Skills For Living Together
Tools for better understanding yourself
and others in your community
and how to get where you want to go
by Duane H. Fickeisen
One of the articles in Living Together (IC#29) Summer 1991, Page 52
Copyright (c)1991, 1996 by Context Institute
| To order this issue ...
Community is all about getting along. But as anyone awake at the end
of the twentieth century knows, getting along is often quite a challenge.
It takes intention, practice, effort, and skill. Fortunately, the skills
can be learned, and while learning them isn't always easy, not learning
them makes life harder still. As the preceding articles demonstrate, people
skills - understanding how to listen, lead, manage, resolve conflicts, understand
the differences between people, and most importantly, understand oneself
- are an essential curriculum for anyone wanting to develop community.
Context Institute administrator, researcher, and resident group process
guru Duane Fickeisen, an ecologist who also holds a Master's degree in Whole
Systems Design, has put together a "people skills survival kit"
to get you started - and help keep you going.
Commitment of the heart is a necessary - nearly sufficient - condition
for community building. People who are seriously committed to living
together in community seem to rise to the challenges of differing goals,
values, and strategies. There are some tools and skills that help develop
community - but the best of them are of little use without that underlying
commitment.
But if you already have a passionate commitment to living together, here
are some ideas that may help you move toward community.
HONORING DIVERSITY
Successful communities find ways to draw on the unique strengths of their
members. Awareness that not everyone else learns, thinks, feels, senses,
or is motivated to action in the same way that you do can be very helpful
in developing effective ways of working (and playing) together.
These personal characteristics can be examined through many different
lenses - books, ideas, models, diagnostic instruments, role-playing games,
group processes, and the like - that can provide insight into your own strengths
as well as those of others. But I urge you to approach any of them with
caution. The models are necessarily simplistic, and each represents only
a piece of the truth. They are at best lenses that provide a view of reality
from a single direction. After experimenting with several of them, you may
choose those that seem to "fit" best for you.
In my experience, the primary value of such tools is in awakening awareness
of the special abilities and talents each person brings to the community.
From that you can seek complementarity among your combined skills.
HERO ARCHETYPES
One of these windows on ourselves makes use of a model of the "hero's
journey" and six archetypal heroes defined by Carol Pearson in her
book The Hero Within (San Francisco: Harper and Row, rev. ed. 1989).
The six archetypes are innocent, orphan, wanderer, warrior, martyr, and
magician. This model suggests that during our lives we typically experience
stages when different hero types are active. Each archetype has distinct
goals and fears and approaches life differently.
The innocent is both pre- and post-heroic. We are born innocents
and may return to the innocent archetype after completing one or more of
the hero journeys. Innocents have no need for goals, fears, or tasks.
When confronted with the need to take up the journey, the innocent "falls
from grace," often feeling betrayed and orphaned. Pearson argues that
the fall is necessary for our development and that we can return to the
grace of love and abundance only after taking the journeys of the hero archetypes.
The fall from innocence casts us into the orphan archetype. We
have been abandoned, and we seek safety. People in the orphan stage may
cope with their sense of abandonment through various forms of addiction
as a way to deny danger and seek answers and protection from others. In
the heroic stage of the journey, the orphan learns that suffering is universal,
and that we are not powerless, despite our dependency on each other and
on the earth around us.
The wanderer usually begins the heroic journey fleeing from a
villain (the person, organization, job, or belief that is causing their
misery). Life becomes an adventure of exploring new ideas. The task of wanderers
is to find their identity in order to claim their independence within the
context of relationships with others.
The warrior hero has an identified enemy and works to eliminate
it. He or she wants to change the world to conform to his or her own values
and is willing to work to mold others to meet his or her expectations. The
warrior is a strategist, monitoring progress toward his or her goals. The
task of the warrior is to learn to be assertive and to establish boundaries.
When one completes the warrior's journey, he or she learns to respect one's
friends, colleagues, institutions, and one's self.
