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Monday, February 8, 2016

Yes. This. (Re: Jian Ghomeshi's Charges and Trial)

I don't often write a blog post that's basically just a link to someone else's blog. In fact I don't think I've ever done this before.

However, this blog post captured so perfectly feelings that I haven't been able to articulate about the charges against and trial of Jian Ghomeshi that I decided to share a link to this blog post here.

If you are a someone who has been upset by Jian Ghomeshi's (yes, yes, alleged) actions and/or our society's response thereto, or if you are someone who wants to understand why many people are upset by this, please read this blog post.

Here's an excerpt to give you an idea of where this (eloquent and pithy) blog post will take you:

"The woman, discredited witness #1, wrote him flirty emails a year later, attaching a shot of her in a red bikini. Does that mean Jian Ghomeshi didn’t assault her?… Nope. It means we live in a society where women are so devalued that the deeply engrained desire for male approval supersedes our own intuition constantly. We don’t even know how to recognize our intuition, let alone respect and heed it, because we grow up speaking less, being listened to less and being recognized as complex and intelligent, worthwhile individuals much less."
~Bone broth and breastmilk blog

(Alert: adult language) Link to full blog post: https://bonebrothandbreastmilk.wordpress.com

Friday, February 5, 2016

Night sweats and marble jars

I'm having one of those peri-menopausal nights when I can't stay asleep because I can't stay comfortable. I'm too hot! But I'm not! But I am! But I'm not!

It's the usual temperature in my bedroom, but under the covers, I'm boiling and then when I kick them off, I'm too cold. So, forget that. I'm not one for trying to sleep when I can't. I'd rather be up and doing something interesting. 

This morning, as I often am lately, I'm thinking about Dr. Brené Brown's work. I did a free e-course a couple of days ago called The Anatomy of Trust. The course centres around a talk Brené filmed for Super Soul Sundays (one of my dear friends sent me the link last month and recommended I watch it. The video forms the central part of the course; if you're interested in watching the video without doing the rest of the course, you can watch the video here). 

Dr. Brown breaks trust down into seven components that fit into the catchy acronym: BRAVING.

Boundaries
Reliability
Accountability
Vault
Integrity
Non-judgment
Generosity

Since Brené Brown's work is based deep in grounded theory research with data gathered from thousands of participants, I find it no surprise that her take on trust rings absolutely true to me. 

If I consider the relationships where I place a lot of trust, I can think of instances where each of those seven components have been enacted. And in situations where I have experienced a lack or loss of trust, this model helps me understand more clearly what happened. 

What does this have to do with a jar of marbles?


Dr. Brown talks about a "Marble Jar" that was used as a classroom management tool by one of her daughter's teachers. If behaviour was appropriate for the classroom, marbles went into the jar and if behaviour was inappropriate, marbles came out. When the jar was full, the class would have a celebration. 

The concept of marble jars strikes me as an excellent one to explain trust and human relationships. 

However, it seems to me that Dr. Brown talks about the marble jar as if the jar belongs to the individual – as if a person has one jar which various people put marbles into and take marbles out of.

I think I see it a little differently. I think each relationship (including the relationship each of us has with self) has its own (mental) marble jar. And each participant in the relationship can put marbles in (contribute to the relationship) or take marbles out (disengage from, betray or damage the relationship). This can get pretty complex, but I think it works this way – for instance for a family consisting of two parents and two kids, that a family has a jar for the whole family and there are also separate jars for each relationship within the family (Parent1– Kid1, Parent1–Kid2, Parent2– Kid1, Parent2–Kid2, Parent1–Parent2, Kid1–Kid2 and probably even Parent1–Kid1– Kid2 and Parent2–Kid1–Kid2 and then jars for each individual's relationship with self). The relationships are interconnected – some actions affect the entire family at once, others affect a sub-set or an individual.

There is a temptation here to see relationships strictly in terms of quid pro quo – you do this for me, I'll do this for you. While I think that if we are honest with ourselves, there is a transactional component to every relationship, I don't think the marble jar concept is best used to simplify things down to that level. I don't think the concept is very helpful as a scorekeeper, but I do think it is useful as a barometer. And also as a tool for communication – a way to help people visualize their perceptions around behaviour and the way it affects relationships.

If people in connection with one another view their relationship as a co-creative endeavour, ideally, each person in the relationship is interested in contributing to the jar (in ways that count for the other or others) so that the relationship feels satisfying for everyone involved. 

What counts as a marble?


