How to Talk to an Anti-Vaxer

Sara Davidson

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November, 30, 2021

William Ury is a grand master at resolving conflicts. Impossible conflicts. Ancient conflicts where the parties have been fighting for so long they believe it’s in their blood and can never be resolved.

“And I’ve seen, with my own eyes,” Ury says, “how these kinds of conflicts can shift and transform. I know from experience, from being present, that it is possible.”

That’s why, when people ask if he’s an optimist or a pessimist, he says, “I’m a possible-ist. I look for possibilities.”

When I heard him say that at a friend’s birthday gathering, I arranged to interview him about how to talk with friends, family, and strangers who are strongly opposed to what you passionately believe.

 I was particularly disturbed by a man I’ve been friends with since college, with whom I’ve agreed never to speak about politics. He refused to be vaccinated, then came down with Covid, but said that getting it was better than being harmed by the possibly dire effects of the vaccine. Well, I said, “What about the harm you could cause others by exposing them to Covid?”

He hung up. So I went to William Ury, who, at 68, has spent his adult life mediating between entrenched countries, groups, and individuals. After studying anthropology at Yale and receiving a PhD from Harvard, Ury co-founded the Harvard Negotiation Project in ’79, and two years later, the Harvard Law School Program on Negotiation. He co-wrote the best-seller, Getting to Yes, and five other books on negotiation.

Whenever I’ve seen him, Ury is smiling, always smiling, which makes his eyes crinkle up. He jokes that he was probably born smiling. And when he speaks, while negotiating, he circles his arms toward each other, as if gathering friends together.

When we met on Zoom, I asked how we could relate or just talk to friends who are on opposite sides of the ideological spectrum.

He knitted his brow. “It’s hard, really hard. It’s the hardest thing humans can do.” Then he smiled. “Who wants to sit with a person whom you violently disagree with and who’s pressing all your buttons?” I couldn’t help smiling back.

He outlined the process of negotiating, which starts with pausing, or what he calls “going to the balcony of life, where you’re observing, not participating. If we’re going to have the slightest chance of influencing someone, we begin by influencing ourselves.” We do this, he said, by “putting aside your moral certainty. The more certainty and moral judgment you wield, the more you’ll drive people away.”

Okay, I thought.

The second step is to “build them a golden bridge—make it as easy as possible to take a step in the direction you’d like.” You do this by listening, he said. “Give no advice. You can’t change another person’s mind. Forget it! But you can create a favorable environment in which they might in their own good time decide to change their minds.”

He said humans often don’t respond to reason. “We respond much more to emotion. So share from the heart, and be vulnerable.”

I’ve tried that, I thought. “What’s the next step?”

Ury said, “Bathe them in the love you have for them.” I couldn’t feel much love for my friend at that moment.

“Speak about your own experience,” he said, “and be patient. Usually, we listen from our point of view. Put yourself in their shoes. That’s the only way to build a golden bridge.”

I still couldn’t imagine this working.

“Sometimes we need to use the third side,” Ury said.

He said it takes two people to fight but a third to stop it. “The third side is the larger community, the extended family, colleagues at work, circles of friends. When the wider community is activated, I’ve seen it be effective so many times.”

When he was a grad student in the ‘70s, he said, there were three big intractable conflicts.

First, the Cold War with Russia. “All my professors were saying the Iron Curtain would always be there. It would never lift.”

Ury went to the Soviet Union 25 times, working to reduce the risk of an accidental nuclear war. “It could have been triggered numerous times by incidents few people know about,” he said.

One took place during the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. Almost three decades later, in 1989, the Harvard Avoiding Nuclear War Project sponsored a meeting in Moscow of the living participants of the Cuban Missile Crisis. “We wanted to learn what actually happened and what was going on in the participants’ minds,” Ury said. “It turned out that no one knew what the other side was thinking.”