The martyr hero seeks salvation through embracing suffering. People
in this stage of their journey sacrifice for others or for a cause that
is important to them. When the sacrifices made are inappropriate, and made
in the expectation that the sacrifices will lead to redemption, martyrs
move further from self-understanding; but when the sacrifices are appropriate
and are made in the spirit of giving rather than expecting a return, martyrs
create the opportunity to learn about their own values and goals and about
the depth of their commitment.
The magician archetype recognizes that the universe is not static,
but in the process of development. A magician is ready to take responsibility
for his or her role as a co-creator. The goal of the magician is to find
wholeness and balance from which to practice co-creation - but caution must
be exercised to avoid misuse of the magician's powerful tools of creativity
and change.
There is no "best" archetype. Each has its unique strengths
and weaknesses, and each faces special challenges and dangers. A community
made up of one predominant archetype may experience itself overly focused
on the tasks of that archetype. A community with people in many phases of
their journeys may benefit from their various perspectives and strengths.
PERSONALITY TYPES
Personality differences can be viewed though the lens of the Myers-Briggs
Typology. For a primer, see David Keirsey and Marilyn Bates, Please Understand
Me (Del Mar, CA: Prometheus Nemesis Book Company, 1984), which includes
the "Keirsey Temperament Sorter" to indicate your "type."
According to this model, the ways we gain energy (introvert/extrovert),
gather information about the world around us (sensor/intuitive),
process that information (thinker/feeler), together
with our comfort with decision-making (judger/perceiver)
define sixteen distinct personality types. People tend to pick careers,
avocations, and mates according to their type. Identifying and recognizing
such differences in type can help build relationships and mutual understanding.
The typology may also help identify tasks and responsibilities that are
aligned with your preferences or that will stretch your experiences beyond
them.
LEARNING STYLES
We also have different ways of learning. Harvard educator Howard Gardner
proposes that there are at least seven different human intelligences (verbal/linguistic,
logical/mathematical, spatial, musical, kinesthetic,
interpersonal, and intrapersonal). We develop skills in each
of them to different degrees, and group learning has been found to be enhanced
significantly by use of all seven in teaching. In addition, we also exhibit
cognitive style differences: some of us are field independent,
preferring a learning path that leads from the details to the big picture,
while others are field dependent and prefer to have the big picture
first. [See IC #27 for a more detailed look at both these ways of
understanding learning].
Another model of learning, developed by David A. Kolb ("Learning
Style Inventory" and technical manual, available from McBer and Co.;
137 Newbury Street; Boston, MA 02116; 617/437-7080), assigns preferred learning
styles based on preference for abstraction or concreteness and
preference for action or reflection.

Learners with a preference for concrete experience and active experimentation
are accommodators. Accommodators learn from doing. They like
to implement plans and get things done, and they tend to accept risk. Accommodators
also rely more on other people for information than on their own independent
analysis. They excel at getting things done and providing leadership.
Those who prefer concrete experience over abstract conceptualization,
and reflective observation over active experimentation, are divergers.
They tend to learn by integrating and synthesizing information from many
sources. Divergers like group discussion but need quiet time for reflection.
People with this style are innovative and imaginative and seek involvement
in important issues. They excel at recognizing problems and understanding
people.
Those with a preference for abstract conceptualization and active experimentation
are convergers. Convergers have a need to know how things
work and learn by testing theories. They value strategic thinking. People
with this style have limited tolerance for uncertainty and need to know
how things they are asked to do will help in "real" life. They
are valuable in drawing a discussion toward completion and in bringing closure
to an issue. Convergers excel at problem solving and decision making.
The assimilators are those with a preference for abstract
conceptualization and for reflective observation. Assimilators have an appreciation
for logic and tend to form theories and seek facts. They learn by thinking
through ideas, value sequential thinking, and need details. People with
this style want to know what experts think. They are enthusiastic group
members. They excel at planning and creating models.
