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NVC Resources with LaShelle Lowe-Chardé

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  1. Setting Boundaries with Attraction

    Setting Boundaries with Attraction

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 3 - 5 minutes · 8/27/2020

    Attraction to others is neither good nor bad. Although it's pleasurable it doesn’t necessarily help with wise discernment. When it arises, it's up to you to engage in wise discernment about how you manage it. This guide provides practices and points of focus to engage your own attraction in a way that holds more choice about what will meet needs for yourself and others, and what role attraction plays.

  2. Emotional Regulation Strategies

    Emotional Regulation Strategies

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Practice Exercises · 2 - 3 minutes · 10/11/2020

    Emotional regulation is the consistent capacity to fully experience one’s feelings, particularly when they are intense and/or painful. Here are 36 practices that help with emotional regulation that can be done alone or with others. Read on for more.

  3. As social beings we thrive with social contact and community. Thus, with the social isolation and a loss of routine that is happening in the COVD-19 pandemic, there are three critical areas to keep in mind everyday: emotional-physiological regulation, self-empathy for fear and anxiety, and meaningful engagement. 

  4. Setting Boundaries with Reactivity

    Setting Boundaries with Reactivity

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 4 - 6 minutes · 7/7/2020

    Tolerating reactivity, name-calling, blaming, guilt-tripping, or stonewalling can lead to resentment and hurt. Plus, the more you stay in a reactive dynamic, the more you are likely to reinforce the pattern. Setting life-serving boundaries around reactivity is about letting another know that you aren’t going to participate in that kinds of dynamics. This means knowing what helps with handling difficulties and asking for that.

  5. Responding to Unwanted Feedback from Peers

    Responding to Unwanted Feedback from Peers

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 6 - 9 minutes · 11/25/2020

    When someone offers continual unsoliticed feedback or advice, setting a boundary may not be easy if you care about how they might hear you. And if you don't set a boundary, you may eventually become resentful and say something you regret. Instead, here are six ways to respond, with varying degrees of effectiveness.

  6. Working with Subtle Boundary Violations

    Working with Subtle Boundary Violations

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 7 - 11 minutes · 11/7/2020

    Subtle boundary violations are more difficult to catch and name in the moment, than obvious boundary violations. Becoming more aware of these moments and finding the words to set a boundary are critical to supporting healthy relating long-term. Three categories of subtle boundary violations are (1.) lack of mutuality, (2.) voice tone and volume, and (3.) speaking for or about someone. Read on to learn more about all three.

  7. How to Set Boundaries Early and Often

    How to Set Boundaries Early and Often

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 5 - 8 minutes · 5/14/2020

    Using the example of being met with chronic lateness, here are three steps to setting boundaries early in a dating situation or relationship.

  8. Catch Unhealthy Relationship Dynamics Early

    Catch Unhealthy Relationship Dynamics Early

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 4 - 6 minutes · 12/13/2020

    Little negative impacts can become big when left unattended. Watch for things like using a sharp tone, choosing not to share something, going along with something when you don’t really want to, trying to convince your partner, impulsively turning away, shrinking, losing access to parts of yourself, hiding, daydreaming about a different life, and judgmental thoughts. Instead, shift the dynamic: take responsibility, provide empathy, and commit to change.

  9. How to Ask for Responsiveness

    How to Ask for Responsiveness

    Elia Lowe-Chardé

    Articles · 3 - 5 minutes · 12/28/2020

    If it's a tender topic and/or you are looking for a particular level of responsiveness, you can let listeners know what you want back before you share -- or you can ask them for a particular kind of response right after you share. The more you can do this, the more it can create supportive relationships in your life. Read on for ways to ask for a particular kind of responsiveness to meet particular needs.

  10. Mid-conversation you may find yourself sliding into defending, shutting down, attacking, or blaming. Here's a list of possible emergency interventions that can help slow down escalation and return you to connection.

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