At the meeting in 1989, they had, from the U.S.: Robert McNamara, who’d been President Kennedy’s Defense Secretary, McGeorge Bundy, National Security Advisor, and Ted Sorenson, advisor and speech writer, “people who were right there with Kennedy, meeting round the clock for 13 days.” On the Soviet side, they had people who were there with Premier Nikita Khrushchev: his son, Sergei, Andrei Gromyko, Foreign Minister, and Anatoly Dobrynin, Ambassador to Washington.

We were so close to nuclear holocaust, Ury said. “The C.I.A. thought they had good information, but they didn’t.” The Americans estimated there were 10,000 Soviet solders in Cuba. Actually there were 40,000 Soviet soldiers. The Americans thought nuclear missiles were arriving in Cuba on a ship and set up a naval quarantine. “What we didn’t know is the Soviets already had nuclear missiles in Cuba,” Ury said.

At the height of the crisis, an American reconnaissance plane was shot down over Cuba and the pilot killed. The Americans thought this was a deliberate decision made by Soviet Premier Khrushchev. But at the meeting in 1989, they learned the decision was made by a general in Cuba, who saw the plane on the radar screen and gave the order himself, without authorization from Moscow. “When they heard about it in the Kremlin, they were horrified,” Ury said.

Kennedy and his advisers had already decided they would invade Cuba if one of the U.S. over-flights was shot down. “They were ready to attack,” Ury said, “not knowing they would face 40,000 Soviet soldiers, 800,000 mobilized Cuban soldiers, and nuclear weapons. Fortunately,” Ury said, “Kennedy did not authorize an invasion, which could have led to a nuclear strike. And none of us would be here today.”

Kennedy and Khrushchev came to an agreement that the ship loaded with missiles would turn back and the U.S. would remove its missiles from Turkey, which were in striking range of the Soviet Union. Ury continued to work with Soviets, and in time, he said “I saw the risk begin to lessen, and today, there’s far less concern about nuclear war with Russia.”

The second impossible conflict was apartheid in South Africa. “At its height, people said it’s a race war that will go on forever.” Ury flew to South Africa shortly before Nelson Mandela was released from prison. “In a short time, apartheid was terminated,” he said. “Months earlier, that had been inconceivable.”

Ury said this is an example of the power of the third side. “The whole society got activated: women, students, religious leaders, business people, trade unions, and they were supported by nearby countries, the UN, the world. They created the environment—the all-inclusive campfire—in which a race-based conflict got transformed into a majoritarian democracy.”

Ury spoke next about the Middle East, which he said was the hardest conflict he’s worked on. “Egypt and Israel had fought four terrible wars, the last in 1973. Then, in 1978, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat went to Israel, the first Arab leader to do so, which led to the Camp David accords in 1978.”

Ury said that in all three impossible cases, the conflict did not end, but it was transformed. “The risk of nuclear war went way down. The U.S. and Russia are still at odds, but it’s very different from when we were threatening each other with nuclear missiles,” he said.

He explained that it’s not about outcome, it’s about process. “If we focus on outcome, we’ll be disappointed. But if we focus on process, we see how impossible situations can shift. If those three enormous conflicts could shift— and I watched it, I was there—I know it can happen elsewhere. That’s why I say I’m a possible-ist.”

I asked what could possibly defuse the current strife between Republicans and Democrats. Ury acknowledged that this is the worst rift that’s existed in our country since the Civil War. “Last year, I dropped all my other projects to work on this.”

He said it’s a “huge problem with toxic emotions, rigid positions, and fierce fighting. Is it possible for us to transform it?” He paused.

“Absolutely.”

He said he’s seen worse quagmires. “And I’ve seen countries break through them. Apartheid was much worse than anything we have today. Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland had been in a cycle of killing each other for centuries and believed it would never end, until the Good Friday agreement in 1998.”

But breaking through doesn’t mean solving all problems and everybody’s in harmony, he said. “Progress is transforming it from destructive to constructive conflict.”

He said we were the first country to experiment with democracy, “which is a third side innovation. But it was imperfect from the start—it only applied to white men. Then it expanded to include women, African-Americans… We have to include all groups, no sector can be left out.”

