A little exercise
  Before
  we
  start
  with
  the
  self-organization
  of
  the
  team
  with
  NVC-plus,
  we
  can
  do
  a
  simple 
  exercise. 
  We
  draw
  a
  line
  through
  the
  middle
  of
  the
  room. 
  All
  team
  members
  stand
  on
  one
  side, 
  the
  other
  side
  is
  still
  empty.
  The
  first
  side,
  which
  represents
  the
  old
  team
  state,
  is
  usually 
  characterized
  by
  a
  functional
  or
  even
  dominant
  culture
  of
  cooperation.
  On
  the
  other
  side
  is
  the 
  new,
  self-organized
  team
  space 
  with
  the
  caring
  culture
  of
  togetherness. 
  Those 
  who 
  want
  to
  opt 
  for this new culture take a step across the line in the middle and into this new team space.
   
  We
  know
  the
  difference
  between
  "to
  be
  nice"
  and
  "to
  be
  kind".
  A
  dominant
  or
  functional
  culture 
  does
  not
  mean
  that
  it
  is
  not
  possible
  to
  be
  nice.
  But
  cordiality,
  openness,
  intuition
  and
  the
  free 
  will 
  to
  support
  others
  is
  not
  predominant.
  It
  doesn't
  matter
  that
  one
  person
  or
  another
  already 
  considers
  it
  good
  enough
  -
  it's
  about
  the
  team's
  certainty
  that
  it
  has
  arrived
  as
  a 
  whole
  in
  a
  culture 
  of
  appropriate
  or
  at
  least
  sufficient
  care.
  Only
  then
  will
  communication,
  and
  with
  it
  joint
  process 
  management, be able to succeed reliably.
  As
  we
  will
  only
  experience
  the
  culture
  of
  care
  in
  a
  caring
  team,
  the
  exercise
  described
  above 
  requires
  us
  to
  opt
  for
  something
  that
  we
  may
  not
  really
  know
  yet.
  Nevertheless,
  the
  exercise 
  works. 
  Caring
  also
  arises
  above
  all
  through
  caring.
  It
  is
  not
  so
  much
  learned
  as
  discovered
  as
  an
  inherent 
  human
  characteristic,
  whereby
  role
  models
  can
  also
  play
  a
  role.
  Caring
  frees
  people
  from
  a
  kind 
  of isolation of the heart. It should come as no surprise that it can also be lived soberly. 
  And
  as
  everywhere
  in
  NVC-plus,
  the
  ideal
  is
  what
  is
  appropriate
  or
  at
  least
  sufficient.
  It
  is
  never 
  about perfection.