Speaking Circles International (R)

“I’m an introvert, not a performer. In college speech class I threw up after every speech. What Relational Presence training does is change public speaking from a performance event to a relationship event. I know a lot about relationships and very little about performing."

Nancy Brown, Psychotherapist

“Through Relational Presence I confronted and broke through my fear of speaking up and being seen. The impact was like someone unplugged me and my flow of communication finally began pouring out.”

Agnes Leonard, Counselor

“For the first time in my life it’s easy for me in front of groups. There’s no anxiety about it; everything just falls into place naturally through attention to Relational Presence."

Steve Mackewicz, Technology Support Analyst

“In my talks I used to sweat bullets and be over-prepared. Now I speak into eyes and feel comfortable since I am able to think on my feet. Speaking with Relational Presence has been a lot more fun, and good for business.”

Chuck Root, Founder, Double Eagle Financial, Registered Investment Advisors

“Even with considerable practice public speaking, I had remained particularly afraid of impromptu speaking. The practice of Relational Presence has brought a wonderful sense of calm over me, and the opportunity to be 'in the moment' has been truly amazing, gratifying and exhilarating.”

Nancy Dakin, Environmental Planner

“Whether I’m at a social gathering or a work event I always remember to breathe and be in Relational Presence with people. This dissolves my habitual feeling of being inhibited and has opened my heart, along with many doors.”

Joan Simon, Office Manager

 

Introduction to Relational Presence
Home Study Program

By Lee Glickstein

The material in this program is copyrighted and may not be duplicated without permission, with the exception of printing copies for personal use. © 2006-2007 Speaking Circles International. All rights reserved.

View printable version

People ordinarily think of one-on-one communication as an entirely different animal from speaking to a group, and conventional public speaking and communication trainings support that distinction.

In pre-workshop assessments, on a scale of 1-10 where ten is masterful and one is absolutely ineffective, participants rate their skills one-on-one an average of 4-5 levels higher than their group communication skills.

But the surprising reality is that speaking to a group at the highest levels of effectiveness and authenticity requires exactly the same skills as does one-on-one communication. We have discovered in 16 years of teaching this radical Speaking Circle® approach that when a person is supported to address a group one listener at a time, most are able to reach a point of never again stressing about speaking to a group of any size.

Now I’m not talking about simulating connecting by making great eye contact; I mean actually Being With one person at a time as you are in a juicy conversation. And this is whether you are making a toast at a wedding, speaking up in class, teaching knitting, or addressing the board of directors of a Fortune 500 company.

How can this be?

Intelligent people would agree that the most important skill in one-on-one communication is listening. But most wouldn’t say the same about speaking to a group. After all, how can you listen when you are doing all the speaking? It turns out that listening is critical especially when you are doing all the speaking, as we’ll find out later. This is why the best listeners make the best speakers once they shift their paradigm about addressing a group and realize they can “lead with listening.”

Many excellent listeners see themselves as introverts, which is why introverts make masterful speakers when they give up the notion that they need to become extroverts to shine and be heard. In fact, many extroverts have a greater challenge in becoming masterful communicators since to get there they must stretch mightily to find a place of receptive stillness from which to initiate the relationship with a group, before filling the air with words.

In reality, most of us have a combination of introvert and extrovert qualities, so we have challenges and strengths from both directions.

Wherever you are coming from, welcome to the counter-intuitive, topsy-turvy world of Relational Presence, the end of stage fright and the radical secret of the masterful communicators.

This revolutionary work may instantly rock your world and dramatically transform your relationship with groups while significantly deepening your one-on-one skills. The great news is that you’ll know in two pages if it will. By then, I will have delivered a 15-minute exercise -- an experience really -- that requires a friend or associate who reads this material and is open to being a more authentic, powerful communicator.

The experience will either draw you toward this approach or not. I just ask that you give it a full chance by doing it in good will with the guidelines as given.

Why this exercise?

Since the foundation of our approach to speaking with groups is one-on-one effectiveness, this exercise is designed to give you the opportunity to access and maximize your capacity to be at your best one-on-one. You will go to the core of where the ease, the magic, the communion, the juice of one-on-ones arises.

The experience will also point you to exactly what is called for with a group when I ask you to turn public speaking into a series of juicy one-on-ones.

All in 15 minutes.

Ready?

You can follow along with the audio instructions here, and a written version of the instructions follow.

Click on the triangular button to play, the double-bar button to pause, and the square button to stop. The slider on the upper left will adjust volume, and the lower slider is useful to repeat any portion of the instructions.

