"[In this book] you will get a good foundation in Marshall Rosenberg's Nonviolent Communication (NVC), on which this very down-to-earth approach to mediation is based upon, and lots of answers to practical questions."--Back Cover.
This book can help you make shame, guilt and anger your allies instead of our enemies. They can become keys to your inner life and to your dreams. Getting to know these feelings will help you better meet your needs for respect, acceptance, belonging and freedom. What would be possible if you no longer needed to shrink yourself to avoid shame or guilt?
This book has been written for anyone who wants to lead groups and stay true to their inner life at the same time. It shows you how to be both authentic and yet remain professional. You will receive a wide set of tools that can help you walk your talk, at the same time as you share your understanding of Nonviolent Communication - NVC (or other subjects).
Nowadays people expect to be treated well when they go to the dentist, the supermarket or when they are connecting with their IT-support. If they are not they might turn to someone else the next time they need that service or product. Being professional and staying human might be the biggest competitive advantage of our time. It is said that the cost of attracting a new customer is six times the cost of keeping an old one. This book clarifies how you can be professional and human at the same time. Actually the author claims that it is only when you are truly human that you can be professional. Communication tools for many different kinds of situations. Support in dealing with "difficult people" or challenging dilemmas. Plenty of useful ideas that can be implemented directly. And much more...
In 2010, four certified trainers of Nonviolent Communication produced a new tool to help people successfully learn, strengthen, and integrate the skills and consciousness of NVC. They called this tool the Pathways to Liberation Self-Assessment Matrix. Since then, thousands of NVC practitioners have been using the Matrix to identify skills, clarify strengths, discover edges, and navigate their own personal journeys toward emotional liberation and a more just, peaceful, and loving world.Now you too can use the Matrix to set a course toward self-knowledge, skill, and success. This guidebook shows you how.Written by Jim Manske, CNVC trainer and one of the four originators of the Matrix, Pathways to Nonviolent Communication: A Tool for Navigating Your Journey offers clear and specific suggestions for using the Matrix to assess your progress and assist others in deepening the skills and consciousness of NVC. Whether you are a longtime practitioner of NVC or have only recently begun your journey, the tool and techniques presented in this book will make every path more dynamic, accessible, and fun.
Communications is so much more than words. Being clear on certain principles will help you know how to connect. Empathy and honesty will lead the way. This book presents ideas on how to communicate and connect with others from your heart. Through stories, definitions and cartoons it will inspire you to go deeper in your exploration of what really matters in human communication.
Addressing the most common workplace relationship challenges, this manual shows how to use the principles of nonviolent communication to improve any workplace atmosphere. Offering practical tools that match recognizable work scenarios, this guide can help all employees positively affect their work relationships and company culture, regardless of their position. This handbook displays proven communication skills for effectively handling difficult conversations, reducing workplace conflict and stress, improving individual and team productivity, having more effective meetings, and giving and receiving meaningful feedback, thereby creating a more enjoyable work environment.
Table of Contents Resistances to Amoris Laetitia: A Critical Approach Antonio Autiero The Border, Brexit, and the Church: US Roman Catholic and Church of England Bishops’ Teaching on Migration 2015–2019 Victor Carmona and Robert W. Heimburger A Synodal Alternative for Ecclesial Conflict: Marshall Rosenberg’s Nonviolent Communication Mary Lilian Akhere Ehidiamhen Review Essay: Theological Ethics of Life: A New Volume by the Pontifical Acad-emy for Life Roberto Dell’Oro and M. Therese Lysaught Teaching Catholic Social Thought Symposium: Teaching Catholic Social Thought: A Symposium Introduction Jon Kara Shields Catholic Social Living: Teaching Students to “Live Wisely, Think Deeply, and Love Generously” Bernard Brady Resisting Gnostic Spiritualism in the Catholic Social Teaching Classroom Joyce A. Bautch Teaching Catholic Social Thought Online in the Philippines: From a Challenge to an Opportunity Teofilo Giovan S. Pugeda III Formative Figures for Catholic Social Witness Daniel Cosacchi Solidarity, Praxis, and Discernment: Formation at the Catholic Worker Casey Mullaney “Are We Theologians?”: A Practical Theology Approach to Catholic Social Teaching with Women Religious in East Africa Sarah C. DeMarais Pedagogical Reflections by East African Women Religious Alumnae of the Loyola Institute for Ministry Srs. Charity Bbalo, Lucy Kimaro, and Jane Frances Mulongo Book Reviews Peter Cajka, Follow Your Conscience: The Catholic Church and the Spirit of the Sixties Maria C. Morrow Charles C. Camosy, Losing Our Dignity: How Secularized Medicine Is Undermining Fundamental Human Equality Ramon Luzarraga Ki Joo Choi, Disciplined by Race: Theological Ethics and the Prob-lem of Asian American Identity David Kwon Daniel K. Finn, Faithful Economics: 25 Short Insights Chris Gooding Najeeb T. Haddad, Paul, Politics, and New Creation: Reconsidering Paul and Empire Jeffrey L. Morrow Conor M. Kelly, The Fullness of Free Time: A Theological Account of Leisure and Recreation in the Moral Life G. D. Jones Matthew Levering, The Abuse of Conscience: A Century of Catholic Moral Theology Kathryn Lilla Cox Marc LiVecche, The Good Kill: Just War and Moral Injury Darren Cronshaw Angela McKay Knobel, Aquinas and the Infused Moral Virtues Nicholas Ogle Joel Oesch, Crossing Wires: Making Sense of Technology, Transhu-manism, and Christian Identity Simeiqi He Robert Chao Romero, Brown Church: Five Centuries of Latina/o So-cial Justice, Theology, and Identity Jens Mueller
Explains how to break patterns of thinking that lead to anger, depression and violence, transform potential conflicts into compassionate dialogues, speak your mind without creating resistance or hostility, hear whatever is said to you as a "please" or "thank you", create greater depth and caring in your intimate relationships, and motivate with compassion rather than with fear, guilt or shame.