Ury said the question for us now is how to make the circle even wider. “To activate the third side, we begin by reaching out to someone you disagree with,” he said. “In your home, at work, reach out to someone who disagrees with you on fundamental things, and listen. Put yourself in their shoes. Listen with curiosity, openness, and compassion. We need to teach listening at school, because it’s the key to resolving disputes.”

I tried to imagine talking with my anti-vaxer friend. The only place we’re not in opposition is…his children. He has twin girls I’ve adored from the moment they were born. I go to their soccer games and dance recitals, and I feel warmth and joy when I see them. But that’s it.”

Ury seized on that. “But that’s perfect. The children—they’re the most obvious symbol for the future of our country.” He urged me to talk with my friend about what kind of future we’d like our kids to grow up in. “My guess is that 80 to 90% of what you’d describe would be the same.”

Ury said we always put the spotlight on our differences. “Spend some time where you actually do agree. And remember, it takes time and patience. It may take years—decades. And the first thing you’ll have to do is work on yourself. If you get triggered, it won’t go forward.”

About 15 years ago, he and several activists invited leaders of the most progressive and most conservative groups to meet for a dialogue at Gold Lake in Colorado. “We had the leader of the Christian Coalition and the leader of MoveOn, who both happened to be women,” Ury said. One month later, the two women testified on the same side at a congressional hearing on a bill to privatize the Internet. “When proponents of the bill saw that the two women, who’re usually on opposite sides, were both testifying against the bill, they folded their case.”

Ury and his team sponsored about six dialogues at Gold Lake. “We brought Al Gore together with climate deniers,” Ury said. “When some of them saw he was in the room, they wanted to bolt.”

They began the conversation by asking the participants to tell a story about themselves, to talk about what activated them “to come into the public square.” Ury said, “The hot tubs helped. We had the most unlikely combinations of people in those hot pools.”

How could meetings like that happen today? I asked.

“Start by thinking: who do you know in your circle that you could reach out to? Don’t try to change their minds, just listen, connect, and begin to knit. Because we’re starting to demonize, and then we don’t see the human being.”

Ury’s insights were deepened by a trip he made to Africa in 1989. He’d gone directly from the Moscow meeting with veterans of the Cuban Missile Crisis to the Kalahari desert to meet with Bushmen, who’ve been living as hunter-gatherers for 20,000 years. He wanted to learn how they resolve conflicts in a way that’s allowed them to survive.

The Bushmen, also called “the San,” live much as they did in the early Stone Age. They live in small groups of about five families, with networks of about 500—the way our ancestors lived for 90% of the time there’ve been humans on earth, Ury said.

He found the tribe was in a similar situation as the Russians and Americans had been, when both parties could have destroyed the world. “The Bushmen have nuclear weapons in the form of poison arrows,” he said. “All the hunters have arrows poisoned with beetle dung, that’s fatal to animals and people, he said. “If you get angry with someone and shoot him with that arrow, he dies, but it takes 2 or 3 days.” Ury looked directly in my eyes. “In that time he can pick up his arrow and shoot you. In a group with maybe 5 male hunters, you’ve lost 40% of your hunting capacity and if more die, it’s like the effect of a nuclear missile.”

How do they prevent that, when someone gets enraged? I asked.

He said everyone in the community listens and pays attention, and when a person gets so angry he wants to kill another, someone gathers up all the poison arrows and hides them in the desert. The whole community gathers around a campfire—men, women, children, elders—and they all talk, give their opinions, argue, and at the end of the night, they engage in trance dancing, call out to the spirits for wisdom, and report their dreams. They use all modalities to transform the conflict. It goes on for days until they get some resolution. And if they can’t, they’ll ask some of the most triggered individuals to go off, visit relatives for a few months, until they cool off.

Ury said, “That’s what I call the third side—it’s the community. They hear from their spouses, mothers, grandfathers, “Cool it…we have to find a way.”

Ury said that’s what we have to recreate in the modern world if we’re not going to wipe out civilization.

