The People Watching Challenge: You can change the world!

in life •  6 years ago 

My mom used to take me to the mall and park me on a bench with a pretzel from Auntie Annie's. From that perch, we would watch families and solo shoppers pass. My mom would point out particular people and ask me what they were thinking. It was a game we played. We guess what they were thinking based on their facial expression, body language or words and tone if we could hear them. We made up stories for how they reached the emotional (or unemotional) state they were in. My mother always steered the stories toward common ground; a reason for anger or sadness that tapped into empathy.

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It was a game but not a game. As a child, I struggled to understand my own emotions and those of others. I was not born able to read body language. Most people are. Instead, I was stumped by others' feelings and responded inappropriately or unexpectedly. The thing is, I could feel their emotions, but without context, all that did was overwhelm me. And since I had yet to learn self-moderation, my reactions tended to be really big. In Autism, we call these overblown responses to seemingly simple stimuli "meltdowns."

The mall was not the only place we practiced reading body language. We examined people from the car, at school, in the grocery store, at restaurants, and sometimes my mom even asked people if they would share what they were feeling and why because "My daughter noticed you seem to be struggling right now . . ." and this opened the window for me to practice listening with compassion.

Listening with compassion requires your full, bodily presence if you are physically near the person who is talking. It requires you to not make assumptions ("She probably wasn't paying attention and doesn't like the outcome.") and, instead, remain curious ("I wonder if she didn't like the outcome because it was unexpected rather than bad.").

The end result of our people watching practice is that I have unusual (I am told) intuitive understanding of emotional settings and situations. I can predict outcome, pinpoint context, and all of this has led me to work with survivors of violence. Ultimately, making up stories about people with my mom built my skill set for coaching people to release trauma.

What would happen if you spent 10 minutes a day asking why instead of assuming answers? What if we all did this? I'm talking about getting curious instead of reactive, of choosing to set reaction aside and hear a person with our whole selves with the goal of not just understanding them, but relating or them or simply holding space so they can feel heard. I think this would change the world.

I challenge you to try this. People watch and write about what you saw, what your initial response was, what an alternate context for what you saw might be, and what this process was like for you.

The Don'ts

Don't be creepy. Don't take pictures of people without their permission.

The Dos

Do use #surviveyourstory as a tag so I can find, read, upvote and resteem your posts. Also, tag your friends so they can participate. And feel free to express what you witness in any form of art.

I challenge @raymondbaxter, @thomasives, @rachelhanson10, @sumayyahsaidso, @tessaradudley, @byn, @trucklifefamily, @didic and @limabeing. I can't wait to read what you see!

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Change the world with your words

@shawnamawna

@shawnamawna This is brilliant!!!!!!!!!! What a fantastic idea!!!

Sounds interesting!

very nice post..
keep it up..
thanks for sharing

Great timing! I am going to have my 'night out' tonight at the coffeehouse with my daughter... and it's generally the only time I leave the house each week. I'll put this into practice.

I'm not generally a people watcher, but I am the type to always be digging in and trying to figure out the 'why' of people's actions and thoughts... it is just usually directed to my family, since they're the ones I see and talk with regularly.

Great challenge!

This post has been upvoted and picked by Daily Picked #36! Thank you for the cool and quality content. Keep going!

Don’t forget I’m not a robot. I explore, read, upvote and share manually ☺️

I don't know that I'm up for this right now, but I'll think on it. It's an interesting challenge. I'm feeling rather deficient in the area of engaging with other people at the moment, though that may be an erroneous self-perception based on a couple of uncomfortable interactions I've had recently.

But I like reading about your mom's activity to teach you how to intuit emotions. This is something I feel like I still struggle with a lot.

Great idea.

My mom and I had a somewhat similar game, that I've posted about before, but rather than making up stories to gain understanding (which is awesome!), she simply took it as a challenge when she saw someone looking unhappy, to get their attention and make them smile.

It still inspires me, all these years later, and I still go out of my way to smile at people when I'm out and about. And several people over the years have told me that it helped them when they needed it most. Sometimes it is the smallest things we do or say that can have the greatest impact.

I've always been an active listener, and I was taught to hear people out without judging, so I'm pretty good at that already, though I'm still human. We all have our off days, times when we're distracted or self-absorbed, and that's just part of life.

But I am in absolute agreement that if we would all simply set aside our automatic judgments, and ask people how they are feeling rather than assuming (usually wrongly) that we already know, SO many arguments and misunderstandings could be averted, and our entire human experience could be transformed.

And what a wonderful world that would be!