Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Assumption 6: Coercion or Community

This one has been tough to write about. For one thing, coercion--and one’s urge to use it--evokes such dark emotions. I was just watching a documentary about the beginnings of the Inquisition in a small village in France. Because the Church was losing its power and centrality among the people, there were initiatives to identify townspeople who were participating in "heretical practices." After many depositions and hearings, five people were burned at the stake. During the next two centuries, many more were persecuted, tortured, and killed.

This was not the beginning, nor the end of coercion. It goes all the way back to our pre-human and early human experience. Struggles for power and dominance were settled by force or the threat of force. Social stability depended on the dominance by some individuals or groups, and the submissive acceptance of it by others. The hierarchy was created and maintained by some form of violence.

In our modern and post-modern world, we have progressed beyond all that. We are civilized, aren't we? Well, yes, we are, but others aren't, so we must attack them, overwhelm them with our superior power, and liberate them from their coercive social structures. And they will be so grateful! Or if not, then they deserve the misery. This is how we solve problems; not every problem, but the really important ones.

We begin learning how to do this, and how to think this way, through parental guidance. A good spanking, for the child's own good, has marvelous results: Compliance. Most of the time. While they're at home. If not, kids get a time out in their room, or when they're older, they get grounded for a week. In school, the education continues: "corporal punishment" is no longer used very much, but misbehavior results in detention. It's excellent training for the post-graduation or post-drop-out life: If you don't comply, you go to prison. We put you away; some would say we throw you away.

How comfortable to have put that last description in those terms. Let me make a small shift: If we don't comply, they throw us away.

Does that change your feelings about this?

In organizations the same pattern exists, though it's applied more subtly, yet no less intensely. Managers expect compliance from their direct reports. If they don't get it, performance reviews won't be good. No pay increases or advancement. If my people get really stupid about it, they're out of here. We've got a business to run. But sometimes managers have priorities that conflict with those of their own peers. It's OK; that's why we invented the hierarchy: we also have managers who resolve differences among us. They have greater power, and what they say goes. We don't always like what they do, but we prefer this arrangement to just fighting with our peers. Don't we?

We live in a culture of coercion. We subscribe to and support the assumption that coercive behavior is needed to maintain order--in our families, in our organizations, in our countries, and in our world. And many of us hold a further, underlying assumption that this is the only choice, and the alternative would be chaos.

There is some evidence, however, for an alternative assumption: that instead of coercion we can acknowledge our community of shared interests. We can re-connect with those we have disowned and made into "others," and engage with them in a different form of interaction, based on mutual respect as human beings, supported by our own self-respect as human beings. We can vulnerably communicate our own interests, concerns and aspirations. We can invite others to do the same with us. And we can frame this interaction in the context of our super-ordinate goal: building mutually satisfying relationships and working arrangements--ones that work well for all concerned.

This is a good definition of community. It's available for use in our families, in our schools, in our work organizations, and in our governments. The family systems work of Virginia Satir, for example, has been eminently successful in building healthy families that are not based on coercion. Some schools have been quietly operating this way, and some organizations have had great business success with this different approach. More courts are diverting divorce proceedings to mediation, and some are starting to use the approach of restorative justice--bringing together those who created damage with those who were harmed, along with their families, and supporting their coming to terms with each other about how to repair those damages.

It's hard work, especially while we unlearn old ways and learn new ones. Most people have less experience with community than they do with coercion/compliance. So the needed attitudes and skills for community are not as widely held. But they are learnable. They are effective. And they are much more satisfying for the human spirit and ultimately for the global society.

13 comments:

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

I'm curious if what is going on in the world in this moment in time is a result of Coercion because of the fear of Community?

Sharona

Saul Eisen, Ph.D. said...

What a perceptive question, Sharona! What thoughts do you have about what some of us fear from community?

Older&Wiser said...

We may fear community, in the sense you are speaking about, Sharona, because if we agree to it then we become responsible to and for one another in ways we are uncomfortable or simply unwilling to accept. It takes time, energy, and patience to be with people, have meaningful conversations, listen actively for greater understanding, and hold space for one another. It means being honest with others and ourselves about who we are and what assumptions and judgements we hold. It means being accountable to one another. Bottom line: it's a lot of work!

I'm reminded of something I read recently about an aboriginal tribe and how they dealt with conflict among their members. When a disagreement or conflict occurred between two or more of its members the situation was brought before the tribe. The situation was explained from both parties perspectives. Everyone, the whole community, could see and understand the circumstances of where the actions, behaviors, and feelings of each of the parties came from and why.

It's the tribe's own form of restorative justice I suppose--without the need for a lengthy, emotional, and expensive prosecution and defense. My first reaction was, "Oh, sure, and the bad guy gets off easy!" And, then as I pondered this system for handling conflict I began to appreciate the fact that both "offenders" were responsible to each other as a person, a family, a community of people. They participated in how the conflict was resolved and how to heal the wounds the conflict created between the parties of the conflict, their families, and the tribe.

They weren't discarded souls, they were still a part of their families and community. Yes, a lot of work, indeed.

Saul Eisen, Ph.D. said...

Thanks for this thoughtful comment, Pamela! Yes, indeed; community can require a lot of work, and a commitment to each other as human beings. It calls on us to be grown-ups in the world.

