The Art of Difficult Conversations—Workshop
Hey everyone,
For our monthly workshop in September, @Severin will teach us the art of difficult conversations. And here’s what that is about:
Dysfunctional work teams. Family conflicts. Dinner table debates. Fights with your partner.
We constantly find ourselves involved in difficult conversations. They can seem relationship-ending, world-bending, or just plain uncomfortable. Worse yet—all the communication tools we learn seem to disappear just when we need them most.
Hard conversations put us in a different headspace than everyday discussion. We need different tools, ones we can call on in the heat of battle.
In this workshop, I will teach a novel format for navigating these choppy relational waters that leaders from Authentic Revolution developed—the mother of Authentic Relating practices.
Join us to transform difficult conversations into opportunities for growth, connection, and understanding.
You’re very welcome, even if you’ve never been to a meetup, or you feel like you don’t fit in. Here is the link to our last event, maybe you know someone already: Doing a “full-time mental health sabbatical” (Shenanigans Workshop)
Time: The workshop starts at 19:00 and is planned for 2h. Feel free to arrive by 18:30. Afterward, there will be time for socializing.
Food: I’ll bring pita bread, vegetables and dips.
Location: The Chaos Computer Club Berlin can comfortably fit about 20 people. Please RSVP so we know how many to expect.
Directions (German): https://berlin.ccc.de/page/anfahrt[1]
Please contact __nobody if you have any questions about the location.
Comment here, or write me here or on Telegram for anything else.
- Why we’re bad at predicting what will make us happy—Workshop by 29 Sep 2023 21:17 UTC; 10 points) (
- 30 Aug 2023 16:10 UTC; 1 point) 's comment on Personal Privacy—Workshop by (
- 17 Sep 2023 13:21 UTC; 1 point) 's comment on Berlin, Germany – ACX Meetups Everywhere Fall 2023 by (LessWrong;
The next workshop with @nina antonyuk has been scheduled for Oct 16 (Mon): Why we’re bad at predicting what will make us happy
I’d love to see you there!