Creating a Personal Village Marv
Thomas, MSW, Excerpted from Personal Village: How to Have People in Your Life by Choice, not by Chance (Milestone Books, Seattle WA (followed by a Conversation with Marv Thomas)
I am a man on a mission. My mission is to revitalize community for
myself and everyone I can reach. Half a lifetime ago, in my work as a psychotherapist,
I realized that many of the people who came to see me would not have been in my
office if they had experienced and were still embedded in a strong, supportive
circle of people. As a young father and professional, I began to recognize that
this rich circle was missing in my own life as well. At the same time, I began
to realize that some people seemed to have a knack for surrounding themselves
with people and creating intimacy, abilities I lacked.
I also shared the growing sense of distress that many feel about what our
modern world is doing to our humanity. It was obvious that our sense of
community was being seriously eroded in our headlong race into a future of
modern wonders. I have watched from my comfortable place in the Western world
as we've lived through the greatest technological leap forward the human race
had ever taken: a leap both exciting and promising, like nothing before in
history, but with a price. I grew up in a traditional, strong extended family
that had just migrated into the city from the farm culture upon which America was built. My family
shared the farm values of hard work and of community. Babies were born at home
and the old folks died in each other's arms. Life was hard, but regardless of
what happened a strong circle of community always
supported everyone. Even though I had not learned the skills necessary to
create such a community for myself, I saw firsthand the power it could hold in
leading a rich life.
As a young man, just launched into a career in the space program, I found
myself suddenly caught up in technical, hurry-hurry, modern America. It was not long
before I recognized that something was missing. I had to find a way to balance
this new exciting world with the strong sense of community in which I had grown
up.
This need started as confusion as I experienced the collision between our
humanity and the pressures of modern life. Then it turned into alarm as I
became aware of current problems in the context of the history I was studying.
Most of the people I talked with saw the same problems, but they tended to
respond either by ignoring them or by complaining. I decided I was going to
apply what I knew from my community-based childhood to improve the quality of
life for myself, my family, and the people around me. I realized that to do
less would simply be adding to the problems that worried me. Eventually I left my
career as an engineer and studied to become a social worker.
My growing awareness of the necessity for vital communities led to what has
become a burning passion over the last thirty years. It was urgent that I find
a way to think about personal communities and develop a way to strengthen them.
I closely studied the communal dimensions in my work as an organizational
consultant and psychotherapist, and I explored the back alleys of our culture
at every level, watching people on the streets, in malls, in classrooms, in
business settings, in the halls of government. I studied anthropology,
sociology, the world's religions, and depth psychology. I poured over all the
literature written about community and immersed myself in both current affairs
and history.
My efforts eventually gave me a way to think about personal community and
allowed me to develop a body of material that anyone can use to create a
supportive cast for themselves. Before I could write about the topic of
personal community, my earlier engineering training impelled me to develop a
theory about all community systems, from the most immediate to those of every
level of society and even to the entire global community. What started out as a
single book about personal community has turned into a series of books that I
am driven to write. I identify with George Bernard Shaw when he said: "I
want to be thoroughly used up when I die. The harder I work, the more I live.
Life is no brief candle to me. It is a splendid torch which I want to make burn
as brightly as I can before I pass it on to following generations." What I
learned taught me how to surround myself with a strong circle of people. The
professionals called this immediate circle a personal network or convoy. I came
to call it my personal village. The first in my series of books [Personal Village] is about how to
create community at the most immediate, personal level….
What I…describe in this book is not a one-time effort. Just like caring for
your health or finances or career, your personal village will require continual
attention and tending. Community is not a simple process like throwing a party
or changing the tires on a car. It is not a step-by-step process like baking
cookies. It does not have a beginning or an end. Like the quest to know God,
community can be embraced in many ways and approached from many directions
simultaneously. I have tried in this book to show you many of the levels on
which you can enhance your own circle of important people….
May you blossom fully. May your loved ones
blossom fully, and may everyone living on Mother Earth blossom fully to the
ultimate that is our human heritage. May every person come into perfect harmony
with their highest self and with each other.
Excerpted from Personal Village: How to Have People in Your
Life by Choice, not by Chance (Milestone Books, Seattle WA, 2004) by
Marv Thomas, MSW.
© 2004 Marv Thomas. All rights reserved.
Reprinted by permission of the publisher.
A Conversation with author Marv Thomas, MSW
Q. In your book, you refer to the
bedrock values of your rural upbringing. How do the lessons of your formative
years play into your concept of the Personal Village?
A. I grew up in a family that had
just migrated off the farm. The values they brought with them included
community, though they did not call it that. They simply looked after each
other, supported births and stood by at deaths, and observed the ritual of
family life by gathering often for big dinners, trips to the cemetery and to
Sunday church. I simply grew up experiencing the richness of a warm circle of
well-known folk and assuming that an extended circle of people would always be
available to me. When I left home and moved into a modern, fragmented,
hurry-hurry society I was simply shocked at how isolated I felt. My childhood
experiences gave me a template about how to have a vital personal community to
support my personal life. And I learned that I need to support the same thing
for the people around me.
