Effective Communication Skills for Good Relationships

The Complete Nonviolent Communication (NVC) Process for Compassion, Understanding, and Peace

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The Complete Nonviolent Communication (NVC) Process for Compassion, Understanding, and Peace

Observing

The first step of the process has you observe something specific about the person that impedes their wellbeing. One example is, “When you see your children hitting one another…” You separate the person from the behavior and refer to a specific circumstance. People make predictable mistakes at this step.

The greatest mistake at this stage is giving an evaluation instead of an observation – because of this, I will thoroughly teach you how to avoid evaluations and observe in this section of the article. An evaluation is a judgment of personal opinion that lacks detachment and objective evidence. Judgments prevent observations and the recipient from feeling understood.

Think of a birdwatcher who carefully and calmly admires nearby birds. The birdwatcher does not disturb the birds. Rather, he carefully watches to see the birds behaviors as he listens to the sounds they make. He may even respond to a bird’s sound in the same manner by whistling.

If people were birdwatchers and they tried to observe a bird (the other person), they would fire gunshots, scream, and throw rocks at the bird. These dangerous actions for the bird is the emotional equivalent to judgments and evaluations for people in the listening process. When we feel judged and evaluated, it drives us insane! We fly away, avoid the person, and do not talk about what really matters as the judgmental person incorrectly blames and wonders what is wrong with us!

When you supposedly “listen” to your partner, a customer, or coworker, your “effective communication” and “excellent listening skills” has you fire a gun with evaluations and judgments. My experience in communication has me estimate 99% of people fail at this stage of NVC because of evaluations and judgments. I am no exception because, even now, I occasionally fail at this stage. Do not get discouraged. The migration from evaluation to observation fights communication habits you have adopted your entire life.

Evaluations can take many forms. It means you do not receive someone’s communication in its real form. You observe the bird, but do things to destroy its natural, beautiful presence. You mostly “shoot a gun,” “scream,” and “throw rocks” with judgments, criticisms, blame, or generalities. Other mistakes include labeling, questioning, deflecting, and other communication barriers I will soon describe.

An evaluation is a judgment of personal opinion that lacks detachment and objective evidence.

Valued customers of my Communication Secrets of Powerful People Program deeply understand the common ways we intoxicate our ability to listen to others. I believe your ability to actively listen and be in the present moment without polluting the person’s message with your thoughts and feelings is one of the greatest communication skills you can obtain.

I will give you common examples of how people fail to observe by applying the 12 communication barriers I give in my program. Never before has it been made in clear detail the common mistakes people make that kill conversations. Below, the first part of the dialog is person one, while the second part is person two who uses the communication barriers:

  1. Criticism – “I’m trying to improve my skills in that area.” “Good. Because you’ve really sucked at it recently.”
  2. Labeling – “I wish you would do house work more often.” “You’re just a nagger.”
  3. Diagnosing – “I don’t want to go out right now.” “You’re just saying that because you’re mad about last night.”
  4. Praising – “There! Done! Happy I’ve done the work now?” “You’re great for doing that job!”
  5. Ordering – “I need a break from working.” “It doesn’t matter. Do what I told you to do now.”
  6. Threatening – “I need a break from working.” “It doesn’t matter. Do what I told you to do now or I’ll make you do more.”
  7. Questioning – “I’m feeling depressed about what happened today.” “You’re depressed again?”
  8. Moralizing – “I don’t want to donate to charity.” “It’ll be good for you to help out.”
  9. Advising – “I can’t believe my friendship has ended with Jenny.” “You shouldn’t have talked with her about Bob the other day.”
  10. Reasoning – “I’m so angry right now because of my boss at work today!” “You need to focus on getting a new job.”
  11. Reassuring – “I’m worried about performing well at the presentation tomorrow.” “You’ve got great skill and will perform fine.”
  12. Deflecting – “Argh! I can’t believe Jerry always bugs me.” “Oh, yeah. Speaking of people being bugging, his friend John annoyed me the other day.”

The above examples of the communication barriers are all times the speaker judged and evaluated when he or she had the opportunity to provide a healthy observation. The speaker decided to travel down the tube of communication violence. We hate being judged, evaluated, and told what to do. In response to the barriers, people become defensive, argumentative, frustrated, and resistant to persuasion.