A community may find it valuable to examine learning styles and to draw
on the unique characteristics of their members as needed for the issues
at hand. For example, if the community finds itself to be predominantly
divergers, it is likely that they will find difficulty in bringing closure
to a discussion. In that case, it may well prove helpful to empower the
divergers to make an intentional effort to move things along and to empower
any convergers in the group to help focus on decision-making once several
alternatives have been identified.
MOTIVATIONS
Yet another window on diversity is the Strength Deployment Inventory®.
This diagnostic questionnaire measures factors that "motivate"
behavior. The underlying model is that we are motivated by desires to be
directive, helpful, or analytical, and the instrument
measures the importance of each of these three factors both when things
are going well and when we experience stress. Scores on each of the three
dimensions are used to define a style of behavior.
I have found this model particularly helpful with members of a team.
It helps members of the group understand each other's behavior, support
effective action, and complement group strengths.
These and other windows or lenses on diversity provide alternative ways
of understanding and finding the value inherent in differences. None
of them captures the whole truth, yet they each contain important elements
of truth.
My advice is to explore several of them and use those that seem to fit
for your group. Avoid assuming that the types are inflexible, or that they
restrict your range of abilities. And don't get trapped into introspection
to the exclusion of action! These tools take on increased meaning when they
are experienced through application to real problems and projects.
GROUP PROCESS
One of the best ways to experience your strengths is in the context of
a community. In a community you'll have an opportunity to discover the synergistic
effects of different styles of behavior - both when they enhance each other
and when they conflict.
But don't expect the groups you affiliate with to remain static. All
groups experience stages in development that can be quite well defined.
Most models of group development assume that there are several stages of
development that a group experiences in a patterned order, and the development
of the group can get stuck at one or more of these stages until the issues
of that stage are resolved.
Of course no group follows the models precisely, and progress through
the stages may be complicated by being stalled, or by reverting to an earlier
stage. It is helpful to recognize which stage the group is in so that appropriate
facilitation can resolve issues related to process.
A model proposed by William C. Schutz (The Interpersonal Underworld.
Palo Alto, CA: Science and Behavior Books, 1966; originally published in
1958 as FIRO: A Three Dimensional Theory of Interpersonal Behavior)
describes three stages of development: Inclusion, Control,
and Affection.
Inclusion * When a new group begins, its members face issues of
discovering if and how they fit into the group. Individuals face the paradox
of wanting to be recognized and included, thus seeking to draw attention
to themselves, and at the same time denying individual differences. Most
of the information that is shared is superficial, and there is a high need
for conformity.
At the inclusion stage, the group is likely to be dependent on a designated
leader and to carefully watch and model the leader's behavior. Group productivity
is usually low, and there is a focus on understanding basic goals and developing
norms for structuring the group. The effective leaders will focus on clarifying
broad objectives of the group, clarifying expectations for participation,
and modeling commitment to the group through punctuality, attendance, and
welcoming new members.
Control * Once the issues of who is in the group are resolved,
issues of control arise. At this stage conflict is common as differences
become apparent and individuals fight to get their way. The group faces
issues over how it makes decisions while individual members face issues
over their influence in the group.
Group development is facilitated at this stage if the leader is comfortable
with conflict and chaos, and does not attempt to ignore the reality of the
control issues, but helps guide development of procedures for participation
and decision making.
Affection * If the group successfully works through the issues
in the control stage, it may move to the affection stage. Members let go
of being defensive and of the judgment and assumptions that have created
barriers to effective communication. Individual differences are respected
and used effectively to assist the group rather than to divide it.
Conflicting views are welcomed and worked through to resolution. The
group becomes much more effective, and members feel close to one another.
Leadership of the group moves among members, and a unique culture begins
to emerge with its own jargon, roles, rituals, and norms. Experimentation
and innovation are prevalent, and there is a high level of energy.
In a sense, any group or community is a new one each time it meets.
