Human Relations Ch.3
Johari Window
A composite site of four panes that shows you ways of relating to others: the open, blind, hidden, and unknown
Nonconversation
A way to describe the amount of actual information in cliché conversation
Peak
Communication characterized by complete openness and honest self-disclosure. It happens rarely.
Ideas and judgements
Expressed through conscious thoughts, opinions, and theories in this level of communication
Gut-level
Level of communication in which feelings are expressed honestly
Self-disclosure
The ability to let another person know what is real about your thoughts, desires, and feelings
Self-awareness
The ability to see yourself realistically, without a great deal of difference between what you are and how you assume others see you
Cliche
The level of communication with the least amount of self-disclosure, including niceties such as "Have a nice day."
Blind pane
The pane in the Johari Window that contains everything other people can see about you, but you can't see about yourself.
Hidden pane
The pane in the Johari Window that contains information and feelings that you are hiding from other people
Unknown pane
The pane in the Johari Window that contains unknown talents, abilities, and attitudes, as well as forgotten and repressed experiences, emotions, and possibilities
Open pane
The pane in the Johari window that contains information that you know about yourself and that you have no reason to hide
Repress
To block off memories that may cause pain, embarrassment, or guilt