
This weekend I am attending a training sponsored by the Mankind Project, an international men's organization that I belong to.

Hi there,
Recently I read something inspiring on empathy on the CNVC trainers' email list. It was a passage from Barack Obama's 'The Audacity of Hope' on the importance and nature of empathy. Gratitude to Alex Censor for posting it there.
There was also a link to a compilation of text and video clips of Obama speaking on the critical role of empathy in personal and international relations:
http://progressivespirit.com/empathy
I find it heartening that someone could get this clear on empathy and its importance, and apparently, is trying to 'walk the talk'.
The extract on empathy from 'The Audacity to Hope' follows.
Love and life, Shantigarbha
I just finished a memo to the Training Team asking for some copy to put on a new page that will go on our Learn NVC section introducing CNVC Certified Trainers in which I wrote up some of my thoughts about the purpose and function of our web site that I want to share with you.
It is about creating Concentric Circles of Connection. Robert Gonzalez who is the President of our Board of Directors used that phrase to describe his vision of CNVC at the in person Board of Directors meeting in New Mexico last week.
It is an image I like very much. The way i see Concentric Circles of Connection overcomes mankind's historical inability to express belonging without expressing who does not belong.
This requires one circle of belonging that includes everyone.
my established blog at
"Why doesn't CNVC have a shopping cart? I order a hundred books a year, and I end up using Amazon.com because you don't have a shopping cart. With all the improvements, why not? I've been told that hidden somewhere I haven't found, in the middle of some page is a link to Puddle Press and they have a shopping cart, but when I use your web site, I'm supposed to call and write a check and mail it? Nope."
I liked that feedback, in part because I have proposed that very thing. The book store coordinator likes the idea. And the idea is being given serious consideration.
Already the sale of materials on the site, which is done by phone, is an important part of the income we get from activity other than Marshall. We could make it more fun for everybody with a up to date shopping cart.
Lately, I have been appreciating the views expressed by Conal Elliot, a member of the NVC community who lives in San Andreas, California, which is about 2 hours east of the Bay Area.
My first blog here, and I am feeling uncertain, curious, and hopeful for connection and gowth. I'm interested to hear back any comments from anyone who reads this, so that I know that it is achieving its aim of connection with others. Your comments may increase the chances that I will post again! LOL
Last weekend, I led a 2-day NVC foundation training for 30 people in Kwan-ju, in the southern province of South Korea. There were 30 people in attendance, and aside from my interpreter, almost no one spoke English, and even the 2 or 3 who did, only spoke a little bit. The lists of universal human needs that are widely circulated among the NVC community vary somewhat, but most contain the same 90%+ needs.
My assumption is that the original list of needs was created by the founder of NVC, Dr. Marshall Rosenberg, and has been adapted and revised by various trainers.
There are a few needs that appear on some "needs lists" that are dubious as to whether they are actually describing a universal element of life for all human beings.
First, allow me to offer my own definition of "need" as we define it in NVC:
"A quality of life energy that arises from inside of me, and asks for attention and fulfillment. Needs are the basic building blocks of life that are required to sustain and enrich life. They are universal in nature, meaning that all human beings share the same needs."
So, here are a few so-called "needs" that I call into question:

Hideayaki and Haruno, two of my Japanese friends, made this connection with ICU, and I am grateful.
(photo taken by Ken Anno-- thank you, Ken)