Not only may attendance vary - new people join the group or current members
leave - but those who are present will have had different life experiences
since the last time the group met. So the group may find itself moving temporarily
back to a stage that it had already moved out of. Also, the group may find
that a new issue causes it to move back if the current norms for operating
don't take into account the new situation.
PARTICIPATION AND INFLUENCE
The degree and quality of participation in the group is an indicator
of the stage of development of the community and of its ability to use diversity
and conflicting opinion constructively. There are many styles of participation,
however, and the person who is actively listening and says relatively little
may be engaged as much as the more vocal members of the group.
There is an important difference between influence and participation.
Influence is not necessarily proportional to participation. For example,
it may well be that the person who quietly listens, and occasionally offers
a synthesis or summary of what has been said, will have more influence than
those who are actively debating an issue.
Effective group leaders notice which members dominate the discussion
and ensure that others have an opportunity to speak if they desire. This
"gatekeeping" role is often shared among group members. A discussion
leader may also ask if anyone can summarize the content of what has been
said as a means of moving the group process ahead. This can serve to assure
those who have expressed their views that they have been heard and thus
enable the group to move on.
TASK AND MAINTENANCE
Task functions are those that move a group toward a particular
goal or solving a problem. Maintenance functions are behaviors that
help the group build relationships and effective processes. Both are important
for the long term, effective health of a group.
Task functions include initiating discussion, seeking and providing information
and opinions, giving directions, evaluating options, summarizing the discussion,
and diagnosing problems.
Maintenance functions include encouraging participation, harmonizing
and compromising, facilitating communications, observing and commenting
on process, building trust, and solving interpersonal problems.
Responsibility for these roles should be shared and flexible. While it
may be helpful to designate a "process observer" from time to
time, or someone to provide process directions, usually groups operate without
such formal roles. However, leaders within the group should be aware of
the two kinds of functions and monitor the group's progress for a balance
between the two. When problems arise, it may be helpful to try to identify
whether they are related to being stuck in working toward completion of
the task or to ineffective relationship maintenance.
COMMUNICATION SKILLS
Our sensory organs gather far more information than we are able to effectively
process and use. To cope with the overwhelming amount of information, we
have developed filtering mechanisms. Our filters enable us to hear or see
only what we want to hear or see to a greater extent than many of
us recognize.
Communications are further complicated by non-verbal factors. Perhaps
as little as 7% of what is communicated face-to-face is contained in the
verbal message; the remaining 93% is non-verbal. Both the verbal and the
non-verbal elements are subject to our filtering mechanisms and to our interpretation.
High quality communication takes a lot of effort. But fortunately, communication
skills are learned, and we can learn new ones. Begin with practicing
active listening - really paying attention and affirming the speaker.
Listen to understand, and don't get distracted by formulating your response.
Instead, ask clarifying questions and check out your understanding.
One way to check out your understanding is to paraphrase - tell the speaker
what you think they have just said, in your own words, and ask whether you
have gotten it correctly.
Another important element in good communication is to be explicit about
describing feelings. If you rely only on your non-verbal cues, you may
not be understood, so describe your own feelings by identifying and naming
them. Feeling statements have the form, "I feel angry" (or happy,
anxious, calm, nervous, etc.). Note that statements beginning with "I
feel that ..." most often describe what you think rather than
what you feel.
When you interpret another person's feeling or purpose, check out your
interpretation. Start by describing the behavior you observe, giving your
interpretation, and inquiring if you are correct. For example, "Your
face is red and I suspect you are angry with me. Is that right?"
Don't give up on these new communication skills when they feel awkward.
With practice you will become more comfortable with them.
DECISION MAKING
One of the most important decisions a group makes is deciding how to
decide! Unfortunately, this most critical decision is often ignored or made
by default, at least until there is a critical issue involving high stakes
at hand.
