Not all topics are created equal. In the context of cooperative culture, some topics are
much tougher to get at than others.
Here are half a dozen that I encounter regularly. These are by no means all, but they're representative. If your group consistently handles any two of these well, you're
way ahead of the curve. (If not, I'm available for hire.)
I. How Power is Used in Cooperative Groups
Groups need to understand—and be able to talk authentically about—how power (influence) is distributed in the group.
If
the group has not done foundational work to define healthy models of
leadership, it is fraught with danger for members to admit that they
have power or are available to fill leadership roles.
Members
of cooperative groups tend to want the power gradient to be a shallow
as possible (ostensibly in the hope of getting away from the power
abuses all of us have had bad experiences with in mainstream situations,
whether it be family, church, school, or workplace), but wishing
doesn't make it so. Power is
never distributed evenly, and you can't reasonably work constructively with a thing you can't talk about openly.
Groups
need to distinguish good uses of power (generally speaking, it's when
people use their influence for the good of the whole) from poor uses of
power (using influence for the benefit of some and at the expense of
others) and to develop the chops to be able navigate the perception that
a person did not use their power as cleanly as he or she thought they
had. That moment is particularly tricky.
Hint:
If your group hasn't yet defined what qualities it wants from leaders,
and what constitutes healthy uses of power, have those conversations
now! Just bumbling along in the fog is not a strategy; it's a train
wreck.
II. Limits of Diversity
No group can be all things to all people.
While all groups have
some
level of diversity among their membership (surely you weren't expecting
clones), and most embrace a common value supporting diversity, it is a
nuanced question just how much you can handle of any particular stripe
of diversity—which manifests in a bewildering array of sizes and
colors.
And it's worse than that. While few groups get
around to an in-depth conversation about what they actually want in the
way of diversity, I have not yet met the group that's developed a
culture robust enough to give voice to the desires of those of how want
more of a thing (in the name of diversity), only to encounter others in
the group who report feeling stretched to the max. Now what?
You need a strong web of caring relationships to sensitively navigate that conversation.
III. Accountability
In
most groups there will be a mix of people who favor low structure and
people who favor high structure—with a healthy sprinkling of folks in
the middle. Those at the low end prefer minimal rules and a high degree
of personal discretion, coupled with personal responsibility. They want
the flexibility to make nuanced determinations on a case-by-case basis.
Those
on the high structure end favor spelling things out to relieve the
anxiety of uncertainty. If the standards are well-articulated than you
know at all times where the boundary is and it's easier to relax. You'll
know what's expected and when you've done your fair share.
The
bad news is: nobody's wrong. People at both ends of this very human
spectrum have to figure out how to live together. One of the key tests
for this is what happens when Member A has the perception that Member B
has broken an agreement or failed to come through on a commitment. (
Hint: If you believe this problem would be eliminated by high structure, think again.)
Note that I didn't say that Member B had done anything wrong; I said that Member A
thought
Member B had done something wrong. In situations like this most groups
prefer that Member A discuss this directly (and hopefully cordially)
with Member B in a good-faith attempt to resolve this concern as cheaply
as possible. But what if Member B isn't interested in hearing feedback
from Member A—either because of the content or because of the delivery?
Does
your group have in place an explicit agreement that members are
expected to provide a channel for receiving critical feedback from other
members about their behavior as a member of the group? Few do. Yet you
can see how much mischief can result from accumulated grumblings that
never get cleared. Yuck.
The next thing you know,
there's a call for accountability (we can't let those bastards get away
with this; they're ruining the community!). This can polarize the group
in a blink.
Whenever there's the sense that someone
has neglected a duty, done slipshod work, or acted in their own interest
instead of the group's, there needs to be a conversation. You need a
group culture strong enough to hold that conversation and to keep its
focus on repairing damage to relationship;
not on determining who's right and how many lashed should be meted out.
Sanctions come only at the end of the line, when all else has failed.
IV. Standing up to Bullying Behavior
This is a special case of the previous point, yet one that obtains frequently enough to get its own mention.
Bullying
is about intimidation. It's accomplished through size, facial
expression, crowding of personal space, belligerent attitude, tone of
voice, volume, persistence, and through threats and retaliation. It's
pushing others out of their comfort zone to the point where they shut up
or leave the field rather than continue to voice concerns or
opposition.
It needs to be stood up to and not allowed
to control the conversation, yet that often adds up to meeting the bully
with behavior that mirrors theirs—which tends to be distinctly
uncomfortable in the genteel world of cooperative living. Sadly, many
good people would rather exit or tolerate bad behavior than stand up in
the face of it.
The challenge is to be both firm and
compassionate. It's not about ganging up on the bully (which runs the
risk of sliding into vigilante dynamics), and it's not about mud
wrestling on the plenary floor; it's about interrupting the behavior as
soon as it arises, and changing the focus to what's unacceptable about
the process before continuing with the topic that the bully was speaking
to. You cannot afford to allow bad process to run unchecked.