To further demonstrate the barriers and help you grasp the observation stage because it is vital to understand, here are more examples of evaluations and the reasons they are evaluations:

  • “You’re very kind by helping out.” – The word “kind” is a moralistic and judgmental word. It is distinguishes the behavior as good or bad. The person gets evaluated as good instead of the person’s behavior as good.
  • “I reckon Mary is ugly.” – The adjective “ugly” evaluates and criticizes Mary’s looks. Ugly is dependent on each person. Other people will like Mary’s appearance.
  • “All guys are clueless about managing a relationship.” – Too generalized and not specific enough. Nothing productive can come from such statements. Blame, misery, and a lack of change can only develop.
  • “She avoids me.” – This is a diagnosis because the person tries to interpret and read into the person’s behavior. The person needs to provide evidence why the woman avoids him or her. Also, the word “avoid” needs to be replaced with something more concrete, like “walked away from”, because it assumes the woman’s behavior when there are many possibilities.
  • “Britney, you don’t like my helping you.” – How does the person know Britney dislikes the person’s help? The person tries to mind-read instead of stating something more concrete like Britney’s emotions or physiology that communicate her possible dislike.

It can be overwhelming to hear about the communication barriers because they dissect the most common problems you have in your communication. In these frequent problems rest enormous potential and opportunity to be a powerful communicator. Should you see the barriers in your communication, you help transform yourself into someone who powerfully communicates with people. You may already be feeling the power of the communication barriers.

Some communication barriers in the above examples can be eliminated and evaluations be removed when you be specific. You can be specific by referring to a past situation. An effective observation typically begins with, “When you hear…” or “When you see…” The goal of this stage is to reflect your observation to the person. It cannot be repeated enough that it must be specific and free of evaluations.

One saleswoman knew the NVC process well. An angry manager approached her about a poor presentation she recently did. If most “good communicators” were in the lady’s shoes, they would respond along the lines of, “You’re angry at me about a bad presentation” or “You think I do not give good presentations”. At first glance, the examples may seem okay responses, but they are general evaluations. The manager may not be angry about a bad presentation. He may also think she is a good presenter.

The woman listened to the manager’s concerns and gave a good response: “When you hear me give a presentation that fails to persuade a potential buyer who could have given our company half a million dollars…” A couple of other good responses the saleswoman could use in different situations include: “It sounds to me as though you are gravely worried about the project not being accepted…” and “I see my exclusion of [so-and-so] facts made you frustrated…” All these examples are observations without evaluations. They are specific and show understanding and empathy.

Additional examples of the observation stage, which I will build on throughout the article to explain NVC, follow:

  • “When you hear me tell you to do work around the house…”
  • “I see that you’re unhappy with the changes in the office?”
  • “It sounds to me as though you’re worried about losing a friend.”
  • “I see that you’re excited about winning tonight!”

The four lines are free from judgments and other evaluations. They show understanding and empathy. They build a connection with people as they feel someone at last understands them! A lot of times your observation may be incorrect, but this does not matter when you observe without evaluation because the person will happily correct you.

Observations build a connection with people as the they feel someone at last understands them!

Now you know how to apply the observation stage on other people (the first step of the NVC), let’s learn how to apply the observation stage on yourself (think of it as the fifth step). When you use the observation stage on yourself, it is also necessary to remove evaluations. This will clarify what you require to fulfill that need.

Common evaluative statements and possible corrected observations, which I will build on throughout the article to explain NVC on yourself, could include:

  • “When I hear you become angry…” – Assumes the person is angry. You need to avoid judgments and say what lets you know the person is angry. Correct statements include, “When I hear you raise your voice…” or “When I feel intimidated around you…”
  • “When I see you avoid me…” – Assumes the person avoids you. You need to say what it is that makes you think the person avoids you. Correct statements include, “When I see you walk away from me…” or “When I cannot make eye contact with you…”
  • “When I come home from work and see you annoy me…” – This starts off well, but quickly deteriorates. The person will become defensive when you say he or she annoys you. What is it that annoys you? A correct statement could be, “When I come home from work and see you lying on the couch…”
  • “When you don’t like my cooking…” – Contains a judgment because the person is evaluated to determine if they dislike your cooking. It misses the true emotional content of the conversation. A correct statement could be, “When I don’t hear appreciation of my cooking…”

As you can probably see, observation statements of yourself typically start off with: “When I hear…” or “When I see…” Such statements initiate concrete evidence that lead you to a pure observation without judgment. You cannot judge or evaluate when you say what you hear or see.

