Have you ever been in an email correspondence with someone and it just stops with no explanation? Or, you are looking for new work and in communication with recruiters, you suddenly get the silent treatment? If you answered yes, then you know how radio silence feels, otherwise known as ghosting.
The given is that most of us are overwhelmed and find it challenging to keep up the demands of the day to day of life and work. We are juggling and busy doing real-time triage on our priorities, and in no way mean to intentionally hurt feelings.
The bottom line is that it does not feel good to have a promising conversation, or open a door or expect information that we need, only to have the person we spoke to turn into a ghost and go radio silent.
The most important quality we possess is our integrity. The most successful assistants take responsibility for their own behavior and the impact they have on others. How they manage their own overwhelm as they navigate others is a key to being ultimate.
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Radio Silence was a performance and broadcast project produced by Mural Arts, with artist Michael Rakowitz and curator Elizabeth Thomas. On April 15, 2018, Rakowitz and Mural Arts launched a seven-episode radio broadcast, the follow-up to a large-scale performance on Independence Mall in Historic Philadelphia that was simulcast on PhillyCAM TV. Conceived specifically for Philadelphia as the birthplace of American democracy, Radio Silence was inspired by famed Iraqi broadcaster Bahjat Abdulwahed, who lived in the city as a refugee until his death in 2016. The project interwove dreams and memories from Iraq, America, and in-between into a soundscape of the contemporary refugee experience, the Iraqi diaspora, and the culture of an Iraq, that due to war and political unrest, no longer exists.
The radio show, hosted by Rakowitz, includes themes such as secrets, shyness, silent letters, censorship, dead air, and peace. Episodes feature recordings of Abdulwahed, plus interviews with his wife and a number of other Iraqi refugees living in the Philadelphia area. Rakowitz and Thomas also conducted a series of workshops and recordings with Warrior Writers, creating poetry and songs and capturing stories of American veterans who served in Iraq. Using first-person narrative, poetry, and music, in English and Arabic, Radio Silence reconstructs a timeline of remembrances spanning the culturally rich Iraq of the 1960s to the decimation of physical and emotional landscapes during and after the war. Weaving these perspectives together, Radio Silence revives ghosts of days gone by and humanizes unspoken sides of a new American story.
Major support for Radio Silence has been provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, with additional support from The National Endowment for the Arts, and the Hummingbird Foundation. Project collaborators and partners include a host of agencies and nonprofits that work on refugee and veteran issues, as well as independent community-driven media nonprofits.
last drawing for ace awareness week! i always say that aled last is so gender but i am also enthralled by their hints of demisexuality throughout heartstopper/radio silence and the fruition of it in his coming out scene with daniel. love aspec representation in the osemanverse, ty alice
The American family has changed. The nuclear family in the house across the street is still there, but different kinds of families live on the block, too: unmarried parents, gay parents, people who choose not to have children at all and, of course, single parents.
Of course, there is a wide array of single mothers. Some women choose to raise children by themselves. Others find themselves without a partner through divorce or abandonment. But when seven in ten believe this is bad for society, it makes you wonder.
So we want to hear from single mothers today. How do people treat you? Tell us your story. 800-989-8255 is the phone number. Email us, [email protected]. You can also join the conversation on our website. Go to npr.org. Click on TALK OF THE NATION.
All the single mothers I have known have been single in self only, but not in parenthood; there are weekends, alternating holidays, weeks in the summer. Even I have documents that refer to me, the custodial parent, and him, the noncustodial one, documents with our names, our Social Security numbers. Such distancing rhetoric.
When Indie turned two, I went to my third-floor office at school and found a box leaning against my locked door. He had sent her a book and a letter. It was the first, and, so far, the only contact he made with us. I keep the letter and the book in a box for her, along with the dress she was wearing the last time he saw her, a plaid, quilt-patterned sundress, size six months. In that same box, he sent me a check for three hundred and fifty dollars. I tore it in half and dropped the pieces into the trash can beside my desk.
In the past nine years, Indie and I have talked about him only twice. He moves silently through the rooms of our minds, banging against the furniture, knocking on the door, calling in the middle of the night like a phone ringing in a distant room.
Shelly from Chapel Hill is the next caller. She is not a single mother, but she works with juvenile kids accused of crimes. Here come the statistics, I think, the ones about children raised without a father, the 80 percent increase in drug use and dropout rate. I think of turning back to the radio, something a bit more soothing for my drive, like Sinatra, or maybe something upbeat, the eighties station. Shelly continues:
Jan lived a troubled life, including some time working as a prostitute in New Mexico. Having published two novels, both autobiographical and both revealing a penchant for the road, just like her father, she died from kidney failure at the age of forty-four.
Mary Pols, a journalist who reviews books and movies for Time magazine, also a single mother. Her memoir is titled Accidentally On Purpose: The True Tale of a Happy Single Mother, and she joins us today from Maine Public Broadcasting Network in Portland, Maine. Nice to have you with us today.
