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Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Apr 27, 2007, 8:36 AM: |
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This is a daughter discussion I'm branching off from the Tragedy, Terrorism, VA Tech Massacre, and Pavlina thread. I asked Colin, “So, Colin, would it be fair to say that you don't feel Stu and Ken are using Right Speech in this instance?” - then thought this could make a worthy topic in its own right. Right speechRight speech (samyag-vāc · sammā-vācā), as the name implies, deals with the way in which a Buddhist practitioner would best make use of his or her words. In the Magga-vibhanga Sutta, this aspect of the Noble Eightfold Path is explained as follows:
Walpola Rahula glosses this by stating that not engaging in such “forms of wrong and harmful speech” ultimately means that “one naturally has to speak the truth, has to use words that are friendly and benevolent, pleasant and gentle, meaningful and useful”[7]. ~~~~That's the traditional Buddhist definition. What would “Integral Right Speech” be, if there is such a thing? Or would you see an integral approach to communication as sometimes using right speech, and sometimes not? Would Integral Communication sometimes include lying, divisive speech, abusive speech, idle chatter? For clarity, let's refer to “Right Speech” as meaning the Buddhist Definition, and “Integral Communication” as referring to a broader definition of proper communication at integral altitudes. What do you think, y'all? spiral out, arthur |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Liz said Apr 27, 2007, 9:52 AM: |
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I think the Buddhist definition is limited. There are times when being nice is not what is best. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 27, 2007, 10:14 AM: |
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I appreciate both of your thoughts on this. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Apr 27, 2007, 9:20 PM: |
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Colin: Though, Arthur, I'm realizing that I sometimes feel a lack of your opinion in your posts. The ever-present non-partial thread starter that you are! |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Frans said Apr 27, 2007, 10:39 AM: |
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Wouldn’t that depend on what level you’re speaking from? And vice-versa, could your speech identify the level you are at - or maybe just the level you are trying to address? So in that way maybe right speech is always that - right for you where you are at… |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 27, 2007, 11:03 AM: |
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I personally think that, regardless of where or how speech manifests, whether in person or on a blog, a person seeking to operate in harmony with “Right Speech” pays very close attention to the words that are used. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Liz said Apr 27, 2007, 11:06 AM: |
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Sure. As Stuart himself says, “the higher that we climb, the more the ladder sways.” |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 27, 2007, 12:09 PM: |
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Basically, what is comes down to for me is that, when we are aligned with our Higher Self, we will always be cognizant of the words we use. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Frans said Apr 27, 2007, 12:23 PM: |
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He Colin, I’m quite wary of AAA personalities too - especially when they are self-declared. However, I’m not sure if your description comes from your Higher Self… |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Liz said Apr 27, 2007, 12:52 PM: |
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Interesting topic, a new slant on things we have discussed in other places in the past. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 27, 2007, 1:23 PM: |
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Hi Frans, |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Frans said Apr 27, 2007, 1:33 PM: |
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Hi Colin, I was referring to: “I find Type AAA personalities rather useless to anyone other than the ego: Arrogant Agentic Assholes don’t seem to me to be very effective at actually creating change.” The Arrogant Agentic Assholes is name calling - not Higher self stuff… |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 27, 2007, 2:21 PM: |
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Ah, yes. I see your point. What I wonder, though, is: Given the current usage of the term asshole, do you think that some people act in ways that actually earns them that title? Or, in terms of right speech, do you feel that it is never appropriate to call someone an asshole? I'm thinking more in line here with Liz and Liz…. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Liz said Apr 27, 2007, 8:57 PM: |
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I think when your head is in someone else's business, passing judgement on their language and denigrating their development, it is just possible the higher self is still there Frans, but you'd need to get out of colin's head and back into your own to find it. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?gitanjali said Apr 27, 2007, 10:04 PM: |
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Hi Tiki Liz We can , none of us, ever really know anyone's reality but our own. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Frans said Apr 27, 2007, 10:25 PM: |
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I guess to me it seems that when you use a term like asshole, it implies an emotional involvement, ergo ego involvement ergo Higher Self just went out the window…but I may be too much of a purist here. “the term Arrogant Agentic Asshole could theoretically be said with love.” - you may be pushing it just a l’ill bit, Liz - but I like the attempt!!! |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 28, 2007, 9:35 AM: |