But the Bushmen are an isolated group, I thought, enfolded in a strong net of family and tribe. I still could not imagine how, in our country, the vicious language, (“Rot in hell!” “Traitor!”), the death threats, hatred, shootings, and anguish of the soul—i.e., the new normal—could be transformed into a more civilized state.

Yet William Ury insists it could happen. “It won’t be done by governments alone, it will take all of us together. It’s hard, no one should think this is easy, but it is…” He gave his irresistible smile. “Possible.”

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  • Richard Shane says:

    Thank you, Dear Sarah. This changed much for me.

    Love,

    Richard

  • Barbra Rubin says:

    That’s what I try to do

  • John (Jack) Sherman says:

    A beautiful article Sarah; thank you. I’ve forwarded this to strong people in my life; people who are influencers, people who are called upon to speak to groups. Your conversation with Dr. Uri was what I needed to hear too.
    Always look forward to you blog
    Jack😘

  • John patrick Grace says:

    Sara – Love to put some of his techniques into a column. I am limited, however, to 550 words. Mission Impossible?

    Item: I have taught The Life Writing Class, in person and now online, for 22 years. Almost 70 books have been published by LWC alumni. Most on a subsidized basis, a few traditional. One ended as finalist for Best Historical Fiction in the U.S. in the ForeWord Mag awards. Have had other award-winning books out of my regional publishing co as well, some from LWC alumni, some from non-alumni.
    If any of my experiences could be helpful, let me know. Happy to share techniques from the class.

    Happy Chanukah and Christmas! Patrick

  • Elizabeth Lord says:

    What a refreshing read. Wonderful ideas I’m going to go out and find a conservative …..and listen.

  • Thomas Edward Romine says:

    Very informative article. I’ve recently finished reading “The Way Out” by Peter Coleman which delves into conflict resolution in detail and whose tag line is How To Overcome Toxic Polarization.

  • Anne Turley says:

    I love him and his ideas.

    I wish he would come and help me with my brother who has Parkinson’s.

    The world needs millions of men and women like him.

    Thanks, Sarah

  • Peter Lake says:

    Interesting to me about the San because I’m likely the only one of your friends who was hunted for death by natives with bows and arrows (Peru).. There was no negotiating — just saved by a near miracle.
    As for your friend’s vaccine refusal, I’ve had three shots and will probably be getting one a month since CVS hands out a 20% discount card with each shot.
    However, it seems to me that Biden is blaming unvaccinated people for the continuing epidemic.
    That translates to me as the unvaccinated being pressured to take a vaccine to protect people who have already received the vaccine. Further, more government pressure will be seen as a push to follow Australia’s model with concetration camps for COVID dissenters. Seems the CDC has become a fourth arm of government. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-12-01/multiple-people-escape-howard-springs-quarantine-facility-darwin/100663994

  • I think the environment today is so different and those techniques, while effective then, are not really applicable. You can’t get anywhere with taking into account and addressing the gigantic influence of social media and the spread of disinformation and misinformation. THAT is the wider tribe and we can silo and only see/hear our own big tribe. That’s why we have a political mess. Another wider community would have a tough row to hoe given how people consume info today.
    We don’t have decades to bring about resolution on the pandemic –we’ll all be dead. I think things are so different today that those techniques simply don’t apply.

  • Laurel Kadish says:

