
the first one doesn't work so well. I also now have the best
relationship of my life.
The tools are simple, and the choice is yours.
Don't ask yourself which way looks easier. Ask
yourself which way will create the connection, intimacy and
understanding you desire.
Oh, yes--at any point in this dialogue, even if the husband
chose to build a case, the wife could have used
these tools to turn it round, to give him the empathy he
needed.
|
“Truly
transformational -- I came here in turmoil, disconnected
and feeling hopeless. But through this workshop, I now
feel more connected and appreciative to my beloved than
ever. My inner peace and capacity for love or stronger
than I imagined they ever could be. I am grateful.”
- Jerome - Golden, Colorado |
If you
have any questions -- any at all --
email us at
.
The Language of Peace
www.RelationshipRemodeling.com
453 E Wonderview, #225 - Estes Park, CO
80517 - (970) 586-7734
Copyright © 2006 The
Language of Peace - Paul Sterling
All rights reserved - Revised:
10/07/08 |