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I realized last night (after coffee at 8pm!) that a few threads in this pod are currently converging, and it seems to be critical, so I am attempting to flesh it out here. I come to this issue with a deep respect for all those I have named, and all those who are involved in this thread, whether peripherally or directly. This is significant work; I am honored, humbled and called to higher waves by this compassionate engagement with all that is Beautiful, Good, and True. Thanks to all who are joining in this effort. Lol said (welcome back, Lol!): “But I did want to respond to Liz's question(s) … ”Here's my question for everyone: when I let the masculine agentic energy out, I get clobbered for it. This has happened enough times that I really don't question it. If we let that sort of thing flow, are y'all really ready for it? Or is it just too intense for online work? Can you accept it from a woman? Really and truly? “ For me I guess it depends on how you let it out, same as would apply for a guy.”In the VATech/Pavlina thread, the issue of Right Speech arose and is being probed. One wave, that Hokai and others seem to be resonating with, is that Julian, in his recent post on the Pavlina's (view-in-that-moment) blog entry regarding VATech, was “wield[ing] his sword of wisdom.” C4Chaos, Arthur and I are resonating with the wave that one should be careful to wield such a sword wisely and with skill. I think there is wisdom in the wave Julian and Hokai are expressing, AND I feel that the sword is not being used with obvious skill. That said, I am simply reading exteriors and translating those through my interiors. I bring this in here because, as Lol pointed out, “it depends on how you let it out.” This seems to be a call to speech that comes from your highest Self for the purpose of engaging in compassionately-centered dialog that has the power to effect change. From my read, this seems to be a distinction between, as Pelle brought out, intellectual and visceral agentic masculine. From Pelle: What do I mean by the visceral masculine? Well, the intellectual masculine is having the agency and guts to flesh out your own ideas as clearly as possible, and also daring to disagree with others if you don't feel that their ideas hold up to scrutiny. It all takes place in the world of concept and ideas …What I call the visceral masculine is more personal. One way of doing this is lovingly challenging someone else to grow, or challenging them to own something they appear to resist. Julian's post seems to come from an intellectual agentic masculine wave, and I guess what troubles me about that is that he has brought a specific person (Pavlina) into the mix. So, it's not so much “fleshing out ideas” because it was made personal. So much so, that Pavlina is personally ridiculed: “Now I have three questions for Pavlina: 1) When did you go off your meds? 2) What kind of drugs did you take instead while you were in Sedona? 3) Did a writer from The Onion hack your site and post this stuff? It's almost too good of a parody. How do these guys get taken seriously?” This activates the wave that C4, Arthur, I, and probably others, are resonating with when we suggest that this is not Right Speech. And, as irony or synchronicity or serendipity would have it (pick your poison), I am reading Grace and Grit right now, and I read the following quote last night, written by Treya: “Learning to focus more on how we say something, not just the content. Often each of us feels totally right about the content, but we both say this “truth” in an unkind or angry or defensive or provocative way. And then we can't understand why the other reacts to the twist in the comment, not the content.” OK, so does this resonate with You? Namaste, Making Gassho, Deep Love, Colin P.S. I am cross-posting this in the Pavlina/VTech thread, the Right Speech thread, and Julian's blog in response to the aforementioned post in an effort to both encourage on-going discussion and directly engaging those involved. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 28, 2007, 11:26 AM: |
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Bringing relevant posts to this thread for continued dialog: well said, Colin. and i agree with your observation. excellent choice of quote too from Grace and Grit. Thanks for posting that intro to NLP, C4. Ever have a time when you were sure you were being totally clear, but the other person heard something else? One way to deal with that is to blame: it's their fault they didn't get it. But then they didn't get it, you didn't get it, nobody got anything. Another way is to take responsibility: that's interesting, I wonder how else I can say it so they'll get it instead. By adopting the belief that the meaning of your communication was the response you got instead of the communication you delivered regardless of their response, you become more real-world by being responsive to feedback and flexible by adapting to change. Hokai said: Hi, Colin. The visceral component is almost absent in this medium, and tone is often a matter of trust and implicit understanding we have about the nature of critical speech. We all need to exercise this basic trust when we engage in online conversations, and I assume most of us do. Thanks for your insightful comments, Hokai. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Pelle said Apr 28, 2007, 10:10 AM: |
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I believe that we do need to have a sharp but compassionate Integral sword ready to make distinctions when needed. If something is clearly green, but trying to pass as Integral then we need to call a spade a spade. At times a clean cut is needed even if it hurts. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Sanjuro said Apr 28, 2007, 2:20 PM: |
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My own understanding of the problems with ‘getting’ right speech, is that its an evolving process. To have right speech is dependant on context, personal stage development, knowing your complexes and shadow integration. If for example I am a sensitive male, I do not like non-sensitive action in other males. This is basic shadow 101 right? As a sensitive male I am afraid of anger.