A journalist for Time, I think, probably not a single mother who suffers economic hardship, as I slow to seventy-eight when I notice a Oklahoma State Patrol car in my rear view mirror. The officer passes, and I resume at eighty, sure that one speeding fine would not upend the monthly budget of Ms. Pols, who has just commented that her economic status improved once she became a single mother because she was motivated to provide for her son, an incentive that caused her to work harder professionally than she ever had before.
I had never heard the term "radio silence" until the day a male friend of mine was explaining how he ended an "on and off" relationship that wasn't going anywhere. He said, "I told her I needed total radio silence, and we never spoke again. It was what I needed to move on."
What's interesting about this friend's journey is that very soon afterwards, he met the woman who he is now married to, and they're both currently glad to be expecting their 2nd child. He's happy, in fact happier than I've ever known him to be. The idea that his ex was taking up space in his psyche and Mrs. Right was not able to come forward bore fruit in his life in a very big way, once he decided to take some action to change the dynamics. I know some people might consider this perspective trite or oversimplified, but hear me out.
Personally, I can relate, because I've lived all sides of this equation. My story and the stories I've heard from MANY women and men illustrate the potential usefulness and power of not communicating at all--radio silence--as a means of creating a space and time for you to heal and center yourself once you've decided to part ways with someone. Actually, that same "sacred space" radio silence gives you can also provide an opportunity to recalibrate your next steps as you move ahead with your life, including toward your "divine right partner," "The One" or whatever label suits you, if that's your intention.
A related insight came forward for me when I was working with Tracy Boyer-Matthews, a superb relationship therapist (www.TracyBoyer-Matthews.com), who suggested using this approach regarding a relationship that was no longer right for either me or the fellow I was seeing. On more than one occasion, she said "You have never really ended your relationship." Huh??? Things finally peaked when I realized: A.) we couldn't "be friends" and B.) staying in contact was really bad for both of us, as it kept a flame of hope in our hearts for something that no longer worked and had run its course.
Please note, radio silence is not the same as "ghosting." Instead of "disappearing" and not communicating (ghosting), you let your former partner know or you agree together that putting a stop to all communication is in order for creating a healthy space to part ways. Radio silence is not taken with an ugly or bitter tone--rather, it's self-care put in practice by setting boundaries and taking the time to heal in a way that maintaining contact does not give you.
So, how does it work? In my view, a closure conversation helps both people, but if the other person isn't inclined, a letter helps. Take the opportunity to thank the person for their presence in your life and their gifts, even if some of the gifts were painful. I believe in my full heart every person we have a relationship with has given us an opportunity to move further along our path in terms of personal and spiritual growth. Sometimes, it may be wise to see them as being "just what the doctor ordered" to get you to do that last bit of "work" to assist you in being ready for "The One."
I also love the Ho'ponopono prayer for this sort of transition--it can be quite powerful. (The simple "I'm sorry, please forgive me, thank you, I love you" mantra is a legendary healing tool in the ancient Hawaiian Huna community.)
What does radio silence look like in this digital age? No phone calls, texts, emails or Facebook contact. No peeking at his or her info for any reason. Simply "go totally dark" about him to anyone who knows him or her and request they do the same. Don't ask about him or her, and request they (i.e., your friends, family and co-workers) not share your personal business in any way.
Here's what I've discovered from my own journey and others who have utilized this as part of their healing: you heal SO much faster. In particular, that nagging sadness and "bad feeling" heals up more readily and you begin to feel optimistic about love again. Anger, sadness and disappointment are allowed to process and leave you. I have some theories about "why" that's the case, but the most obvious is that you never get to fully heal if you are still in contact.
By the way . . . I've found practicing yoga is an amazing "support" during this time period of radio silence, too.
One of my girlfriends shared that she was trying to be compassionate in her break-up, but it kept the cycle of resentment and pain going. Only in silence was she able to begin to move on and start her healing process.
Another gal I know ended a relationship when she realized he was not "her guy," came home from traveling and rekindled an old romance from college. They are happily married with kids now, and she feels he's her "soul mate," for sure.
My senses is, in the radio silence of whatever relationship closure you're in the midst of, you are able to hear your own inner voice more readily and thereby find the wisdom to live your life more easily. In this intentional downtime, you are able to have a sort of "relationship exit" interview, take stock of what worked, what didn't, and how you would like to change going forward. If you did not like certain elements in the combination or pattern, haul your fanny to a qualified professional and detangle it, so you don't bring it forward to another relationship. I really like doing some body-based work along with talk therapy, in order to shift the whole system. I suggest considering work like EMDR, applied kinesiology, energy healing or cord cutting, as they all can be powerful tools to transform the disappointment and clear it from your body.
Whatever path you choose, I would encourage you to focus on you, on your part of what you experienced, and how your inner voice is guiding you to choose differently going forward. He or she (i.e., your "ex") has to do their own work, if they are inclined.