 

“Five and Five” – The Relational Presence Experience

You will do this with a friend or colleague who we will refer to as your RP partner.

Sit facing each other a comfortable conversation distance apart. Have a timer available, preferably one that rings or flashes so you won’t have to keep looking at it.

Before your 5-minute timed turns, we will take a few minutes to understand “Relational Presence,” the foundation of our work together.

Relational Presence is simply being with the other, eyes available, without trying. To get a sense of this, first start by gently closing your eyes and going to a place inside of not trying -- just breathing. Don't even try to relax or slow down your mind. There's nowhere to go and nothing to do. Notice how it is to have no self-consciousness since no one is looking at you.

After 10-15 seconds of silence, open your eyes and be this way with each other, without trying. Even though your eyes are available to each other, you are not even trying to connect. You are not winking, nodding, smiling, or otherwise giving social signals. You are just there, steadily, neutrally receptive. Breathing is good. There may be some discomfort, anxiety (am I doing this right?), and this is normal until you find the natural place of Relational Presence that you know so well deep inside. No rush to find it. It will find you if you are willing.

Without the smiles and other habitual social signals you may feel that your visage is stern or even grave. Simply take a deep breath while noticing your sense of positive regard for your RP partner, and that will lighten your face at least a bit.

This is Relational Presence. This is the foundation, the precondition for all masterful communication, one-on-one at its most intimate, and with groups of any size. When you are not in the habit of establishing this interpersonal stillness -- this ground of being -- when you start speaking or listening, much is lost and anxiety is gained. Conversely, when this state becomes your default way of approaching every communication, you step into a natural flow without effort. This 15-minute experience is designed to get you on the road to making Relational Presence your priority so you can speak (and listen) with ease any time, anywhere.

Developing your capacity for Relational Presence is like strengthening a muscle that has been neglected. Welcome to the gym! But unlike how physical workouts are for many of us, this exercise will be highly pleasurable. First, though, there may be some confusion, discomfort, self-doubt. We are dealing with nothing less than your capacity to fully live your passion and purpose out loud in the world, so hang in there and do the reps no matter how it feels or what you are thinking.

Take a deep breath and Be With each other in Relational Presence for 15 seconds in silence.

How was that? Tell each other briefly. Is there confusion or questions about the guidelines? Talk about it. Refer back to the instructions. Do the 15 seconds again. Remember, you are not trying to be comfortable. You are only aiming at being present in relation to your RP partner together, no matter how it feels or what you are thinking. You are not trying to connect; you are only being neutrally available for connection should it arise.

When this 15-second exercise gives you each a sense of expansion, rather than of contraction, you are ready to move on.

The sense of expansion may come the first time, or later, or you may find yourself getting more and more contracted as you try too hard to “get it right.” This happens. It doesn’t necessarily mean that this experience is not for you. You might try again later at another time when you feel more relaxed. In any case, don’t move on to the “Five and Five” until you have each experienced at least some quality of expansiveness in the 15-second silence.

Five and Five

You will each have five minutes to explore allowing words to arise, if they do, without compromising the underlying priority on Relational Presence. This includes noticing your sense of positive regard for this other human being. You are both simply being there, listening, receptive, not trying, while words may come through only one of you. But in your turn you do not have to speak. Words may arise from the Relational Presence experienced together, but silence is fine.

You may find yourself going back and forth between silence and words. If you catch yourself “going into your head” to think of something to say, or habitually looking up or down to access your mind, come back to gently Being With. There is nothing to say. The eyes are not staring; rather they are softly and steadily gazing. Breathe.

The one thing to not talk about during your time is the other person, even to say something like “You have beautiful eyes” or “I don’t feel you are listening.” You can have that conversation later. For now, be with your own experience.

You now have enough information to each take a 5-minute turn. We are not looking for perfection; just an experience that opens a door to a clear fresh path of communication ease and mastery. Likely, you’ll have exciting and useful revelations along with some wrinkles to iron out. If you are attracted to the good stuff and continue doing “Five and Five” with this RP partner and/or others, I guarantee that the wrinkles will iron out and you will find these 10-minute experiences to be fonts of extraordinary personal and professional development, as well as ecstatic relational events.

Follow-up

I do at least three Five-and-Fives a week with various RP partners, and that is what I recommend as a minimum weekly requirement for developing your Relational Presence muscle.

I believe that every Five-and-Five done with RP priority will surprise you with untold benefits of clarity, power, and joy, as it has for me and others who have taken on this practice.

We welcome your comments about your experience and results from these exercises. Let us know if you'd like to join future teleclasses to further develop your home study of Relational Presence.

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