Eventually, and hopefully we integrate that shadow to the extent that we can then use anger appropriately. But how would I know what appropriate was until i learned through interior work, with a guide? I am bullshitting then right? No third party audit on my psyche! Until we integrate, we are at the level of our shadows dualism, whatever ‘colour’ that may be. Our own view of the world is driven by this. As Kagen says ‘our mind has us, we do not have our mind’. Shadow work is like running a marathon, until you actually do it, you haven’t done it. There is a wall. Once you have gone through that wall you know the ‘story’ of the wall was different than the ‘moment’ of the wall. You have less fear as a result. Right speech demands us to be cogniscant of our limitations, and be ready for those limitations to help us evolve. Right speech does not preclude being abusive, its probably the theoretical end result of multi-decades of interior work. I would deal with my shadow before reaching for the lofty goal of not using abusive language ever. Just less. Lets give everyone a break. You say or do something stupid, you are going to get called. Hold the criticism in suspension, and use it to look at yourself. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 29, 2007, 8:29 AM: |
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Sanjuro, I appreciate what you've added to this conversation. Right speech is definitely an art that evolves over time if we engage with our shadows to integrate them. And I think you're right on when you call out the messiness of the first stages of practicing that art. And, even as one evolves into higher expressions of that art, and begins to create beautiful and exquisite oil paintings that brings others that view it higher, one will regress into messiness when remaining shadow elements are hooked. Though, as you pointed out using other words, this reaction is the pure gold, if one is able to see it for that. It holds contracted power that is freed for higher purposes when the associated shadow is integrated. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Lucidity said Apr 28, 2007, 10:47 PM: |
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For me “right speech” is anything that “wakes” someone up and it can include all kinds of speech if necessary even if that speech is very divisive or even offensive to some. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Colin said Apr 29, 2007, 8:56 AM: |
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I also appreciate your addition to this conversation, Lucidity. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Lucidity said Apr 29, 2007, 2:06 PM: |
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Hi, Colin. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Apr 29, 2007, 9:32 AM: |
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Lucidity: Personally, what I find interesting is everyone's reaction to “right speech”. The “ethical conduct” (Śīla) subdivision of the Noble Eightfold Path is considered the cornerstone or foundation upon which unwholesome thoughts and practices end and higher meditative states begin. In AN 11.2 Cetana Sutta (An Act of Will) Buddha states it is virtue (without clinging to virtue) which gives freedom from remorse and freedom from remorse which leads to joy, serenity and subsequent rapturous states of meditation.
In Buddhism, this is also one of the Ten Recollections along with the Triple Gem.
This aspect of the Noble Eightfold Path is the most outward-oriented aspect of the Noble Eightfold Path insofar as it deals directly with a Buddhist practitioner's relationship with other members of his or her society. ~~~~~ And, specifically about right speech, it states: ~~~~~ Right speech (samyag-vāc · sammā-vācā), as the name implies, deals with the way in which a Buddhist practitioner would best make use of his or her words. In the Magga-vibhanga Sutta, this aspect of the Noble Eightfold Path is explained as follows:
Walpola Rahula glosses this by stating that not engaging in such “forms of wrong and harmful speech” ultimately means that “one naturally has to speak the truth, has to use words that are friendly and benevolent, pleasant and gentle, meaningful and useful”[7]. ~~~~~The definition of right speech seems quite straightforward and specific, and that's why I suggested using “integral communication” to mean speech (and other forms of communication) that might include right speech, but may also include forms of language which fall outside that definition. I would suggest that Julian is using language that is not “friendly and benevolent, pleasant and gentle.” If someone tried to suggest such language is right speech, could we imagine the Dalai Lama gently inquiring, “What the fuck? Are you off your meds?” Trust me, you don't want to piss off the Dalai Lama. spiral out, arthur |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Lucidity said Apr 29, 2007, 12:19 PM: |
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Hey Arthur. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?e said Apr 29, 2007, 3:49 PM: |
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Hey All, |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Rannah said Apr 30, 2007, 5:59 PM: |
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Dear Arthur, Ah, been thinking about this for a day or so. For one thing, seems like we’re talking ground rules again. Yet, it also seems a new gestalt element as appeared: Right Speech naturally follows Right Thought, yes/no? So, I imagine “Integral Right Speech” would be one that flows from “Integral Right Thoughts”…indicating that all quadrants were being considered at each opportunity where they could be applied (is anyplace not open ground to apply AQAL?) Or is this just way too simple? |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Liz said Apr 30, 2007, 6:15 PM: |
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It's not too simple, it's elegant. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Apr 30, 2007, 7:00 PM: |
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Rannah: So, I imagine “Integral Right Speech” would be one that flows from “Integral Right Thoughts”…indicating that all quadrants were being considered at each opportunity where they could be applied (is anyplace not open ground to apply AQAL?) |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Ewan said May 2, 2007, 1:26 AM: |
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Hi Rannah |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Jul 7, 2007, 5:56 PM: |
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The July 2nd zaadz mailout (What do you believe?) is an inspiring example of skillful integral communication in addressing a contentious issue; it starts thus: ~~~~~ An invitation to go deeper…