    Indeed, Uri sounds like an amazing person and I appreciate learning about his tactics, which hinge on remembering that we all are human beings with our unique stories and lived experiences.
    Somehow, though, the whole orientation of this — “How to talk to an antivaxxer,” seems to imply that you will find that golden bridge, etc., to “convince” them of your point of view, even though you say you will be open to what they might have to say and what their nuanced reasons are for declining the shots. Are you also open to be ‘convinced’ by them? Or are you starting at a place where the ultimate goal is that they need to have their mind changed because they are wrong? A simple “I do not want to do it,” is not reason enough, is it? Further, the use of the term, “anti-vaxxer” as it’s being used incessantly in the media, is painting with a very broad brush, as though there are only a couple of “ill-thought out” reasons why someone would not want to get vaxxed instead of the plethora of reasons people have for saying no. My point of view is that this divide is being heavily propagated in the mainstream, corporate media. Divisiveness is the name of the game to get people to forget that others are human and to forget that all human beings have bodily autonomy and choice. (People say they are disgusted by comparisons to Nazi Germany and yet, isn’t this how it all **started**? It began slowly, with the Jews being painted as “infected, “unclean,” and needing to be excluded and separated from the “good” people? And those “good” people thought they had immense clarity about this? Our ancestors are whispering their cautions into our ears if only we can hear them. . .) The tremendous lie that someone’s shot does not work unless everyone gets it — is only born out through a narrative about “science” that makes zero sense at this point of the game. There has been a mass hypnosis about this, pounded in daily for months and months, where I see people actually acting, and repeating things that definitely go against their own values. I hope there comes a time very soon when there is an awakening — or even an honest questioning — of the ‘approved’ narrative and the immense propaganda and behemoth censorship surrounding it.

    • Thanks, Laurel, for your thoughtful and provocative comments. To truly “listen,” one has to release all judgment and expectations and just be present. Difficult, but worth trying, I suspect.

  • George LeCompte says:

    Loved it Sara! Of course, coming from the nonviolent communication NVC background, William Ury’s suggestions and experiences really resonated with me. I also love the way you wove the story together and sprinkled in your own honest thoughts and reactions. Life… it may not be easy (all the time) but it is…possible to actually live it (while you’re still alive) in the present moments. So glad I took time to read your latest. Hoping you are doing well! Aloha. If anyone is reading my comments and hasn’t read The December Project yet, I’d recommend it!

  • Carol B Myers says:

    I love this post with great insights for conflict resolution, or at least fanning the flames. Recently, I discovered myself engaging in meaningful discussions with people who have different perspectives than my own. I had a great conversation with a Mormon mother of seven children. We talked about the joys and tribulations of parenting. I had another wonderful conversation with my husband’s sister-in-law, a fundamentalist Christian about the importance of positive mindsets in aging gracefully. If I can focus on commonalities, rather than differences, connecting on a human level is possible. That being said, I haven’t tried talking to anti-vaxers.

  • Gail Storey says:

    This was helpful, thank you, Sara and Ury. Ury’s sense of possibility gives me hope. Very heartening to hear about his good work. I agree that working on ourselves is vital. A lot of valuable tips here, especially learning to actively listen, not get triggered, and find common ground. Not easy, but it can be practiced, for the benefit of ourselves and everyone.

  • Herman Shelanski says:

    Great ideas on conflict resolution! It is worth trying ASAP as the environment has become so heated and filled with hatred !

  • Ron Newman says:

    Sara,
    Nice piece. Very wise. At the beginning of covid, I was adamantly pro-vaccine for all the good reasons, solidarity with the community, protecting each other, etc. And I’ve changed my mind. As a far-left Democrat, I find myself in the strange position of actually agreeing with Trump supporters on at least one thing (vaccine mandates).

    I changed my mind as a result of emerging scientific research that just wasn’t available at the start. Example: Geert Vanden Bossche, academic, vaccine developer, Ebola Program Manager, and Gates Foundation researcher. https://www.voiceforscienceandsolidarity.org/who-we-are And others who are discussing at lower volume the risk/benefits and some viable alternatives. Dr. John Campbell of the U.K., a promoter of both vaccines and antiviral alternatives, presents daily, easily digestible summaries of studies as they come out. But we should all beware, there’s a LOT of misinformation and argument it’s hard to know who to trust. Ideally, we’d all trade information with no agenda, but that’s not what’s currently happening, with a few exceptions.