A pure observation instantly reduces interpersonal violence, makes people feel understood, and increases your power with people. People open themselves to intimate communication and persuasion from your healthy expression that you understand them. Your understanding of people gives you the power to mold your relationships into the shape you want. This is the secret of charismatic persuasion explained in my program.

(There is a lot more to the 12 barriers that I cannot explain in this article. Of the hundreds of communication books and programs I have been through, I believe no other program has explained and made it easy for you to know what prevents you from connecting and understanding people. I highly recommend you read about my program by clicking here and grab your copy to learn more about the 12 communication barriers that kill conversations.)

About the Author

Joshua Uebergang, aka "Tower of Power", teaches social skills to help shy persons build friends and influence people. Visit his blog and sign-up free to get communication techniques, relationship-boosting strategies, and life-building tips by email, along with blog updates, and more! Go now to http://www.towerofpower.com.au/free/

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12 Responses to “The Complete Nonviolent Communication (NVC) Process for Compassion, Understanding, and Peace”

  1. Dr. Chandrakumar Jain on 21st Dec, 2008 at 2:27 pm • (#1)

    Nonviolent Communication as described by you is the ultimate guidance to developing healthy relationships. Also it is the need of the day and the days to come. Your quotes may change anyone’s life. I must express my gratitude for such a great article. Your teachings are worth and need sincere reflection so as to apply them to better living. Thanks… thanks a lot.

  2. Vinod on 22nd Dec, 2008 at 4:48 pm • (#2)

    Hi Joshua, :smile:

    First of all, thanks for all your life changing materials and postings.

    I don’t see the print option in the webpage that was available in the earlier website. I usually print the contents to a PDF for easy reading or hard printing. Please include the option if possible.

  3. Michelle on 22nd Dec, 2008 at 9:11 pm • (#3)

    Hi Joshua,

    Its really nice to keep me updated on all this….the article is very nice and informative…as I am a Trainer….these tips help me understand my trainees even better….and also its very motivating at times when I am disturbed with issues at work,home or personal life.Thankyou very much and looking forward for more updates.
    All the best..take care.

  4. ana on 22nd Dec, 2008 at 9:28 pm • (#4)

    Wow!

    NVC is a great christmas gift to all! I will try my best to put it into practice. Thank you very much for your generosity in sharing this article to us. God bless you.

  5. Vinod, thanks for letting me know what you want because I forgot about printing. You can now print any of my posts by clicking the “Print” text below my bio.

  6. Nafiseh on 24th Dec, 2008 at 5:42 am • (#6)

    Hi Dear Joshua
    Thanks for your supporting advices. I am so happy to have a such good friend like you.
    Marry Christmas :razz:
    Nafiseh

  7. cathie on 26th Dec, 2008 at 3:13 pm • (#7)

    Hi Josh,

    You have inspired me for over the months that I’ve been reading your articles. It has changed my perspective and my wrong impressions of people and things. Thank you so much for inspiring more people and God bless.

    Happy holidays!

    Cathie

  8. Mohammad Mobin on 26th Dec, 2008 at 6:03 pm • (#8)

    Thank you for the wonderful article. I shall pass it on to Dr. Zakir Naik, of PEACE TV for distribution amongst his staff and other preachers.

  9. gisso on 30th Dec, 2008 at 1:57 am • (#9)

    Wow,a wonderful gift, you are great guy..I really find you as hardworking and also kind man!yeah,while you share your experiences to others,it gives you a nice sence!!and,you exactly do this now!I’m so glad that have a sympathetic friend like you!!your statements or tips are exactaly the things which make my mind busy and full of question, nowdays :razz: !!!God bless you:P:)

  10. Amina on 30th Dec, 2008 at 6:23 pm • (#10)

    Thanks a lot for your usual precious articles. This one is really loaded with deep ideas that will help a lot in bringing wisdom to our communication process and for most to avoid conflict.

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