Conflict without Casualties: A Field Guide for Leading with Compassionate Accountability - Softcover

Regier PhD, Nate

 
9781523082605: Conflict without Casualties: A Field Guide for Leading with Compassionate Accountability

Inhaltsangabe

When leaders learn how to manage the emotions and drama in their organizations, conflict can be made healthier. Nate Regier uses the Drama Triangle Model and the Compassion Cycle to show leaders how to exercise compassion, not passion, and turn the negative energy of conflict into a positive energy for increased productivity and growth.

"Conflict without Casualties fills a gap by showing leaders at any level how to leverage positive conflict. Practical, insightful, challenging, relevant." -Dan Pink, New York Times bestselling author

Most organizations are terrified of conflict in the workplace, seeing it as a sign of trouble. But Nate Regier says conflict is really just a kind of energy and can be used in positive or negative ways. Handled incorrectly, conflict becomes drama, which is costly to companies, teams, and relationships at all levels. Avoiding, managing, or reducing conflict is a limited alternative. Instead, Regier explores the interpersonal dynamics that perpetuate drama in organizations through a concept called the Drama Triangle and offers an alternative: the Compassion Cycle.

The Compassion Cycle allows leaders to balance compassion and accountability, transforming conflict into a growth experience that enables organizations to achieve significant gains in energy, productivity, engagement, and satisfaction in relationships. Provocative and illuminating, the concepts Regier shares will turn conflict from an experience to be avoided into a partner for positive change.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Nate Regier, PhD, is the CEO and cofounder of Next Element, a global training advisory firm specializing in leadership communication and building cultures of Compassionate Accountability. He is a former practicing psychologist and holds a doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Kansas.

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Conflict without Casualties

A Field Guide for Leading with Compassionate Accountability

By Nate Regier

Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc.

Copyright © 2017 Next Element Consulting, LLC
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5230-8260-5

Contents

Acknowledgments, ix,
Introduction, 1,
PART 1 | CONFLICT WITH CASUALTIES: DRAMA IS KILLING US, 7,
Chapter 1 | Conflict: The Big Bang of Communication, 9,
Chapter 2 | Drama: Misusing the Energy of Conflict, 13,
Chapter 3 | But I'm Just Trying to Help!: Good Intentions, Unintended Consequences, 33,
PART 2 | A FRAMEWORK FOR POSITIVE CONFLICT: COMPASSIONATE ACCOUNTABILITY CAN CHANGE THE WORLD, 45,
Chapter 4 | Compassion: Not for the Faint of Heart, 47,
Chapter 5 | Compassion and the Cycles of Human Civilization: Will We Get It Right This Time?, 75,
PART 3 | CONFLICT WITHOUT CASUALTIES USER MANUAL: PUTTING NEXT ELEMENT'S COMPASSION CYCLE TO WORK, 87,
Chapter 6 | Violators Will Be Prosecuted: Three Rules of the Compassion Cycle, 89,
Chapter 7 | Warning! Drama Approaching!: Three Leading Indicators, 103,
Chapter 8 | It's All about Choices: Three Choices to Move, 111,
Chapter 9 | Coaching Accountability When There's No Drama: Match and Move, 129,
Chapter 10 | The Formula for Compassionate Conflict: Confronting Drama with Compassionate Accountability, 147,
Chapter 11 | Conflict without Casualties: Preparing to Struggle with, 163,
Appendix A | Personal Development Guide, 181,
Appendix B | Preparing for Conflict: Building My ORPO Bank, 191,
Notes, 195,
Glossary of Terms and Phrases, 197,
Index, 201,
About the Author, 207,


CHAPTER 1

Conflict

THE BIG BANG OF COMMUNICATION


"A problem only exists if there is a difference between what is actually happening and what you desire to be happening."

