Classes

So often, when a spoken phrase starts, “I think that you are…” or “I think that the president is…” it leads to a very disconnected feeling. The large bulk of the speaker's emotions and attention pour into the content of their thinking, leaving so little to notice how their own body feels, how others feel around them, and their feelings about their surrounding environment.  Like sugar, this disconnected feeling leads to doing it again and again. Learn how to overcome this addictive behavior at NVC in Marin’s next NVC class.

Eric’s “Learn the NVC Basics Class” can be ordered and scheduled by contacting Eric here.

The “NVC Basics” Class Includes the Following:

The Classic Four-Part Model of:

  1. Observation > Learn to describe events without judgmental evaluations that cost you connection and respect.

  2. Feeling > Learn about common words that project blame and how to use feeling words more connected to others and yourself.

  3. Need > Transform your life by addressing what matters to you and being heard by others.

  4. Request > Learn the art of making Requests that care about everybody meeting their needs and make yours sound like a Gift.

Also…

  • Learn to translate labeling “Subjective” words into Objective Phrases that effectively express What Truly Matters to You.

  • Learn the Art of Empathy that unites people by connecting them to their core values.

The Center for Nonviolent Communication is a global organization that supports the learning and sharing of NVC and helps people peacefully and effectively resolve conflicts in personal, organizational, and political settings.

CNVC is a steward of the integrity of the NVC process and a nexus point of NVC-related information and resources, including training, conflict resolution, and organizational consulting services. CNVC’s mission is to contribute to more sustainable, compassionate, and “life-serving” human relations in personal relationships and social systems and structures, such as business/economics, education, justice, healthcare, and peace-keeping. NVC work is being done in over 65 countries and growing, touching the lives of hundreds of thousands of people around the world