Page 32 - Crucial Conversations
P. 32

1 4    CRUCIAL CONVERSATIONS


     and groups find a way to engage in healthy dialogue. They talk
     through important issues. In contrast, communities that fail to
     improve  play costly  games.  During community meetings peo­
     ple  insult  one  another,  become  indignant,  and  act  as  if  indi­
     viduals  with  differing  views  are  sick  or  deranged.  Battles
     ensue.
       In  addition  to how people  behave  in  public  forums,  private
     behavior  affects  community  health  as  well.  Take,  for  example,
     the problem of crime. You might be shocked to discover a rather
     tragic  statistic. Not everyone in prison is a career criminal who
     was  born  into  a horrible family, then  shaped by abuse and neg­
     lect  into  a  seething  sociopath.  In  fact,  over  half of  the  people
     who are convicted of violent crimes are first-time offenders who
     commit crimes against f r iends or loved ones. 3
       How could this be? Violence is often preceded by prolonged
     periods  of  silence.  Most  inmates  once  held  a  job,  paid  their
     bills,  and  remembered  their friends'  birthdays.  Then  one  day,
     after  allowing unresolved  problems  to  build up  and  then  boil
     over,  they  attacked  a  friend,  loved  one,  or  neighbor.  That's
     right,  convicted first-time offenders are often not career crimi­
     nals.  They're  our  frustrated  neighbors.  Since they  don't  know
     what to say or how to  say it,  they opt for force. In this  case, the
     inability to  work  through  tough  issues  devastates  individuals,
     ruins families, and poisons communities.
       What about where you live? What crucial issues does your
     community face?  Are there conversations  that  people are not
     holding  or  not holding well  that  keep  you  from  progress?  Is
     crime  skyrocketing?  Do your community meetings  look more
     like  the  Jerry  Springer  show  than  an  energetic  forum  for
     healthy  communication?  If  so,  both  you  and  the  community
     have  a  lot  to gain by focusing on how you handle high-stakes
     discussions.
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