Dialog not Debate

QuantumLove (Lynne McTaggart) presents several guidelines to help a group of clouns create a dialog as opposed to a debate.

  • Build trust by sharing goals and reasons for participating.
  • Frame the dialog as a series of questions, not topics to be debated or discussed. Plan questions in advance.
  • Start with a single question and give everyone a chance to respond.
  • Go deep, but don’t debate. The purpose is not to reach a decision, but to explore and share deeply.
  • Don’t monologue.Each clown should have an upper limit of time to share.
  • Be alert to your own emotional reactions, particularly to those whose views differ from yours.
  • Engage in deep truth telling about what really matters to you in your community or your country.
  • Be fully present. Listen with heart and mind.
  • Don’t be judgmental, no matter how different some other clown’s worldview or actions are different from yours.
  • Root out misperceptions and stereotypes in your views of others during the process.
  • Avoid generalities (“always”, “never”,, and speak to the facts.
  • Make it personal. Tell stories from your own past, which places your interests and points of view in context. Speak in first person, rather than about a particlar point of view. Describe turning points in your life, your heroes, role models, parents, or parent figures, and your dreams.
  • Ask open questions unrelated to the area of conflict in order to get to get to know the clown whose views are different from yours.
  • Reflect back what you think the other clown had said.
  • Frame questions about a contentious issue in neutral language, without implied judgments.
  • Look for common interests, emotions, values, or experiences that emerge in the conversation. Ask the facilitator to point them out.

 

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Clowns for Peace