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Контент предоставлен Traci Ruble. Весь контент подкастов, включая эпизоды, графику и описания подкастов, загружается и предоставляется непосредственно компанией Traci Ruble или ее партнером по платформе подкастов. Если вы считаете, что кто-то использует вашу работу, защищенную авторским правом, без вашего разрешения, вы можете выполнить процедуру, описанную здесь https://ru.player.fm/legal.
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High Conflict (and how we get out) with Amanda Ripley

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Manage episode 345243505 series 2578980
Контент предоставлен Traci Ruble. Весь контент подкастов, включая эпизоды, графику и описания подкастов, загружается и предоставляется непосредственно компанией Traci Ruble или ее партнером по платформе подкастов. Если вы считаете, что кто-то использует вашу работу, защищенную авторским правом, без вашего разрешения, вы можете выполнить процедуру, описанную здесь https://ru.player.fm/legal.

Amanda Ripley is a New York Times bestselling author, an investigative journalist, and the co-founder of Good Conflict, LLC. She writes for the Atlantic, the Washington Post, and Politico, and she spent a decade writing about human behavior for Time magazine in New York, Washington, and Paris.

Listen in as Amanda and Traci explore what High Conflict is (and how we get out) drawing on research, insights, and experience across astronauts on space missions (yes, really!), the Israeli-Palestine conflict, intimate relationships across political divides, gang warfare, and racism.

Episode Timeline
  • [00:09] Intro
  • [0:58] Meet Amanda
  • [3:44] Amanda’s journey to becoming a writer - and how she’s not like Stephen King
  • [8:14] Journalism, Conflict Entrepreneurship, and our need to matter
  • [10:17] Gossip: the art of creating intimacy through a common enemy
  • [11:46] Conflict in space missions (NASA studies with astronauts)
  • [15:09] “Us versus them” and dehumanization
  • [15:50] Curtis Toller’s story of gang rivalry… and redemption
  • [19:38] The paradox of internal and external conflict
  • [22:00] The “exhausted majority” who want less toxicity in politics
  • [23:40] Sidewalk Talk’s Wish you knew Me project, designed for couples who have conflict around politics or vaccines
  • [27:12] Bringing Black and white communities together in the wake of George Floyd’s murder
  • [29:20] The impact of positional power on the need to be heard
  • [31:38] The art of political speech
  • [33:35] Social media and automatic responses
  • [39:32] Friendship, stereotyping, and how a lack of listening shuts down conversations
  • [41:35] Learning to dialogue differently around issues of righteous callout… like racism, vaccines, mask-wearing.
  • [45.09] Amanda’s message to the Sidewalk Talk volunteers
  • [47:14] Closing
  • [48:01] Outro
Resources Mentioned

High Conflict: Why we get trapped, and how we get out (Amanda’s book)

Standout Quotes
  • “you'll never get out of external conflict until you work on the internal conflict” (Amanda)
  • “I feel like that's why we're in this situation. We'd rather just continue othering.” (Traci)
  • “Meanwhile there's this “exhausted majority”... who really want major social change and they want less toxicity in the conflict. So both at once they don't necessarily want moderation or centrism, but they want less toxicity, less dehumanization.” (Amanda)
  • “There’s something like 40 million Americans who stopped speaking to someone in their lives over the 2016 election.” (Traci)
  • “So we're not marrying, dating, or living next to or working with people of other political persuasions is a big problem.” (Traci)
  • “yes, you shouldn't let people get away with saying racist things. And what do you say in response? Like, where is the skill, the craft, the learning, the education, the nuance of sophistication emotional, intellectual around what you say, how you respond to that?” (Amanda)
  • “We could make lasting change that really solves racism in America or dehumanization of any kind by developing the capacity to dialogue differently.” (Traci)
  • “When you really listen to someone, even if you disagree, there is something that opens up. There's an opening that happens in your mind and in your heart. And most people who experience that kind of opening across a big difference want more of it. It's almost like a drug, like a very good drug.” (Amanda)
Connect:

Find | Sidewalk Talk

At sidewalk-talk.org

On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg

On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg

Find | Traci Ruble

At Traciruble.com

On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT

On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT

On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT

Find | Amanda Ripley

At https://www.amandaripley.com/

On Twitter: @AmandaRipley

SUBSCRIBE TO THIS PODCAST

On Apple Podcasts

On Google Podcasts

On Spotify

On YouTube

  continue reading

96 эпизодов

Artwork
iconПоделиться
 
Manage episode 345243505 series 2578980
Контент предоставлен Traci Ruble. Весь контент подкастов, включая эпизоды, графику и описания подкастов, загружается и предоставляется непосредственно компанией Traci Ruble или ее партнером по платформе подкастов. Если вы считаете, что кто-то использует вашу работу, защищенную авторским правом, без вашего разрешения, вы можете выполнить процедуру, описанную здесь https://ru.player.fm/legal.

