Bloody Chicago#
by Melody Brooke, MA, Conflict Coach, Motivational Speaker

Gangland Chicago

Chicago has suffered another horrible weekend of what are most likely gang related shootings.  36 people were shot over the course of one single weekend.  I don’t know what the numbers were in the 20’s and 30’s when the mafia was running Chicago but I don’t imagine it was any worse than this. 

What drives this kind of violence? The police and others want to blame the guns for the problems.  I’m reminded of the movie West Side Story when I hear that.  They didn’t need guns to kill people. Maybe fewer people get killed, but killing still happens.  Blaming the guns doesn’t really get to the heart of the matter.  When we understand the Cycle of Egocentrism we can begin to see how the horrors of this kind of violence are triggered.

Gangs and the Cycle of Egocentrism

Gangs are the epitome of the Cycle of Egocentrism at work.  Someone at some point felt damaged by someone else in a different gang, heck, maybe that is what started the gang in the first place. Maybe someone’s friend was insulted, hurt, or killed by someone (thereby becoming a Victim) and the friend gathered up a bunch of their mutual friends and became a gang (then becoming a group of Self-Protectors).  Now they target this other person (another Victim), who in turn gathers up his friends and they became a gang (another group of Self-Protectors).   The blame game ensues and all that results is pain and death.

The Cycle and us

How many times in our lives have we become stuck in the Victim/Self-Protector cycle of blame? I know when I got divorced (both times) I was convinced the guy was horrible.  I made up all kinds of good reasons that my friends agreed with about how awful they were. And, yes, their behaviors were awful.  My friends and I judged them as being to blame for everything that happened in my relationship and I could see no complicity on my part.  He was the one that was screwing around, after all.  He was the one with the temper. He was the one behaving irresponsibly.  I never saw that I owned as much responsibility for what occurred in our relationship as my husbands.  I was trapped in the blame game just as surely as those gang members. 

The growing divorce rate

The Cycle of Egocentrism explains the growing divorce rate better than any thing else. When we get caught up in a Cycle of Egocentrism we believe we are the Victim, and our spouse is the Self-Protector/Perpetrator.  Our only choice is to look for Rescue.  A Lawyer makes a good Rescuer.  The lawyer starts handing out harsh complaints against our spouse and we feel much better.  Of course, then we become the Self-Protector/Perpetrator don’t we? Our spouse then gets so hurt and angry, and they lash back with their own Lawyer. Breaking that cycle is the only way to really change everything.

How are you engaged in the Cycle of Egocentrism?

Have you ever found yourself stuck in blame and battling for survival? If you are or have been caught up in the drama, I’d love to hear how your story turned out. Comment below.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008 7:48:30 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00) #    Comments [2]  | 
Monday, April 28, 2008 9:00:00 PM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)

"What drives this kind of violence?"

I tend to think things like this come about when "there is not enough." When human needs are not being met.

Those needs may be pragmatic or emotional in nature.

When there is "enough" for both man and his neighbors, I think man's agression level drops way down, and can only be arroused by the political manuverings of their leaders. Even then citizens may resist.

However, when there is "not enough" people become hyper-vigalant and ultra-sensitive to percieved threats, both real and otherwise.

Rapidly a tipping point is reached, and social equilbrium can break down. Just as we are seeing in Chicago.

Granted egocentrisum may play a role here, but in Beverly Hills I suspect it is played out by buying a bigger car than your neighbor, rather than blowing them away with a 45.
Robert Johnson
Tuesday, April 29, 2008 6:37:05 AM (Central Standard Time, UTC-06:00)
Absolutely right. Violence like we are seeing in Chicago is an issue of needs not being met. The egocentrism I refer to comes the blame associated with the idea that we are the victim of someone or something else. When we feel we are not getting enough and we look to someone to blame our violence erupts toward the person we view as to blame either directly or indirectly. The type of egocentrism you refer to in the Beverly Hills example is more narcissism, focused on a perceived lack of personal value that you make up for by supplementation in some form.
Thank you for your comments.
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