Filling in the gaps

Filling in the gaps

‘You can never really know someone completely. That’s why it’s the most terrifying thing in the world, really – taking someone on faith, hoping they’ll take you on faith too. It’s such a precarious balance. It’s a wonder we do it at all.’ (Libba Bray)

There’s an idea in?Gestalt psychology?that we’re predisposed, hard-wired, to ‘fill in the gaps’. Here’s a real and practical example. I was once invited to facilitate a conference of around 50 people from diverse professional backgrounds in the housing sector. I had never met anyone in the group and they had never met me. I stood up on the podium, introduced myself simply as ‘Nick Wright, an?organisation development?consultant from England’, then invited everyone to take a pen and paper. I explained that I would ask them a series of questions about myself, to which they were to guess the answers.

‘Which newspaper do I read?’ ‘What political party will I vote for at the next General Election?’ ‘Am I married, or single?’ ‘What is my professional background?’ ‘What’s my favourite hobby outside of work?’ I then asked who had been able to answer every question. Everyone raised their hands. I now invited them to draw a simple face against each of their answers – which they wouldn’t be expected to share in the group. A happy face meant their answer drew them towards me; an unhappy face that it pushed me away. A neutral face meant, well, neutral. Again, everyone managed to do it.

I paused and invited them to reflect at their tables on what had just happened. Person after person said how astonished they felt at how quickly and easily they had created a profile of me in their minds, and how that had influenced how they felt about – and were now likely to respond and relate to – me. They had?filled in the gaps?of not-knowing by drawing on hopes and fears,?past experiences, personal projections,?cultural assumptions?etc. This phenomenon enables us to relate quickly to others rather than starting every relationship as if from scratch. It also risks unhelpful stereotyping and bias.

This raised important questions for participants at the conference so I offered 3 principles:?compassion,?curiosity?and?challenge.?Compassion: ‘What do I need to feel safe to contribute in this group? ‘How can I demonstrate a compassionate stance towards others?’?Curiosity: ‘What assumptions am I making about those around me, e.g. based on their looks,?accent?or?job title?’ ‘Who or what is influencing the ways in which I’m?thinking about, feeling about and responding to others?’?Challenge: ‘What am I?not-noticing?about those around me?’ ‘How open am I to have my?beliefs about others?tested?’

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