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Mandy Fessenden Brauer's avatar

My husband likes to ask people who have strong feelings about something, "Would you rather be right or rather be effective?" He goes on to say that being right can make you feel momentarily better but won't change anything. Being effective is figuring out how to deal with the upsetting event strategically so you are effective. Ex: "I am so angry I quit!" vs. "Let's figure out if we can achieve that same goal collaboratively."

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Alexander Leon's avatar

In my work when we're talking about co-creating a culture within a group (in a week-long training, say) we talk about calling "out" versus calling "in", which I think speaks to the tension you're talking about! As a facilitator I will present these options just like how you were saying, as two different strategies for different situations where harm might be occurring, depending on a variety of factors... but what's most interesting is that in some groups people will lean towards one strategy more than the other and then collectively decide that we're only going to deploy that (i.e. a group of rowdy anarchists who are like "we are just gonna call out harm every time, doesn't matter if its disruptive"). I've never *ever* seen it work effectively. My sense is you always need to have both strategies working in tandem for harm to effectively be named and dealt with accordingly.

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