Ch. 1 Giving From the Heart 

Nonviolent Communication

Chapter 1 – Giving From the Heart, page 1.

Introduction

  • Believing that it is our nature to enjoy giving and receiving compassionately, I have been preoccupied most of my life with two questions:
    • What happens to disconnect us from our compassionate nature? 
    • (And) Conversely, what allows some people to stay connected to their compassionate nature under even the most trying circumstances? 
  • While studying the factors that affect our ability to stay compassionate, I was struck by the crucial role of language and our use of words.
  • I have since identified a specific approach to communicating – both speaking and listening – that leads us to give from the heart, connecting us with ourselves and with each other in a way that allows our natural compassion to flourish. 
  • I call this approach Nonviolent Communication, using the term nonviolence as Gandhi used it – to refer to our natural state of compassion when violence is subdued from the heart.

A Way to Focus Attention 

  • NVC guides us in reframing how we express ourselves and hear others. 
  • Instead of habitual, automatic reactions, our words become conscious responses based firmly on awareness of what we are perceiving, feeling, and wanting.
  • We are led to express ourselves with honesty and clarity, while simultaneously paying others respectful and empathetic attention. 
  • NVC trains us to observe carefully and to specify behaviors and conditions that are affecting us. 
  • We learn to identify and clearly articulate what we are concretely wanting in any given situation. 
  • We perceive relationships in a new light when we use NVC to hear our own deeper needs and those of others. 
  • When we focus on clarifying what is being observed, felt, and needed rather than on diagnosing and judging, we discover the depth of our own compassion. 
  • Although I refer to NVC as “a process language,” NVC is more than a process or a language. On a deeper level, it is an ongoing reminder to keep our attention focused on a place where we are more likely to get what we are seeking. 
  • I developed NVC as a way to train my attention – to shine the light of consciousness – on places that have the potential to yield what I am seeking. 
  • The use of NVC does not require that the persons with whom we are communicating be literate in NVC, or even motivated to relate to us compassionately.

The NVC Process 

  • The four components of the NVC model:
    • First, we observe what is actually happening in a situation, articulating this observation without introducing any judgment or evaluation. 
    • Next, we state how we feel when we observe this action. 
    • Thirdly, we specify what need of ours is connected to the feelings we have identified. 
    • Fourth, and last, we express what we are wanting from the other person that would enrich our lives. 
  • The other part of this communication consists of receiving the same four pieces of information from others.
  • We connect with them by first sensing what they are observing, feeling, and needing. 
  • Then we discover what would enrich their lives by receiving the fourth piece – their request. 
  • As we keep our attention focused on the areas mentioned, and help others do likewise, we establish a flow of communication, back and forth, until compassion manifests naturally. 
  • When we use this process, we may begin either by expressing ourselves or by empathetically receiving these four pieces of information from others. 
  • NVC is not a set formula, but something that adapts to various situations. 

The Four Components (Re)Summarized 

  • The concrete actions we observe that affect our well-being. 
  • How we feel in relation to what we observe. 
  • The needs, values, desires, etc. that create our feelings. 
  • The concrete actions we request in order to enrich our lives.

Summary 

  • NVC helps us connect with each other and ourselves in a way that allows natural compassion to flourish. 
  • It guides us to reframe the way we express ourselves and listen to others by focusing our consciousness on four areas: what we are observing, feeling, and needing, and what we are requesting to enrich our lives. 
  • Some people use NVC to respond compassionately to themselves, some to create greater depth in their personal relationships, and others to build effective relationships at work. 
  • Worldwide, NVC is used to mediate disputes and conflicts at all levels.