Thursday 23 February 2017

Tacit Knowing


March 2017

 Tacit Knowing by Dr Elizabeth McCardell, BA, BA (Hons), M. Couns., PhD

     Perception is a funny thing. You can notice some things straight away but not even see other things, and we are quite different in this way.  For instance, I have a large Japanese torii painted red in my front garden. It is in plain sight, but not everyone sees it. A friend came by and had to be shown where it was, even though he’d parked his car directly in front of it. A torii is a gateway with no walls and symbolizes the passage from this world and the next. It is a very visually pleasing structure and frames my garden beautifully.

     Not seeing something doesn’t mean the object is completely out of awareness. A person encountering my torii for the first time would not attempt to walk into the wooden frame; some knowledge of its existence is present, albeit not conscious.
At some level the person has some tacit knowing of this thing, but there is nevertheless a certain blindness that needs to be addressed. What else, I wonder, in my friend’s life that is not seen? What else might he benefit from seeing?

     Tacit knowledge is defined as knowledge that isn’t explicit and cannot be easily transferred via direct language. This is the kind of knowledge we have when we have acquired the ability to ride a bicycle, or play a musical instrument, or get a sense of the geography of a town. We can speak of elements of the negotiation of these things, but a large knowledge base is known at another level. We can convey a sense of it through artwork, hypnosis, stories and poetry, and we explore it also in our dreams and reverie. It is a kind of knowing that is very rich and, when understood better, can enhance our lives through offering solutions we didn’t even know we had. In my psychotherapeutic and clinical hypnotherapeutic work I deliberately set about bringing those partly obscured knowledges into the light so they can be consciously accessed.

     I’m thinking here of a woman client who was feeling bereft at how the people in her life were apparently trying to strip away everything she loved. I reminded her of how each time she settled in a place, she created great beauty, even with very little. In other words, she had unconscious skills to make spaces that are lovely. Certainly others had abused her by taking her for granted and stealing things from her as well, but her inherent knowledge of the right placement of things , the feng shui, meant that, at a tacit level, she knows (although she doubts) what should go where, and what should be left out: the very skills needed to create boundaries around herself so that she cannot be abused. By drawing attention to her tacit knowing, she begins to have the skills required to take back her life and live the life her heart desires.

     Tacit knowing can be built upon and strengthened. Regarding the woman just described, the reconnected skills of boundary making and right placement of intent in relation to certain other people that I suggested she deliberately utilize will, over time, become a second nature, a tacit knowledge. For now, though, the knowledge she has in the making of beautiful spaces needs to be explicitly utilized in the right placement of those people she can trust and those she feels are not right for her. This kind of knowledge has to be worked upon deliberately and face on and simply and with regard to ethics and the law. The explicit is not subtle. There is likely to come a time when she just knows what do, what to say, how to be in a way that nurtures her in the way she knows as the creative person she is.

     I like my torii and I like the symbol it portrays. It is a gestalt figure that is both figure and ground and explicit and implicit being in the one thing. Walking through the torii I move from space to space acknowledging the many kinds of knowing, and it is a delight. Neither matters individually, except as the whole.