Guest guest Posted April 7, 2001 Report Share Posted April 7, 2001 9. HUMOR & OFF TOPIC POSTS: Guideline of the Day The 12 sections of the " WTO Guidelines " are posted at the rate of one per day, as below: 1 - Intro to WTO 2 - Technical Stuff 3 - List Facilitation 4 - List Netiquette 5 - Posting and Getting Responses 6 - Eggshell Resources, Abbreviations 7 - Offended? Send Problems to Us 8 - Confidentiality 9 - Humor and Off Topic Posts 10 - The Family of Welcome To Oz Lists 11 - Live Chat, The Buddy System 12 - BPs on WTO _____________________________________ 9. HUMOR & OFF-TOPIC POSTS: Guideline of the Day It is your RIGHT to read posts reflecting the purpose of this list. However, it is also your RIGHT to have fun and get to know other members. Therefore it is your RESPONSIBILITY to: * Keep in mind that anything you write is going to 50-800 other people who all have busy lives. Please keep posts on topic. * Please especially avoid off topic discussions that have the potential to generate strong or hurt feelings. We all have our personal views on sex, politics, abortion, feminism, Macs vs PC's, the existence of God and which way to hang the toilet paper. But discussions of these topics belong somewhere else--perhaps on the " Which Way to Roll the Toilet Paper " LISTSERV facilitated by Martha . * Humor and fun is necessary and is a vital part of this list. However, please restrain yourself from going overboard on the regular lists. If you have off-topic information you feel is important, simply put it at the end of a post about BPD. People need to laugh and some posting of this nature can be healthy, and on smaller groups this is less of a problem. But people unsub every day because of " too much mail, " so please be careful, use your best judgment, and if the subject is about something off topic, please write OFF TOPIC or " OT " in the subject line. * This also goes for news about yourself: for example, people have other concerns and want to share them with other members. See the post above and use your best judgment. * To keep down list clutter, please avoid one line posts that do not add substantially to the discussion. Or, send them off list to the member. * If you want additional company or the chance to get to know fellow members better, you can choose to participate in real time chat and talk about whatever you like. Please send a message to Greyh2o2@... or DeborahSu@... for more info. Or, join WTOChat by going to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WTOChat Following is something written by list facilitator about humor and off topic posts. ____ HUMOR GUIDELINES AND OFF TOPIC POSTS By (p.shirley@...) I'd like to see if I can help give clarification to those boundaries between the kinds of humor we want to see on the lists, vs. those kinds of humor we'd rather not see get posted. PRINCIPLES, NOT DEFINITIONS I'm not going to try to describe a clear line between " good " humor and " bad " humor, because I just don't think that will work for anybody. What I'm going to try to do instead is describe how humor functions in discussions. After that, I'm going to try to compare those functions with the goals of our list. That way, it will be largely up to everybody's good judgment to contribute toward the major goals of our list, without anyone feeling obligated to have to walk on eggshells themselves by shutting down their own personal funny bones. OK so far? FUNCTIONS OF HUMOR Several people have talked about the important part that humor has played in their healing on these lists. I agree with those statements fully. It has long been my experience that humor has three specific functions that give it a crucially important place in growth and healing. 1. First, humor acts as an anesthetic. That is, it helps make the pain bearable. The reason that is important is because human growth is painful, and sometimes it can be excruciatingly painful. I don't think I have to convince anyone here of that fact, do I? I don't know the breakdown of the list, in terms of who lives where geographically, but here in the USA we largely live in a culture in which it is falsely believed that to be " normal " and " healthy " means living pain-free. I will politely say that I consider that belief to be a complete crock. Healthy living means often living fully despite the inevitable pains of life, and also finding occasional joys that transcend the pain. That is purely my own belief, but it works for me, and I've seen it work for other people too. It might even be the greatest lesson life has taught me so far: no matter how bad the pain of living can be, there are things which are infinitely more IMPORTANT than the pain. Some of the greatest satisfaction in my life has been discovering my painful circumstances to help someone else avoid similar painful circumstances, or give them comfort as they endure the same thing. For anyone who wants a label for that belief, you can call it existential psychology, because the reality for me is that MEANINGFUL pain is endurable pain. Which brings me to the second function of humor. 2. Humor serves to add breadth and depth to our limited human perspectives. I have a good friend who sustained extensive brain damage in a series of accidents. I can't think of a whole lot of things more tragic than that, yet one of the greatest things I share with this friend is humor. He has a wonderful ability to take situations and look at the hidden side, and sometimes this involves exercising a delightful sense of humor regardless of the associated pathos. It helps. It heals, and it is funny. I don't think I can ever forget what my friend said one day when discussing the horrible aftermath of his accidents. In a quietly studious tone, and with a deadly serious expression, he said, " I was all right until I fell out of a well and got run over by an airplane. " As a result, he and I both howled with laughter over his terrible tragedy. And we both went away emotionally stronger as a result. Humor somehow helped us see a bigger picture. 