STEREOTYPES ARE A REAL TIME-SAVER
Of course they are. Because, honestly, who has the time, let alone the need for real conversations when simpleminded stereotypes will do?
Who indeed….
The 3Practices emerged as an exercise in reverse-engineering. Over decades, we observed, and eventually described and named the habits of people who cross the difference divide — repeatedly and on purpose. Not only do these people have time for real conversations, they’ve decided they don’t have time for conversations that aren’t real. All this crystalized for us in in 2016 when we made a documentary film about a rabbi, an imam, and an white evangelical preacher in Peoria, Illinois. As stereotypes, these three were perfect ideological opponents. In fact, they were the best of friends. They’d given up trying to convert each other years before we met them. They had spirited discussions about their differences on spirituality and religious practices, on society and politics, on morality and the common good … they watched ballgames together, introduced their spouses and children, taught a class together at a local university … they learned to laugh together and prank each other across their differences … they stopped blaming each other for the depraved acts of people who tried to justify their lust for power as a religious impulse … they started protecting each other and speaking up for each other in public — especially as anti-Muslim sentiments and hate crimes began to spike in 2016 … their friendship embodied what we’d come to identify as — and what Jim Henderson had to started calling — three practices for crossing the difference divide. We called the movie No Joke. The last half-hour uses the 3Practices as a frame for viewing the relational path of our three remarkable friends.
Early in 2017, we started testing 3Practice Circles in Seattle, then here and there across the country, in an effort to prove it’s possible to have substantive, civil conversations with ideological opponents — the sort of conversations that have to take place before any of us can become true friends with people who disagree with us. We wanted to find out if we could create spaces for people to
We designed, tested, and redesigned rules for creating safe spaces to talk about unsafe things. We started calling ourselves Referees — not facilitators, discussion leaders, or moderators — because we came to understand that our task was not about the outcome of the game but about making the game safe and fair.
We refereed Open 3Practice Circles where anyone was welcome, and Private 3Practice Circles for businesses, civic groups, religious organizations, colleges and universities.
In August 2019, we trained a group of Referees in California’s Central Valley who helped us test the capacity for people others than the two of us to lead 3Practice Circles.
In February 2020, we experimented with private Zoom-based Circles for a distributed civic organization.
Then the Covid 19 storm hit.
By the time Covid shut down our in-person 3Practice Circles, we’d refereed half-a-dozen Zoom Circles. The transition to Zoom felt oddly normal in a time when so many things seemed chaotic and not normal at all.
Just like that, we went from two or three Circles a month, to two or three Circles a week.
In May, 2020, we trained the first online cohort of 3Practice Circle Leaders. By September 2021, we’d trained eight cohorts online — some open, some private for institutions and organizations — with more in the pipeline stretching into 2022.
We think this works because 3Practice Circles aren't inspirational or aspirational, they're operational.
Because, what the world needs now is not inspirational ... Look what those lovely people are doing ...
… or aspirational ... I wish everyone would love their neighbors…
What the world needs now is operational. Here is a way we can stop fighting like cats and dogs! We’ll still be cats and dogs … but we’ll learn to understand each other well enough to see that being good neighbors doesn’t mean we have to agree with each other — and it certainly doesn't mean surrendering core principles … unless your core principles include silencing people whose crime is disagreeing with you.
Our book about all this, 3 Practices For Crossing the Difference Divide, is available at Amazon.com.
Jim Henderson
Jim Henderson’s innovative work in crossing the difference divide has been reported by The Wall Street Journal, and USA Today, and featured on This American Life with Ira Glass. Jim is a serial entrepreneur, a producer of films and live events, an organizational leadership coach, and the author of eight books. He makes his home on an island north of Seattle. You can reach him at jimhenderson@humaneresources.com.
Jim Hancock
Jim Hancock has a long history designing content on difficult subjects. After cutting his storytelling teeth as a youth worker, he finished the 20th century in a commercial film house. Since then, he’s focused on boutique creative services and learning designs — leading to his partnership with Jim Henderson. These days, if you think you see him around Seattle, you may be right. You can reach him at jimhancock@humaneresources.com.