    A friendly, mature, non-reactive view is presented in an interview of Dr. Reagan Baber at https://conduitnews.com/2021/09/28/local-anesthesiologist-speaks-out-against-covid19-narrative/

    It’s interesting that as of this writing the hotspots in the world are countries with relatively high vaccination rates. Worthy of investigation and open discussion of what might be behind the successes observable in some countries. As we know, high infection rate does not mean high death rate, but interesting nevertheless.

  • Elizabeth Cox says:

    Sara, I always read your blog, but this one was TLDNR. Too long did not read.

  • Charles Horowitz says:

    Brilliant, hopeful, wonderful. It’s my fave writing from you yet, Sara!
    …Note: there are alternatives to counterbalance conventional, fear-slanting news:
    Good News Networkeverything that is good. …
    Positive News. …
    The Optimist Daily. …
    Happy News. …

  • Greg says:

    Interesting article. I am a Unificationist. I believe in the possibility of all people, religions and ideologies to be united. If not in practice, at least in heart, and as Ury so profoundly expressed…that’s a start.

    I was in the Soviet Union in 1991 as well working to educate young college students on leadership principles to facilitate love and unity. I was also in the Middle East in 2003 working with a group of volunteers in Israel to facilitate dialogue between Muslim, Christians and Jews. Believe it or not, without “the politics” there was a great deal of harmony and common ground established.

    Currently our organization is working with numerous religious, business, and political leaders from around the world to initiate dialogue and real steps of conflict resolution to facilitate the potential unity between North and South Korea. Many believe that that is an “impossible situation” much as they said about the “lifting” of the “iron curtain”. But in fact, it is …possible. With love, all things are possible, and I believe that’s what your friend is saying…Love People regardless whether or not you “agree” with them. And that is the message of “The Family Federation” . Currently the program I referred to earlier is rallyofhope.us which is conducting such a program in a couple of days. I encourage you to register (it is a virtual program) and see the excitement of real POSSIBILITY. – Greg

  • Hilary Grant says:

    Well, I applaud him for doing what he’s doing.

    There’s a national group that began shortly after Donald Trump won the nomination for POTUS — it’s called Braver Angels (braverangels.org) and has done some good things. I took part in a one-day listening project about abortion, where we listened to pro-lifers, and I got the chance to talk from the pro-choice POV. We found, surprisingly, that we had a LOT in common.

    Having written the above, though, there is no way I can talk to an anti-vaxxer.

    Our son-in-law is one and in every other way, is a great and present father to his kids. But in my mind, he is a horrible parent, because he doesn’t seem to realize that if he gets very sick with COVID, or even dies, his daughter (husband’s daughter) will be plunged into poverty and LOSE EVERYTHING. She has a part-time job, is super sweet but never graduated from high school… she simply doesn’t have the financial skill set to give her kids the life he has provided for them.

    Did you still want to talk about possible writing workshops?

    All best, Hilary in Oregon

  • Carolyn A. Zeiger says:

    I have adopted the label of Possiblist! Fits perfectly. I have never liked the dichotomy of optimist or pessimist. I’m always looking for possibilities. Give my thanks to your friend.
    Carolyn Z.

  • Tracy Newman says:

    This is so important, Sara.
    Love
    Tracy

  • Carol Tanenbaum says:

    good morning all, in response to this wonderful article on peace-making. I helped run a peace camp in the Balkans after the war, 1994-2012. We were a group of volunteers, who formed an organization with the intention of bringing kids of fighting factions together to “live together, eat together, sleep together, to de-demonize one another” We worked with Bosnians, Serbs, and Croats; children from Northern Ireland, and also groups from Israel and Palestinian kids over the years. what we did was to provide a safe haven, a place where the children could “live and play, and relate to each other” in normal everyday ways AND the grown-ups that surrounded them engaged with them and each other, with respect and yes, tolerance. I do believe that peace takes place “on the ground” when we live and depend on each other, because we do need each other to thrive. This building of trust often took many interactions, many years often, and in the end a recognition that we share more than we think we do. Conversations and group processes were sometimes very tense and formal and directed, and more often around the camp fire, or late at night. We made connections and kept this going year after year, and in time, they came to see each other, “the other” in less biased ways and the wounds of war, not healed, but integrated and less intense. The ability to self reflect is not so American, and we have a lot to learn from these kids who came together despite terrible circumstances to share, to trust, to build mutual respect and interdependence.