Decision-making methods range in the degree that those who will be affected
by the decision are involved in the process. Decisions can be made by:
- a single decision maker without input from others
- an expert on the question of concern
- a single decision maker with input from others
- averaging of individual decisions or positions, without discussion
- a sub-group or committee
- majority vote
- consensus
No single method is ideal: the appropriate one to use depends on the
situation.
With a high degree of participation in decision making, there will be
more support for its implementation. Additional time and effort spent reaching
the decision may be offset by reduced time and effort to implement it. It
usually takes more time and energy to reach agreement with high participation
methods. In some cases the issues don't merit this degree of involvement,
and the process may become burdensome and inefficient unless alternatives
are found.
When a group has reached the stage of development where differences are
welcomed and there is a high level of trust (Schutz's Affection stage, described
above), it may be appropriate to use consensus for decisions that require
greater cooperation to implement and when the stakes are high. However,
for those decisions that are less important, when group members lack relevant
expertise, and when implementation does not require full cooperation, it
may be appropriate to use one of the less demanding methods of decision
making, for example, decision by an expert or by a committee.
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
Conflicts are unavoidable in human relations. Our approach to
them can be one that makes use of conflict as a means of building trust,
creating innovative solutions to problems, and strengthening relationships.
But unless serious attention is given to resolving conflicts constructively,
they can generate distrust, destroy relationships, and stifle creativity.
Conflict is often approached as a zero sum game with the assumption that
there must be a winner and a loser, and that the winner can only gain at
the expense of the loser. Sometimes that's true - for example, when a limited
resource must be divided between competing interests. But often a creative
alternative can be found that meets the needs of both parties.
A key to conflict resolution is to identify the interests of all the
stakeholders. Knowing clearly what your own interests are allows you to
evaluate proposed solutions from the standpoint of meeting your underlying
needs.
Interests are the underlying principles that are non-quantifiable
and cannot be negotiated, as opposed to positions or issues which
are measurable and can be bargained. For example, one's interest might
be to have good nutrition. A related issue would be wanting to have
access to a 400 square foot garden spot in which to grow vegetables in raised
beds. It would be possible to negotiate for the location and size of the
garden spot, but not over the desire to have good food.
In conflicts it is often helpful to make the interests of all of the
stakeholders explicit and public. Clear understanding of everyone's interests
may lead to creative ways to meet all of them.
Individual styles of dealing with conflict cover a range of behaviors
that differ in their focus on the importance of the stakes and the
importance of the relationship. If neither are important, it may
be appropriate to avoid the conflict or flee from it. If the relationship
is important but the stakes are not, it may be appropriate to accommodate
the other party. Conversely, if the stakes are very important but the relationship
is not, then compelling the other party to agree to your position may be
the best strategy. A collaborative solution is called for when both
the stakes and the relationship are important.
LEADING AND MANAGING
There is an important distinction between leadership and management.
Leadership is involved in the process of creating new approaches and innovative
ideas, envisioning a purpose, and enrolling others as co-creators. Management
is the reactive process of maintaining the status quo, organizing resources
to accomplish a goal, and solving problems that threaten to interrupt progress.
Both are needed for effective community action.
Many corporations are overmanaged and underled, and they are attempting
to develop leadership. Consequently, literature on the difference between
leadership and management often seems biased toward leadership as a preferred
style. However, both are needed, and it seems more likely that a community
will suffer from lack of management than from a lack of leadership.
Management roles in a community include monitoring progress and
tracking resources. The manager translates plans into action, monitors
progress against milestones, and finds ways to recover from setbacks or
unexpected turns of event that threaten completion of the project.
In a group that is functioning effectively at the Affection stage of
development, leadership is a shared responsibility. Leadership qualities
are not necessarily related to personality type, nor are they something
we are born with. Rather, leadership involves a set of learned skills and
behavior, and most of us are quite capable of learning these skills. Of
course, there is also an art to applying leadership skills, but with practice
that art can be developed.