3. Humor serves as a social lubricant. Some of our topics are awkward, embarrassing, ugly and clumsy. They are just plain hard to deal with. Humor simply makes it easier. It is an uphill battle at best, to fight our way out of some of the dilemmas life has brought us. We need every advantage we can get, and humor is one energizing way of helping us to see ourselves as being all in the same boat. The fact that that she is a Border Line Cruise Patrol Boat becomes something that pulls us together instead of isolating and alienating us. 4. Having specified the ways in which humor encourages growth and healing, I'm going to also mention the flip side of the coin, that is, one way in which humor can interfere. Humor can serve as an effective means to hide from, and avoid dealing with, important issues. This is the kind of humor we'd rather not see posted here. Examples include totally irrelevant or potentially tasteless humor (e.g., the Rabbi, Priest and Minister were stuck in a lifeboat... " ) or snide tasteless humor (i.e., anything about Clinton). Back to the first side of the coin: the banter that I've seen spontaneously emerge during the course of painful and/or difficult discussion about living and dealing with BPD has been very productive humor, every single time. Who can forget " Lasagna Therapy, " when a list member described how a well-placed dumping of noodles, cheese, and tomato sauce in the lap of a raging BP stopped criticism about the non's way of eating in an instant? But it was also very instructive for all of us, since it addressed some of the most key topics surrounding setting boundaries between BP's and Nons. But can we define " Lasagna " humor as on-topic, and some other humor subject as " off-topic? " I don't think so. Unfortunately, it is somewhat of a subjective judgment call. If it comes down to it, though, I'm willing to be the one to make that judgment and take the heat for it, because I've seen what this list can facilitate, and I want to see it keep happening. I love what this list is doing. I love what people are using it for, and I love where I see some people going as a result. I'm a flat-out healing junkie, and I get high as a kite from being with people who are addressing and overcoming problems in their lives. Each and every time I see someone take charge and empower themselves, it empowers me just a little bit more, too. I don't think any of us can ever be too empowered in this life here on planet Earth, so I'm in for the long haul on being a healing junkie. Now: I want to offer a cautious word about where we are on these lists, and where I see us headed. Based on the quantities of topics on various subjects, I see these lists serving, first and foremost, as an education center for practical information on coping with BPD. I don't want to see that change, because I think that is where the most help lies for the greatest number of people. Secondly, I see these lists functioning as a place where people can form bonds based on their joyful discovery that they are not alone. I see these friendship bonds as being very important. Thirdly, I see evidence that some list members may be moving towards a closer examination of their own deeper issues related to their status as Nons. If we do begin to go deeper into these issues, then we're gonna need humor, because some of these issues are excruciatingly painful, and possibly even disorienting at times. Bless you all, I see enough of you reaching out to grab that golden ring of positive health that I want to encourage that, even if we go past the original blueprints for these lists that Randi so caringly created. If we want to reach for bigger and better things, as in joyful and healthy living, then I'm all for it -- never mind how hard and painful that journey might be. The important thing is that we honor that process, without diminishing the other good things which are already happening here for everyone else. I'll bring this to a conclusion by saying that I love being a part of these lists. I am very glad for the fact that Randi and all of you have offered me this opportunity, because in the short time I have been acting as a facilitator here, I have experienced a great deal of learning and sharing with you. It has been fun, it has been energizing, and I am using comma splices, so evidently I need to descend from my cloud of exhilaration over successes and new possibilities and get back to the here and now. In the here and now, I sense a high level of respect between list members, and that is undoubtedly one of the keys to the good things taking place here. I'm sure it helps that we've all been personally exposed to projection and splitting, and thus we're not quite as vulnerable to falling into it as some other groups and lists. We know what raging is, because we have seen it; therefore, we're not naive to the fact that flaming posts are about the person doing the flaming, and not about the flame's recipient. (It also helps that flaming posts are forbidden in the guidelines -- LOL.) We're a step ahead in that regard, because in other lists I have been on, people have not been quite so savvy about the fact that flaming is, pure and simple, an obvious cyber version of splitting and projection. Here, we know better. Anyone who hasn't been able to figure that out for themselves has apparently gone elsewhere, and that means we're in safe company, doing our own thing. And with that 60's cliche, I'll stop. I'll be glad to answer any questions about what I've said, and otherwise I'll assume we're all on the same page and just say " Carry on. " Salutes to all, the Bear _____ Randi Kreger List owner, Welcome To Oz Lists Coauthor, Stop Walking on Eggshells Love and Loathing, Hope for Parents www.BPDCentral.com Addendum: A portion of the guidelines to the WTO groups are sent out each day because altogether they can be rather overwhelming. They are sent to all lists in approximate order of what is important and are not making any comment on any particular message on any one of the WTO groups. Please note our guidelines have developed over the years by the group as a whole to meet situations that come up again and again. Before you post, you must agree to try to read and try to meet them. If you have any questions, comments, or feelings you wish to voice about the guidelines, please write to at bear454us@... or Edith at psychprof5@.... Thank you! __________________________________________________ Posted by Edith Facilitator / WTO lists PsychProf5@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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