    • Thanks, Carol, for this inspiring report on the peace-making you did. I wish we could have similar programs in our country.We need to break down barriers, and it’s brilliant to start with the children.Warmest, Sara

  • Kathryn Lynch says:

    Thanks, Sara! That was a gift that I will pass on.

    Katy Lynch (at Gleanings)

  • Linda Stonerock says:

    This article was tremendously helpful and moving. i have printed it and will always keep it as
    something to go back to when i feel most hopeless in personal or political circles.
    To be reminded as long as we’re here, we can reach out, we can listen and tell the truth.

  • Lyna says:

    Such a worthy topic. And I enjoy all of your pieces! Thank you.
    By the way, on 12/1 the venerable and credible medical journal, The Lancet, actually published a paper stating that Vaccination Does Not Decrease Transmission Rates or peak viral loads. So no more need to fear the unvaxxed, anymore than they might fear you. Not so comforting, though.

  • Art Johnson says:

    These are ten emotional needs that human beings require. Affection, Acceptance, Appreciation, Approval, Attention, Comfort, Respect, Encouragement, Security and Support. In his approach to negotiation it is obvious that he is working to meet those emotional needs in others that are in disagreement whether they are presidents, dictators or unruly children. To be effective requires that you give before you receive without communicating an expectation of receiving. Humility and vulnerability, the very things we resist, are required to communicate acceptance, approval, etc., of the person-not particularly the behavior or belief. Typically we have a top 3 that are more important than others to us influenced by culture and experience of life. When I first heard of these needs I denied all of them with some flexibility for respect. That behavior can be identified as self-reliance. Good relationships require that needs are met. Unfortunately they can only be met by others. Darn it! It seems that William is humble, vulnerable, fearless, gives first, generous, and optimistic. Good traits for giving people what they need most…

  • Alan Ross says:

    Beautifully written, interviewed and researched, Sara. It’s difficult to imagine, though, the vast polarity of differing thought in America without someone to arbitrate it, like a Ury. I love his thinking and respect his work pedigree, and I can potentially see a large willingness among Blue patrons possibly embracing the framework he puts forward, but in Red rural America, where I live, that just ain’t gonna happen.

  • Jean (Krasnansky) Thompson says:

    Hello Sara,

    I followed a few bread crumbs and read The December Project. Thank you. I worked at Naropa in the early 2000s and Reb was around our offices because he was friends with my boss. I didn’t know what his deal was, seemed like a friendly person with a lot of energy. We chatted about a program he was starting, something about creativity and elders. I was the admin in the Gerontology program at the Paramita campus. The December Project helped me understand why my boss was so crazy about Reb. I totally believe you saw a comet in your bedroom. The power of the unseen has always felt more real to me.

  • Grace Miller says:

    Ury’s thinking is encapsulated in something I heard on Ted Lasso (don’t recall which episode, it was during a dart game), where he quoted a simple phrase “Be Curious, Not Judgmental”.
    ALL of us listen through own filter, RARELY ever listening with genuine curiosity about the points of view of those who see things differently than us. But having the ‘end goal’ of changing their minds so that they think like we do, seems a bit inauthentic (the other person will likely sense that anyway, so might be best to be truly curious…).
    Sometimes it feels like the Media is our worst enemy (both right and left), as they fan the flames of discord, bringing out the worst in people’s judgmental nature, with more and more hostility especially in blogs, which is why I rarely ever comment on a blog. But this article is different, and it resonated deeply with me.
    I like the idea of listening just to LEARN of why the other person thinks as they do. The part where he says, “And the first thing you’ll have to do is work on yourself. If you get triggered, it won’t go forward.”. There’s so much truth in that and it’s a tough one because it takes a great deal of discipline and practice, but in the end – the only person we can really change is ourselves.