Amanda Ripley is a New York Times bestselling author, an investigative journalist, and the co-founder of Good Conflict, LLC. She writes for the Atlantic, the Washington Post, and Politico, and she spent a decade writing about human behavior for Time magazine in New York, Washington, and Paris.

Listen in as Amanda and Traci explore what High Conflict is (and how we get out) drawing on research, insights, and experience across astronauts on space missions (yes, really!), the Israeli-Palestine conflict, intimate relationships across political divides, gang warfare, and racism.

Episode Timeline
  • [00:09] Intro
  • [0:58] Meet Amanda
  • [3:44] Amanda’s journey to becoming a writer - and how she’s not like Stephen King
  • [8:14] Journalism, Conflict Entrepreneurship, and our need to matter
  • [10:17] Gossip: the art of creating intimacy through a common enemy
  • [11:46] Conflict in space missions (NASA studies with astronauts)
  • [15:09] “Us versus them” and dehumanization
  • [15:50] Curtis Toller’s story of gang rivalry… and redemption
  • [19:38] The paradox of internal and external conflict
  • [22:00] The “exhausted majority” who want less toxicity in politics
  • [23:40] Sidewalk Talk’s Wish you knew Me project, designed for couples who have conflict around politics or vaccines
  • [27:12] Bringing Black and white communities together in the wake of George Floyd’s murder
  • [29:20] The impact of positional power on the need to be heard
  • [31:38] The art of political speech
  • [33:35] Social media and automatic responses
  • [39:32] Friendship, stereotyping, and how a lack of listening shuts down conversations
  • [41:35] Learning to dialogue differently around issues of righteous callout… like racism, vaccines, mask-wearing.
  • [45.09] Amanda’s message to the Sidewalk Talk volunteers
  • [47:14] Closing
  • [48:01] Outro
Resources Mentioned

High Conflict: Why we get trapped, and how we get out (Amanda’s book)

Standout Quotes
  • “you'll never get out of external conflict until you work on the internal conflict” (Amanda)
  • “I feel like that's why we're in this situation. We'd rather just continue othering.” (Traci)
  • “Meanwhile there's this “exhausted majority”... who really want major social change and they want less toxicity in the conflict. So both at once they don't necessarily want moderation or centrism, but they want less toxicity, less dehumanization.” (Amanda)
  • “There’s something like 40 million Americans who stopped speaking to someone in their lives over the 2016 election.” (Traci)
  • “So we're not marrying, dating, or living next to or working with people of other political persuasions is a big problem.” (Traci)
  • “yes, you shouldn't let people get away with saying racist things. And what do you say in response? Like, where is the skill, the craft, the learning, the education, the nuance of sophistication emotional, intellectual around what you say, how you respond to that?” (Amanda)
  • “We could make lasting change that really solves racism in America or dehumanization of any kind by developing the capacity to dialogue differently.” (Traci)
  • “When you really listen to someone, even if you disagree, there is something that opens up. There's an opening that happens in your mind and in your heart. And most people who experience that kind of opening across a big difference want more of it. It's almost like a drug, like a very good drug.” (Amanda)
Connect:

Find | Sidewalk Talk

At sidewalk-talk.org

On Instagram: @sidewalktalkorg

On Twitter: @sidewalktalkorg

Find | Traci Ruble

At Traciruble.com

On Instagram: @TraciRubleMFT

On Twitter: @TraciRubleMFT

On Facebook: @TraciRubleMFT

Find | Amanda Ripley

At https://www.amandaripley.com/

On Twitter: @AmandaRipley

SUBSCRIBE TO THIS PODCAST

On Apple Podcasts

On Google Podcasts

On Spotify

On YouTube

  continue reading

96 эпизодов

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