I wanted to lay out all of my findings and all of my opinions, but realized, for issues as divisive and polarized as this (like racism), I want to be an advocate of ideas and opinions in the context of relationship.

[bctt tweet=”I want to be an advocate of ideas and opinions in the context of relationship. #schoolshooting” username=”macorkum”]
Here’s the thing. I feel like if we put aside our differences for a hot second, we can agree that we want the same things—less violence and felt safety. What we disagree on is what factors affect those. There’s also a foundational desire to protect a person’s rights and freedoms, whether it be the right to bear arms or the right to life.
What would it look like to start our conversations and interactions on common ground instead of drawing our lines in the sand first? In connected parenting, we encourage parents to frame situations so that the parent and child stay on the same “side.” That might mean thinking about a parent and child fighting together against the effects of trauma instead of a parent thinking of fighting against this child and his behaviors which are ruining her family’s life. Parent and Child vs. Trauma instead of Parent vs. Child. Do you see how that could make such a huge difference relationally?
[bctt tweet=”Let’s start conversations on common ground instead of drawing our lines in the sand first.” username=”macorkum”]
Also, questions lead us to solutions. Inflammatory opinions and “truth bombs” dropped on social media only create more division.
If we really want to start solving this problem, we are going to need to work together. Not fight with each other.
One thing that really helps me is remembering that we form opinions inside our own bubble of a paradigm. If I’ve learned nothing else in the past 5 years, it’s
Some of my fundamental beliefs about life have been shaken at my core which means I’m holding my opinions with much more open hands. And you know what? I’m a better human for it. It’s changed the way I do relationship with my husband, my kids, and people with whom I work. I also know that I’m still definitely a work in progress. You can ask my husband, my kids, and the people with whom I work 
I also know that how I hear and process someone’s opinion is different when I have a relationship with her because I have a paradigm that knows her heart’s deeper intentions, and I can reconcile that opinion within that framework. In simpler terms, it just helps me give a person, with whom I might disagree, the benefit of the doubt.
So, if you want to see all of my Excel graphs and hear why I don’t think the statistics on mental health and violence tell the whole story or how I’m convinced kids are still safer at school than at home, we’ll have to plan to grab coffee or at least a phone date.
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