A Story of Unlearning Norms
Ali grew up in a culture that prized stoicism... “Don’t show weakness.” At work, she avoided asking for help, burning out in silence. She listed every scenario where she’d held back support requests, then researched cultures and teams that valued vulnerability. She adopted a new personal norm: “Strength includes asking.” She practised small requests: “Could you review this draft?” Each positive response rewrote her expectation of safety in openness.
A Mini-Workshop: Norms-Contrast Exposure
Use this when you feel torn between expectation and impulse:
- Identify one “normal” rule you follow automatically (“Work comes first,” “We don’t challenge elders”).
- List two alternative norms from other contexts or cultures (“Balance matters,” “Respect includes honest feedback”).
- Notice the discomfort or relief each norm evokes.
- Choose which norm you want to test in your next relevant situation.
- Declare it aloud before you act... “I prioritise balance”... and observe the result.
- Journal the experience: note shifts in emotion, relationships or outcomes.
Each contrast you try weakens the hold of unexamined expectations.
Collaborative Reflection: Norms Test
Partner with someone from a different background or team. Share one cultural norm you’re questioning. Invite them to describe how they do things in their context. Then role-play one scenario using your new chosen norm, and coach each other through the shift.
Next Steps
- Explore Internalised Beliefs to see how broader norms shape individual scripts.
- Get The Dirt for weekly-ish rambles about how this mind stuff plays out in real life.
Further Reading
- Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison
- Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste
- bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom
Cultural “normal” is a choice, not a mandate... choose consciously.