Of course, coercion also takes a lot of work. It takes time, energy, and impatience to deal with people, have threatening conversations, watch vigilantly for threats and advantages, and protect our own space of power. It means being dishonest with others and ourselves about who we are and what assumptions and judgments we hold. It means avoiding accountability to others. Bottom line: it's also a lot of work! But maybe most of us are just more familiar with this kind of work, and don't get that there is a good and real alternative.

And what if we turned this perspective around a bit? Would it be worthwhile to build community, so that others take time, energy, and patience to be with us, have meaningful conversations, listen actively for greater understanding, and hold space for one another? It would mean being able to rely on others being honest with us and themselves about who we and they are, and what assumptions and judgments we're holding. It would mean being mutually trusting and accountable to one another. Bottom line: it would take some learning of new skills, and a willingness to be part of a social wholeness. It's such a good bargain, no?

Older&Wiser said...

Yes, yes, yes. A bargain, indeed. And so who goes first to build this community? I say the courageous ones. The ones who want to leave a heartprint rather than a footprint upon this earth.

PeaceDiva said...

I believe we have been ruled by fear for too long. Additionally, we have allowed so-called "experts" to make decisions for us. Although this has been true throughout history, I think we can all plainly see the trail of dire consequences over the last eight years. It is time to change this story.

I’m hopeful for the first time, in so many years. I believe that the "tipping point" and time for change has come. A momentum has built up and a call for action is sounding.

We have a presidential candidate who will stand for us and our communities. Obama will be the voice and the power for the people - but this will require that we do the work ourselves. We can no longer depend on anyone else to be the expert or the rescuer. We as everyday people in our local communities must come together to take action.

Who indeed are the courageous ones?
Who should begin? The answer is within each one of us. Everyone is valuable and needed to build our community.

It does take a lot of work. The good news; we've got nothing but time. More good news, there are many people moving in this direction. This movement has created a collective consciousness of moving toward this heart space.

This universal force has compelled me (and many others) to get involved and use my powers for good. What will this look like? To begin, I'm connecting and working with other like-minded individuals. Luckily for us in Sonoma County, they are not hard to find.

My focus is to start with our most vulnerable populations, who may not have a voice (youth, women, immigrants, and other people rendered voiceless in our society).

It’s time to end our fear of “others” and stop letting people’s fears, demands, and coercive tactics rule our personal choices.

Whatever your passion and interest, I invite you to begin where you are at and start there - don't wait for a good time. If you open your heart, the opportunity will come to you....

Thanks for opening the conversation!

In love and light....

Saul Eisen, Ph.D. said...

PeaceDiva, this is a great comment; so in tune with the theme we've been exploring--that we can become aware of our assumptions, and then move beyond the limitations we thought were there.

We can thus reclaim our personal freedom and power. And yes, this means also accepting the responsibility to behave wisely, with humility, respect and compassion. It requires the disciplines of self-awareness and courage.

Then the opportunities for making a difference show up every day.

Joel said...

How does this relate to more traditional psychologies? My understanding is that Freud's ego comes out of interaction between the superego and the id. Gestalt's here and now is a balance of top dog and underdog. I personally see yin and yang creating our personal wangs. The challenge is to create processes to help our dualistic subselves to dialogue.

Joel

Saul Eisen, Ph.D. said...

This is a great question, Joel, and a tough one.

The first challenge is how to resolve the apparent dualism between coercion and community. But these are not on the same continuum. The opposite of coercion is not community, but compliance. If we think in terms of subselves, then we have a coercive subself and a compliant subself. In terms of Gestalt therapy, these are both introjected from the culture.

The non-dualistic perspective that transcends the polarity between these two is the realization that we can be in community with others. We can give our attention to creating a world that works for all.

Internally, that means that we need to develop an inner community among all our subselves--a way of carrying on an inner dialogue that affirms the legitimate underlying interests of each of our subselves. If we can do that inside us, we can do it in our interaction with others.

Community is the non-dualistic approach to being in the world.

Debra said...

I love what you are saying here and agree completely. Just last week, however, I learned that corporal punishment is in fact still being used in MANY schools. It's so outrageous that it's almost unbelievable. But it is true. If you are prepared to hear this truth, take a look at Paula Flowe's web site: www.thehittingstopshere.com. She's a very courageous woman who has committed to bringing an end to this injustice to our children.

PeaceDiva said...

"Community is the non-dualistic approach to being in the world."

I LOVE this Saul - I'm going to appropriate it's use (citing you of course)!

This is one of the things I'm coming to in my life and work. I can talk all day long with people who agree with me (or are at least more similar), but by engaging in community with everyone, I have access to building bridges with people who I might not typically agree with, but we can find common values and connection through community! Love it!

Be well...

Saul Eisen, Ph.D. said...

Thank you for these are great comments, Debra and Peacediva!

It can be shocking to learn that coercive behavior like corporal punishment is still being used. Because we prefer to associate with people who share our perspective, we don't tend to learn about different attitudes and behavior.

Most of my friends vote the way I do, but the propositions I vote for don't always pass. We know there are people who think differently from us, but we tend not to talk with them, to avoid the unpleasantness of interacting with "unreasonable people."

It takes skill, and courage to engage with people whose thoughts and actions are different from ours. The Catch 22 assumption is that the only way to interact with them is to oppose them--to meet coercion with coercion. That is certainly one option, but it's also possible to become curious about how they think about what they do, and to engage them respectfully in that conversation.

The genuine expression of curiosity and inquiry often elicits reciprocal curiosity and inquiry. Then there is the new possibility of shared learning--of discovering what neither of us realized before we started talking. And shared learning is a defining component of community, no?