— Ken Blanchard


At the most basic level, conflict is a gap between what we want and what we are experiencing at any given moment. Conflict is everywhere. I want my latte in my hands before 7:50 a.m. so I can get to work on time, and the line is long at Starbucks. I want my team to come together around our strategic vision, and they have lot of questions. I want to feel rested tomorrow, and I also want to stay up tonight to watch three episodes of my favorite show on Netflix. I want to be recognized for my hard work on a project, and my client criticizes it. I want to feel settled about a decision, and my gut clenches whenever I think of it. I want to feel confident that my sales team will positively represent our brand in front of customers, and they question each other's integrity. I want to feel safe in my house, and I am afraid because two families in my neighborhood have been victims of recent break-ins.


What happens when conflict occurs? Where do you feel it? Does your heart rate soar? What about your stomach? Does it churn or tighten up? Perhaps your hands get cold and clammy or your neck gets hot. Does your hair stand up on the back of your neck? Maybe you notice racing thoughts or extreme emotions. Some people shut down. Some people lash out. Some people have learned to take it in stride. But for most of us, conflict is stressful. The more conflict we experience, the bigger the emotional, physical, and psychological toll it takes on us.


CONFLICT GENERATES ENERGY

Before evaluating whether conflict is good or bad, or how we should respond to it, it's important to recognize that conflict generates energy. That energy shows up in a variety of ways. It could show up in racing thoughts and fantasies about what to do next. It could show up in increased heartbeat and flushed face caused by increased cortisol levels in the bloodstream. It could show up as an overwhelming desire to fight back or run away.

Conflict generates energy, pure and simple. And conflict is unavoidable. In fact, I'd go so far as to say that conflict is part of the grand design of the universe. I'm convinced that conflict is a necessary part of our human experience. Humans are created to be different from each other. Because of this we will inevitably have different needs, wants, and pursuits. When these come into contact with each other, conflict occurs.

Conflict is energy. Conflict is unavoidable. The only real question is: what will you do with the energy created by conflict? How will you spend it?


WHEN CONFLICT COMES KNOCKING, HOW DO YOU STRUGGLE?

Our experience working in thousands of interpersonal conflict situations shows that when conflict occurs, human beings struggle. We spend the energy struggling. That struggle seems to take one of two forms: we either struggle against or we struggle with.

Struggling against is a process of opposition and destruction. It's about taking sides, forming camps, viewing the struggle as a win-lose proposition, and adopting an adversarial attitude toward resolving the discrepancy between what we want and what we're getting. Struggling against is everywhere. It's in politics and religion. On the news. On social media. Look no further than a typical Facebook post to see self-righteous, moralistic, opinionated, and dogmatic attitudes that create and maintain polarized "us vs. them" struggles.

Struggling with is a process of mutuality and creation. It's about seeing the solution as a two-way street, viewing the struggle as an opportunity for a win-win outcome, and adopting an attitude of shared responsibility for resolving the discrepancy between what we want and what we are experiencing.

"The purpose of conflict is to create — Michael Meade


A friend of mine, the poet, psychologist, mythologist, and musician Michael Meade, says "the purpose of conflict is to create." Wow, that's a strong statement! I agree. If conflict is inevitable and it generates energy, and if creating something new requires energy, then all the pieces are in place. The determining factor is whether the energy of conflict will be used productively to create, or destructively to tear down. That choice is up to us. Each one of us has the power to transform the energy of conflict into a creative force.

This notion of conflict is quite different from what I was taught in school, and even what I see in most leadership literature. Conventional wisdom says that conflict is supposed to be managed, reduced, or controlled. Why? Because most people are accustomed to struggling against during conflict. When we ask people what's the first thing that comes to mind when they think of conflict, they nearly always use phrases like, "very stressful," "people get hurt," "nothing good comes out of it," "I avoid it if I can," or "I gotta win." We rarely hear an enthusiastic endorsement of conflict as a creative force. We also rarely meet a leader who has mastered the art of positive, generative conflict.


DRAMA AND COMPASSION

Two critical concepts in this book, and in our entire philosophy of transformative communication, are Drama and Compassion. You will see these themes repeated, expanded and applied throughout this book and our work at Next Element.

Drama is the result of mismanaging the energy of conflict. It diverts energy towards the pursuit of self-justification, one of the strongest human urges and one that almost always gets us into trouble.

The word compassion originates from the Latin root meaning "co-suffering." Com means "with" or "together" or "alongside." Passion means suffering or struggling....

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