V. Being Selective about Members
Many
groups shy away from discussing what qualities they want in members—not
because they don't have preferences, but because it's unseemly to be
viewed as favoring some over others. Mostly, I think, this is a
misinterpretation of a core value of anti-discrimination.
It's
one thing to be scrupulously fair on matters of race, ethnicity, age,
gender, sexual orientation, religious affiliation, etc—all protected
classes under fair housing laws—yet it's an all together different
matter to be blind about a person's communication skills (when assessing
membership potential) or their management skills (when considering them
to mange a major construction project). The former makes sense from the
standpoint of making strides toward building a more just world; the
latter is just plain shooting yourself in the foot.
While you can make the case that almost everyone
could
benefit from living cooperatively, not everyone has the capacity to do
it well and you can only make so many silk purses out of sow's ears.
It's hard enough to navigate the intricacies of cooperative living with
people who "get it"; why complicate matters by working with random
volunteers? Doesn't it make more sense to be deliberate about who joins
the group: about who is asked to do certain tasks?
To be clear, I am
not
saying that groups shouldn't commit to creating opportunities for
people to learn the skills needed to take on group roles; I'm only
saying it's a poor bargain letting unqualified people fill slots simply
to avoid giving them the assessment that others don't think they're
ready.
In the case of group membership, it's a
frightening risk having little or no discernment about who joins the
group, and then trying to get them out later once you've discovered
they're a poor fit. In the case of making committee assignments or
filling manager slots, the more important it is that the job be done
well (or is a high trust position), the more crucial it is that you
select well to fill it. The stakes are too high to trust to chance to
meet your needs.
What all this adds up to is the
importance of developing a culture in which it's OK to be discerning,
and it's OK to let others know that you don't think they have what the
group agrees is needed. Pretending people have what it takes when they
don't is a very dubious foundation on which to build a durable culture.
VI. Working Constructively with Distress
Face
it. We come out of a mainstream culture that does not do well with
distress (outside of a therapeutic setting), and we bring that inability
with us into the cooperative experience. Unfortunately, as human
beings, we also bring distress.
Once nontrivial
distress is in the room (never mind how it got there; it will come) you
really only have two choices: pay now or pay later. Let's look at what
happens with each of those options:
—
Dealing in the Moment
If
you're willing to engage with fulminating distress, then a few things
need to be put into place ahead of time: a) you need explicit buy-in
from the group that there's permission to go there (seeking permission
in the dynamic moment is a nightmare; it has to be done ahead of need);
b) you should determine a menu of options that may be used to work with
distress, so that folks know what they've signed up for; and c) you need
to develop the internal capacity to understand and sensitively employ
the modalities on the approved menu.
In my view if
you're going to go down this road—which I recommend you do—then you need
facilitators who can do two important things:
• Be
sensitive to energy shifts so that distress can be recognized and
attended to as it occurs. This can mean shifting on a dime, suspending
the topic in which the distress erupted, to focus on the reactivity and
getting the person (or persons) deescalated to the point that the group
can productively return to the original conversation. This is an
important criteria in that the skills needed to manage a conversation
deftly are almost completely unrelated to the skills needed to work
distress well. So asking facilitators to be able to do both can be a
tall order.
• Be able to discern when it's an
effective use of group time to work distress, and when that's happened
sufficiently that the group can productively return to working the topic
that was suspended in order to attend to the distress. This is a
sophisticated balancing act that calls for the facilitator to be able to
accurately read how upset people are (both the person who was initially
in reaction, and those around them) and when the group's attention can
productively shift off the persons in distress.
—
Setting Distress Aside
When
you make this choice you're rolling the dice. The good outcome is that
it's possible that the person in distress can work through their
feelings on their own and come through the experience OK, with no toxic
aftereffects. I'm not saying that's
likely, but it's possible.
Unfortunately, the downside is pretty big. All of the following can happen:
•
The person in reaction may not be able to manage deescalation on their
own. For as long as significant distress continues you have to expect
they're experiencing significant distortion. That means they aren't able
to hear accurately what's being discussed; they are essentially lost as
a functioning participant, perhaps for the remainder of the meeting.
•
Often, when one person is enduring unaddressed distress, there is blow
by on those around them, who are significantly distracted by it. Thus,
the focus of many people can be impaired when one person in distress is
not getting help.
• When group members observe others
not getting help (when they go into distress), the message is that it's
not OK to go into distress. This leads to suppression, which makes it
that much harder to know what's happening when quashed feelings start
leaking and someone starts behaving weirdly.
• Even
after the meeting you can't count on things settling down in a balanced
way. Sometimes, upon reflection, hearts get hardened rather than
softened and the group gets that much more brittle. Not good.
•
Maybe you're thinking that if the group sidesteps working with distress
there's that much more time to work the issue in which the distress
arose. Yes, but it tends to be a bad bargain if the room is infected
with significant distortion. How good can those decisions be? How good
will the buy-in be if some people aren't hearing well?
Taken all together, I'm question whether you can afford the compound interest when you defer payments on distress.
Many
groups avoid working distress in the moment because they have no
agreement in place to do so, or no confidence in the skills of their
facilitators to handle it constructively. Don't let that be your group.