One of the things that impresses me most about this community is how it grasps the deeper truths behind the glitz of principles like “creating your own reality” and the Law of Attraction. It’s not that these popularized notions are wrong, but more that they’re just a superficial glimpse of a much larger picture… and it’s wonderful to be among a group of people who understands this. And it’s wonderful to see that there are others out there who realize this, too. The Institute for Noetic Sciences (a sponsor that we’ve not spent nearly enough time talking about) is one organization that’s doing excellent work in encouraging and spreading legitimate scientific research around the way our thoughts influence reality. They push deeper, beyond the notions of “manifestation” into psychology, consciousness studies, and those shifts in perception crucial to crafting a sustainable future. ~~~~~ coolness :) arthur |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Pelle said Jul 8, 2007, 9:16 AM: |
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See also this post where I link to serious research being done by the Boundary Institute on how human consciousness affects Random Number Generators. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?jikishin said Jul 8, 2007, 10:49 AM: |
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a story, |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Elizabeth said Aug 20, 2008, 7:34 AM: |
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Thanks, Arthur. A very timely bump. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Tom said Aug 20, 2008, 10:46 AM: |
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Right on, Elizabeth. Let's tarry a bit on Treya's quote. I'll give my own flavour. The how of one’s communication carries a considerable and important element of a communication’s social motivation or intention. Communication is among other things a social phenomenon with social purposes and ends that include the entire gamut of what one wants to get from one’s environment—particularly, how one wants one’s environment (ie, another person) ordered or structured including, centrally, how one wants that other to behave toward me. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Aug 20, 2008, 10:58 AM: |
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Elizabeth: Thanks, Arthur. A very timely bump. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Tom said Aug 20, 2008, 11:05 AM: |
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By the way, on a practical note, one can practice intention-noticing by aid of assumptions, one being that if the other hurts from something I said, assume you intended that hurt. This assumption is almost certainly the more accurate the better one knows the hurting other. : ) |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Tom said Aug 20, 2008, 12:42 PM: |
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Further by the way, most “you” statements carry more than a whiff of social motivating of the nature I described above. Worth a look. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Aug 20, 2008, 4:00 PM: |
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Something else to throw into the stew, from the just-published book Integral Life Practice: |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Tom said Aug 20, 2008, 5:24 PM: |
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Arthur, yes, to the extent one's buttons can no longer be pushed—what is perhaps this decade's version of emotional maturity—is one free to see another and appreciate what that other needs and wants in their development, situation, personality, etc. The development underlying the growth of this perspective sounds to me like an emotional version of the “momentous leap” into 2nd tier: integral EQ. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Fication said Aug 24, 2008, 3:57 PM: |
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A question on the Platinum rule. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Mascha said Aug 24, 2008, 4:09 PM: |
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Yeah, I had similar thoughts when reading that bit about the Platinum Rule. |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Fication said Aug 24, 2008, 4:51 PM: |
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Oh, these are tough questions. This really opens up for some shadow boxing: |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?maryw said Aug 24, 2008, 4:55 PM: |
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Mascha & Fication, I agree – that platinum rule needs to be qualified …. I'm thinking that the idea was to have somekind of pithy, shorthand way to say “take the other person's perspective into consideration when making a decision on how to treat / communicate with / serve / love them.” But there really is a beat missing in “treat others as they would like to be treated.” |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Grey said Aug 25, 2008, 2:04 AM: |
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Exactly, Mary. The Golden Rule, when read in terms of the “self” (small “s”), is almost as problematic as the Platinum Rule. Would a masochist be justified in also being a sadist (just to take an extreme example)? |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Elizabeth said Aug 25, 2008, 9:20 AM: |
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The implication is that we are to love or “treat” others as God has loved / treated us - and not just how we would like to be treated. Seems like that would mean taking our perspective, the other's perspective, and the perspective of the divine, or the higher Self, all into consideration … |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?adastra said Aug 25, 2008, 9:57 AM: |
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maryw: I'm thinking that the idea was to have some kind of pithy, shorthand way to say “take the other person's perspective into consideration when making a decision on how to treat / communicate with / serve / love them.” But there really is a beat missing in “treat others as they would like to be treated.” |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?Mascha said Aug 25, 2008, 10:17 AM: |
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Arthur: (Who do you throw to the sharks - Ghandi, or the plumber who tried to fuck you?) |
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Re: Integral Communication/"Right Speech"?maryw said Aug 25, 2008, 11:31 AM: |
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I dig your clarification and emphasis, Arthur (dang, you still have not signed the index in my book yet!) – and for me it also serves as a reminder that there are potential downsides (misunderstandings, misinterpretations) to reading certain kinds of passages and quotes outside of their original context. |
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