People in conversation

A Better Question: Vaccination

Essential Partners
Vaccination

Since 1989, Essential Partners has been helping people navigate deep differences in identity. It is understandable when people reach out to ask us to comment on a current crisis in our world. How can communities like Ferguson, Missouri resolve the tension tearing them apart? What can dialogue do for the people of Paris after the latest shootings? How do we resolve our differences about same-sex marriage?

We don’t know. Essential Partners doesn’t presume to know what any community should or shouldn’t do without the deep preparation, collaboration, and local awareness that has made our work effective for so long. So, what can we offer the conversation about these highly visible, hotly contested issues without being prescriptive? A better question. A better question than “should we or shouldn’t we?” A better question than “How can you think that way?” A better question than you’d be likely to hear on TV or social media.

We have decided to offer this as a new series on our blog – it will appear from time to time when a polarizing conversation seems like it could benefit from “A Better Question.” The series is meant to inspire people to have a better conversation in their communities, with their friends and family. It is meant to help bring a little more understanding and a little less demonization. We believe the best conversations are the ones that start with questions, and that most conversations are only as good as the question that starts them.

The first entry is a set of questions that relate to the issue of vaccination in children, a hotly debated issue that has come to prominence in recent months since the outbreak of diseases we thought long vanished. The conversation is a difficult one: it’s about our children, our health, and some of our deeply held values. Rather than shaking your head, or your fist, at someone who doesn’t share your view on vaccination, we invite you to start a conversation with some better questions:

  • What are the core values or commitments that frame your views on vaccination?
  • What do you take into account when deciding which information sources you trust about vaccinations?
  • What have you heard said about your views that leaves you feeling mischaracterized?
  • What do you want folks on the other side of this issue to most understand about your thinking and motivations?
  • Where, if at all, do you feel pulled in different directions, have mixed feelings, areas of less certainty, etc.?
  • How have you learned about those whose viewpoints differ from yours? What else might you want to find out about them?
  • What do you think the media, government or others could do to help or hurt this current situation?

What other questions would you add to this list? Let us know and join the conversation.