Finding My Voice in Shared Spaces

It has happened to me many times that during extracurricular activities, roundtable discussions, or even simple conversation clubs, I hesitated to voice my thoughts. I worried that the person in front of me might think completely differently, or judge me for it. Have you ever felt the same?

I’ll be honest: I am a conflict-avoider. If a conversation feels like it might turn into an argument, or even mild tension, I often pull back. I listen. I try to understand. But I stay quiet, afraid that being different might also mean not being accepted. For a long time, I thought this was simply okay. But over time, especially through international experiences, I began noticing how many of us carry the same hesitation, and how much we lose when silence replaces real dialogue.

It wasn’t until I found myself in spaces where disagreement was not avoided, but held with care, that I realized something was missing from the way I understood communication. This was my first encounter with what is called constructive dialogue. During the year I spent with the Maailmanvaihto – ICYE office, I slowly began to notice that conversations there felt different. Meetings, reflections, even challenging discussions carried a sense of calm and safety that I hadn’t often experienced before. One of the things I came to appreciate most were their safer space guidelines. They weren’t just words on paper. They shaped how people listened and how they responded, encouraging respect, active listening, and a genuine chance to be heard. Everyone was reminded that their voice mattered, and that openness and care were not optional.

These same principles were carried into the camps. Through sessions on everything from environmental issues to mental health and global challenges, I watched volunteers slowly open up. People who were quiet on the first day began to share, not only to express themselves, but also to learn from one another. Because how else do we really grow, if not by listening to perspectives different from our own?

I remember one particular moment that stayed with me. We were sitting together, talking about environmental issues, when the conversation slowly turned toward climate anxiety. Not policies. Not statistics. But how the climate crisis actually makes us feel. Some people spoke about fear, others about guilt, exhaustion, or helplessness. There was no rush to respond, no pressure to fix what someone else was feeling. Just a shared space to be vulnerable, and people who listened. What stayed with me was how naturally everyone’s emotions were treated as valid. We didn’t always agree. But we could express our perspectives without that familiar tension about where the conversation might go.

Moments like this made me realize that constructive dialogue is not about reaching agreement. It is about staying in conversation, and choosing understanding even when it feels uncomfortable. It is a shared effort, approaching others’ perspectives with openness, while trusting that they are doing the same with yours. And ultimately, it is about creating spaces where people feel safe enough to show up as they are.

“There was no rush to respond, no pressure to fix what someone else was feeling. Just a shared space to be vulnerable, and people who listened. What stayed with me was how naturally everyone’s emotions were treated as valid. We didn’t always agree. But we could express our perspectives without that familiar tension about where the conversation might go.”

What makes Maailmanvaihto’s camps especially meaningful is that they do not exist in isolation. They prepare volunteers for what comes next, for living, working, and building relationships in unfamiliar environments, where misunderstandings, differences, and difficult conversations are inevitable. In a world where much of our communication happens through screens, real, face-to-face dialogue is slowly becoming a lost skill. We scroll, react, and comment, but we rarely sit together, listen deeply, and express ourselves in the presence of others. Over time, this creates distance. And often, silence.

Camps offer something different. Through shared discussions, reflection circles, and guided sessions, volunteers practice being present. They practice listening to perspectives that challenge their own. And they practice voicing their thoughts, even when it feels uncomfortable. In this way, camps become training grounds not only for volunteering, but for constructive dialogue itself.

I can’t say that I am suddenly great at expressing my opinions. But I carry something I didn’t before: awareness, intention, and the first small courage to stay in the conversation. The camps planted a seed, and like any real skill, it is still a work in progress. One I now try to nurture consciously, in conversations, in communities, and in everyday life.

Text: Dilbar Aliyeva
Photo: Maailmanvaihto’s album

About the photo: at camps, Maailmanvaihto aims at offering safer shared spaces for preparing for international volunteering and deepening learning through it.

The story has been published in MaailmanVaihtoa – Volunteers’ Voices 1/2026: peace through international volunteering.

The writer Dilbar Aliyeva volunteered in Maailmanvaihto’s office team through the European Solidarity Corps.

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