One model of leadership, adapted from the work of William D. Hitt (The
Leader Manager: Guidelines for Action, Columbus, OH: Battelle Press,
1988), describes seven key activities of leadership.

Envision * Create a vision of the preferred future. Make it specific
and allow it to create its own reality in your consciousness. Involve others
in its development and talk about the vision often. Keep it visible and
present as you go about your work.
Enroll * Get others to join in sharing the vision you have created.
Enlist their support and find ways for them to participate meaningfully.
Empower * Facilitate processes of group development. Find ways
to define roles and processes of working together. And discover the skills
represented within the diversity of your group.
Engineer * Develop an action plan to accomplish your vision. Make
it specific and be sure to include not only who and what,
but also when and with what resources each task is expected
to be accomplished. Make sure the resources needed to accomplish the project
(people, funding, materials, equipment, skills) will be available at the
right time and place.
Enact * Assign people responsibility for the roles needed to accomplish
the task and provide the authority they need to carry out their roles. Implement
the plan and do the project.
Encourage * Be a cheerleader for your team! Assist by facilitating
problem solving and conflict resolution and celebrating the completion of
interim goals.
Evaluate * Take time to evaluate the effectiveness of your actions
as a group in terms of the results you accomplish and the relationships
you are developing. Evaluate the process as well as the results. Examine
your own role as leader.
The Envision, Enlist, Empower, and Engineer steps comprise a design phase.
The Enact and Encourage steps are an action phase, and the Evaluate step
is a time for reflection - and celebration!
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER
Well, that sounds like a lot of work. It is a lot of work! And
it can be frustrating to focus on process. But getting to know who you and
your colleagues are, how you relate to each other, and how you work together
is the most effective way I know to build and sustain a community. Even
so, knowing how to do it isn't enough.
You must do it - experience community. That takes courage,
creativity, and commitment as well as skills. It all starts with a simple
decision to be in community - a decision of the heart that, once
taken, creates its own fulfillment.
Living Together, Or Living Apart?
Cerro Gordo is a planned community in Southern Oregon that has been under
development since 1971, though it was stalled for many years while waiting
for bureaucratic clearances (see IC #25, "The Town That Time
Almost Forgot"). Its members have shown remarkable persistence, and
today Cerro Gordo is moving steadily towards realizing its ambitious plans
to be a demonstration ecological community.
But when members of Cerro Gordo first began considering land use, many
of them wanted large home sites - which would have scattered the planned
2,100 residents about the 1,158-acre property in the foothills of the Cascade
Mountains near Eugene. With large home sites, it was thought, each family
would enjoy privacy and a piece of the natural environment that drew them
to the place.
Over the years, however, as the members learned more about the site and
about each other, their vision for development of the property shifted.
From ecological studies conducted as part of the planning process, they
began to understand the larger place and the complex interrelationships
among the natural communities of plants and animals that also called Cerro
Gordo home. And from their work together they realized the value of another
kind of community - a community of neighbors and friends. Large, scattered
home sites, they realized, would neither protect the foothill ecosystems
nor promote the developing relationships among future human residents.
The answer they came up with was clustered development. By grouping several
home sites on small parcels of land and leaving plenty of open space between
the clusters, they were better able to protect the meadows and forested
areas and at the same time to live in community with each other.
The model of cluster development with preservation of open space is one
that other communities could well adapt as a means of providing affordable
housing, conserving energy, protecting ecosystems, and encouraging development
of human communities. Current zoning that requires 2.5 or 5 acres per home
site is perhaps the worst way to plan land use in developing rural areas
[see, for example, the illustration on page 47 of this issue]. Innovative
land use regulation - and a shift in understanding and values like the one
experienced by Cerro Gordo community members - is a badly needed remedy
for suburban blight.
- Duane H. Fickeisen
For information on Cerro Gordo contact Chris Canfield, Cerro Gordo
Town Forum, Dorena Lake Box 569, Cottage Grove, OR 97424, Tel. 503/942-7720.
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