Santa Cruz Mountains, CA
NVC: A Language of Compassion That Can Help Us Walk the Talk of Critical Social Change
For full details see http://diversity.learnnvc.com/
(For other extended training programs with different focuses, consider Compassionate Leadership or the Bay NVC Leadership Program or see our extended training page.)
[This is the first retreat of an extended training program. See http://susan.nvcti.com/ for official details]
Dear NVC Friends,
International Intensive Training
with Marshall Rosenberg and other trainers. See the CNVC IIT page.
I am excited to invite you to join me for a five day intensive focused on cultivating and dwelling in life enhancing energies -- the Beauty of Needs -- and deepening the practice of Self-Compassion.
In the retreats and workshops that I offer, people consistently share with me how grounding, opening and inspiring these practices are for them. I want to support an inner consciousness of Being that I see as having fundamental importance in the development and cultivation of living life authentically and fully in relationship.
International Intensive Training
with Marshall Rosenberg and other trainers. See the CNVC Marshall's schedule page.
Applications for the Bay NVC Leadership Program are accepted on a first-come, first-serve basis, and should ideally be received by October 15, 2010, for the program starting in February 2011.
For full information on this 9-month program (which most NVC trainers in the Washington DC area have attended), see http://lp.learnnvc.com/
Whereas "retributive justice" attempts to figure out who is to blame and how to punish, "restorative justice" aims to restore what was torn in the social fabric, to repair relationships and set things on a better course for the future. Inspired by ancient approaches to justice among a variety of native cultures, restorative justice is proving to be transformational in the modern world where it is used. It is useful in schools, communities, and other places, as well as in criminal/civil justice settings.
Whereas "retributive justice" attempts to figure out who is to blame and how to punish, "restorative justice" aims to restore what was torn in the social fabric, to repair relationships and set things on a better course for the future. Inspired by ancient approaches to justice among a variety of native cultures, restorative justice is proving to be transformational in the modern world where it is used. It is useful in schools, communities, and other places, as well as in criminal/civil justice settings.