Q. In what ways have people become
more distant from one another? Aren't the Internet and digital media making us
more "connected" than ever?
A. Oh, many influences in the modern
world have acted to cause more distance between us. Our mobility is one thing.
Instead of wandering around in our natural neighborhoods, we drive miles to
meet someone for coffee or spend hours in a commute. Another feature of modern
society is our devotion to being in a hurry. We scurry here and there with such
speed that we do not take the time to stop and have a leisurely conversation.
And when we do slow down we too often are seduced into plastering a phone to
our ear or watching the television instead of simply talking in a contact-rich
way with the people who are right in front of us.
The electronic ways of communicating have evolved naturally to compensate for
our lack of connection. Now we can hurry and talk with someone at the same time, that is if we do not drive into someone in the
process. We can say what we want to important people via e-mail and come back
later to see how they responded. This is efficient and contributes to our
productivity, but it also leads to fragmentation and hurriedness. The digital
world is a blessing and curse.
Q. What are some examples of
"dysfunctional communities," and what can people do to avoid them?
A. Domestic violence makes a family
community dysfunctional. A bully at school or work makes the school or
workplace community dysfunctional. A community that is dominated by a control
freak is a dysfunctional community. A leader who used the community members for
his/her own advantage creates a dysfunctional community. A community where the
members do not take care of each other is dysfunctional.
If the community circle you find yourself in feels wrong in some way, it
probably is. What you can do is take the community effectiveness test to orient
yourself in a more precise way to what is wrong. Then talk with friends outside
of the community. Consult this book for clues about how to bring about changes.
If it is possible, talk with other members of the community circle and see if
you can collectively agree on a way to bring about positive change. Always
think about trying to bring harmony between people and to find a way where
everyone's needs are being met to some degree.
Q. Forming a Personal Village demands
that you consciously connect with the people that make up your world-neighbors,
the people you encounter every day during your commute, the person who serves
you coffee at Starbucks, etc. Does this mean that one has to be outgoing and
dynamic to have a Personal Village? Are there techniques that
"wallflowers" can follow to achieve greater depth to casual
relationships?
A. Well, extroverts do have an
easier time forming connections. For the rest of us there are lots of ways. The
best is to simply hang out with people who are doing things that are
interesting to you. If you hang out long enough you will begin to see ways to
become involved and the others will naturally begin to include you.
Q. Is having e-mail and IM buddies
the start of a Personal Village? How has instant communication
affected the current state of human interaction?
A. It can be. However if the
relationships that happen electronically never evolve into face-to-face contact
they may feel very intimate -- like a journal that talks back to you -- but the
real contact necessary for depth in a Personal Village never occurs. The
electronic forms of community can be a real boon for people who are isolated in
some way and have no other way to make contact. But real Personal Village happens when people are close
enough to see and talk with each other face-to-face.
Instant communications have tricked us into believing that sharing data,
including what we are thinking and feeling, is the same as real human
communication. It has made our lives more efficient and in some ways fun, and it has opened up new possibilities that did not
exist before. But if it replaces, rather than serves as a garnish, our
face-to-face connections will go hungry. You cannot eat data.
Q. You highlight the Rule of Seven
as a means of adding people to your Personal Village. What is the Rule of Seven, and
how does it work?
A. The Principal of Seven is your
strongest tool to create new relationships that have depth and trust. It is
your best friend in navigating around your Personal Village.
How it works is that all of us, now matter how confident and brash we seem, are
nervous with a new relationship. When we can watch another person over a period
of time, gradually our discomfort diminishes and we become more receptive to a
new person. The research shows that comfort begins to develop after
approximately seven different interactions have occurred. When you keep showing
up or hanging out the opportunity for accumulating the magic seven connections
occurs naturally. Then it is easier to establish contact with a new person.
In 1970, Marv Thomas began developing a
practical working model of community. Since that time he has been helping many
people deepen communities and has lectured and presented workshops on this
subject. He speaks not only with the authority of someone who has "been
there," but as a professional counselor who for thirty-five years has
observed the damage that isolation imposes on our population. He is well known
in Seattle as a teacher, lecturer,
psychotherapist and marriage counselor. He also has a degree in Engineering and
worked in the aircraft and space industry as a part of the team that sent the
first men to the moon. Thomas is a founding member and former director of the
Group Process Institute. He trained directly under Fritz Perls,
Leon Fine and Virginia Satir. He has taught group
process and community theory for many years, appeared on radio and television
and delivered many speeches and lectures. His broad and diverse training and
experience gives him an authority on the subjects of systems thinking, human
relations, and community dynamics. Marv lives in Seattle with his wife of 43
years and has two grown sons. For more information, contact Marv
at: Marv Thomas, Lakeridge
Institute, P.O. Box 27645 • Seattle, Washington • 98165-2645, (206)
364-9494 • marv@marvthomas.com or
visit the website: www.personalvillage.com