I believe there is some delicate work here around understanding what each person feels is a contribution or a withdrawal. The whole "Do unto others as you would have others do unto you" idea, is actually not as useful in relationships as "Do unto others as they would have you do unto them." People are put together differently and have different boundaries and expectations. I believe great relationships are founded on a desire to learn about one another and build mutual understanding, care and acceptance.

I recently read a blog post someone posted on Facebook about how some guy's wife left him because he wouldn't put his used drinking glasses in the dishwasher. As the writer himself admits, he finally figured out, too late, that those used glasses in the sink made his wife feel unseen and disrespected. So every time he left one out, he was taking a marble out of their shared jar. While, on his side, he felt that every time she complained about those drinking glasses, she was being unreasonable, stupid and annoying and taking a marble out of their shared jar by making his life needlessly less pleasant.

Often, there is simply a failure to understand another person's marble code – one person puts a marble in, thinking they are making a contribution and the other person fails to recognize it  – or worse, sees the other person's contribution as a deficit. 

Another common dynamic is unequal contribution. If one person feels like they are putting in way more marbles than the other person, they may come to feel depleted and decide to leave the situation. It can work the other way around, too, where the person with fewer marbles to contribute leaves a relationship because they feel overwhelmed, judged or resented.

I think marble jars can get too full as well as too empty. Sometimes the weight of expectations or of obligations can be just as damaging to a relationship as disregard, disinterest or an out-and-out betrayal of trust.

Marble Jar Relationships


I have to say at this point in my life that I think I have personally experienced a vast array of relationship marble jar failure: too little investment, unequal investment, waning interest, apathy, misplaced or unrecognized marbles, plundering, jars that cracked and then broke due to over-filling, initial contributions that were later clawed back (sometimes with interest), and the classic, "I'm taking all of my marbles and going home". A few times, I've hurled a marble jar against a wall and walked away, and a few times, someone else has done that to me.

I have also had a number of marble jar successes. I have relationships (some life-long, others dating back as many as 35 and some within the past 5 years) where both people are committed to contributing marbles to the jar. There have been challenges to work through – places where we have disappointed one another in one of the 7 BRAVING trust areas, and places where we have worked things through with accountability and integrity, built or repaired trust and continued with our process of being in relationship.

Self-trust is the root of all trust


For me, one of the biggest take-aways from this idea, is the importance of self-trust. The e-course I mentioned above includes worksheets for trust in organizations, with another person and with oneself. I found the self-trust inventory enlightening. I feel pretty solid in some areas and much shakier in others. I'm going to keep that inventory on-hand for difficult moments. When I'm not sure what to do, or when I've just done something I feel ashamed of, I am encouraged by the thought that I can bring myself back to the BRAVING framework to build and/or repair self-trust.

I'm also percolating an idea about how I might be able to use an actual physical marble jar as an exercise with self-trust, but as this blog post is already pretty long, I think that will have to wait for another post.

Thursday, February 4, 2016

30 Days of Hustle – Report


A little more than 30 days ago, I posted that I was embarking on a program called the 30 Days of Hustle.

This is a motivational challenge to boost productivity (learn more at 30daysofhustle.com). I decided to focus my hustle on picking up the quilting hobby I dropped cold about 8 years ago and completing as many quilt tops as I could.

I finished THREE and made progress on a fourth.

I was impressed by the 30 Days of Hustle process – the videos, exercises and the camaraderie of the private Facebook group. It turned out that doing it was so much easier than thinking about doing it. After all, one of the quilt tops was only about 4 hours from completion, the other two about 6 hours each.

It certainly helped that I spent those hours in very good company with the wonderful staff at The Lunenburg Makery. (Big shout out to Rita, Kat and Jo)

Things are getting busier with my day job now, but I feel like I still have some hustle in me. In the course of doing this project, I found still MORE unfinished quilt projects, including 2 more sets of inherited quilt blocks, so I'm going to keep hustling on them at the Makery, as my schedule permits.

I also learned that there is woman nearby who runs a quilt shop and does long-arm quilting for a reasonable price, so as soon as I can afford her services (and batting and backing), I will skip my least favourite part of the quilting process and have these tops quilted for me.

Happily, I also learned that I still enjoy the process of piecing a quilt top – or two – or more.

Here are some photos!

Quilt top #1: Colour Wheel baby quilt
Quilt top #2 – double bed-sized log cabin
from inherited quilt blocks
Quilt top #3: single bed-sized quilt with
stereotyped (yuck), appliquéd Dutch children,
made from inherited, hand-worked blocks
Quilt top #4 (in progress): paper-pieced
New York Beauty