Tweets of Two Weeks

– Just completed AoH with Labour Educators. A gift to be part of such movements and with friends who are learning at edges.

– Great ride from Toronto to Port Elgin with Lynn (CLC) and Esther. Talking about “democracy deficit” and the case for organized labour.

– On my way to Port Elgin, Ontario to begin a week of work with Canadian Labour Congress. And I hope a piece of Thanksgiving pumpkin pie.

– Living this — We project meaning upon symbols, and in so doing, come to understand more of our inner condition that creates outer reality.

– Cafe Zinger Bowen AoH — Thomas Brackett on stretching: “What would it take for us to experience the chasm stretch of not-knowing as dance?”

– Cafe Zinger, Bowen Island — Chris Corrigan on emergence: “When everybody takes something that nobody came with.”

– People arriving on Bowen for AoH. Beginning tonight with a cafe on the stretch of today that makes it important for us to learn together.

– Headed to Seattle, then Bowen Island to host AoH. Feeling quite excited to see friends on the participant list. New learning here we come.

Twitter: TennesonWoolf

Intuitive Knowing

I returned this week from an Art of Hosting Training, working with Chris Corrigan, Caitlin Frost, and Teresa Posakony. Bowen Island, just off the west coast of Vancouver, British Columbia, is suuuuch a lovely place to host. Rivendell, the retreat center holds a group well. It is quite cozy — which usually makes for great community and learning.

While there, I hosted an Open Space session on Intuitive Knowing. I wanted to explore this as a tool for shifting paradigms. It fit well in the context of this training, which began with a cafe on “Where do you feel stretched now?” It was affirmation together that the times are changing, and, yes, it is a time to not only pick up tools but to re-learn and un-learn learning itself.

It was great to see so many people interested. We each expressed a bit of why we were interested in intuitive knowing. This itself was quite helpful, some naming of desires. It included everything from seeking more efficient ways of being to working deliberately with dreams and visions. From the deep dives of trusting old wisdom and owning our roles as alchemists to the immediate beginning practices of strengthening intuition through journaling. A common thread for me was the desire to be better translators, better listeners, and better receivers through intuitive knowing.

Through sharing a few stories together, we began to listen in for a few principles and practices to strengthen intuitive knowing. Each of these feels like it can be a practice for living. Our full harvest sheet is here for perusing.

  • Follow the impression, the ease.
  • Own the calling (the times seem to keep speaking it to us) — who do I think I am not to do it?
  • Welcome the wholeness of the world (life and consciousness seen as one entity) that wants to be in partnership with us and speaks to us through intuitive ears. What if the things that grab out attention are gifts of communication from this wholeness of the world so that we can learn at new levels?
  • Remember old ways. First respect your elders. Then become one. Be your 100 year-old self (thanks Amanda Fenton in particular for this), sometimes welcomed through initiation by elders or mentors.

My experience of learning in this group, in and of itself, was great. What it opened me too was even more beautiful, this topic and inquiry:

The world offers us symbols
so that we might project meaning upon them,
and in so doing,
come to understand more of our inner condition
that is in fact creating our outer reality.

This is a deep learning for me. It is something that has been distilling now for a number of years. So, thanks to all the good friends at Bowen Art of Hosting! This is one for some further reflection and writing over the next season or so.

Tweets of Two Weeks

Some of the journey shared through tweets of the last couple of weeks. I’m finding it quite helpful to tweet — a level of attending to life through expression of snippets. I’m also finding twitter a helpful way of staying in touch, with the life stream of people, events, news.

– School for Hackers — Perhaps all in new paradigms are hackers (http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/10/school-for-hackers/8218/

– On simplicity, from an NPR radio program on the ukulele: “An orchestra can tell you stories. But an ukulele tells the truth.” 🙂

– “@benjaminaaron: “queepening” = the process of deepening into a question through questions instead of seeking answers”

– Also readying for Art of Hosting in Arnprior, Ontario, near Ottawa (http://berkana.org/pdf/AoHOntarioOct2010.pdf). Join us.

– Preparing for upcoming work with labour educators in the Canadian Labour Congress (http://www.box.net/shared/1tjs2sc97l)

– Just walked 2.5 miles on Heritage Trail. From a townhome I just agreed to buy, to the Shoreline Trail in the Uinta Forest. Still and quiet.

– Jackie Wright (Red Cross) on Art of Hosting: “the process enriched my personal and professional life and bring clarity to my path.”

– Meg Wheatley 3 minute video (http://www.vimeo.com/12939130) — “Life seeks order but uses messy processes to get there.” Yes!

Twitter: TennesonWoolf

Engaging Emergence

One of the books I’m perusing these days, and finding particularly helpful, is Peggy Holman’s Engaging Emergence. It is good to know Peggy well enough to see her face and  hear her voice when reading the words. I can feel the gift of her experience coming forward nicely in this book.

In particular, I’m appreciating some of her early framing. All beneath the umbrella of “emergence,” I can hear Peggy offers some simple invitations:

1. To notice the relationship between complexity and breakthrough. She talks about how many of today’s challenges are complex — in nations, organizations, teams, communities, and families. It’s natural to invite people together to do something about these challenges. But here is the rub — doing so can make it more complex! Peggy has a nice way of inviting the breakthrough that can arrive in that complex group of people. It is well-framed to notice that without the complexity, we may never get to the new solutions we so need.

2. To give focus to what I would call “our job” as we engage emergence. First, embrace the mystery. Second, follow life energy. And third, choose possibility. These help add to ways I’ve been naming “our job” with clients and people in systems. I often speak it as “surrender to surprise,” or “follow the spark of yes,” and as my colleague Teresa Posakony often says, “live at the scale of our dreams.”

3. To welcome the benefits of emergence. This is particularly helpful as I think about people and clients I know that are considering participative ways of working and learning. People want to be effective. There is often a worry / doubt / fear that engaging emergence won’t yield enough result. Here’s Peggy’s description of five benefits that feel like gifts in any system.
•Individuals are stretched and refreshed.
•New and unlikely partnerships form.
•Breakthrough projects surface.
•Community is strengthened.
•The culture begins to change.

Thanks Peggy. Well-framed for inviting and doing great work. Well-framed for helping to shift the culture and paradigm of leadership.

Gifts of Circle - Question Cardsasd
Gifts of Circle is 30 short essays divided into 4 sections: 1) Circle's Bigger Purpose, 2) Circle's Practice, 3) Circle's First Requirements, and 4) Circle's Possibility for Men. From the Introduction: "Circle is what I turn to in the most comprehensive stories I know -- the stories of human beings trying to be kind and aware together, trying to make a difference in varied causes for which we need to go well together. Circle is also what I turn to in the most immediate needs that live right in front of me and in front of most of us -- sharing dreams and difficulties, exploring conflicts and coherences. Circle is what I turn to. Circle is what turns us to each other."

Question Cards is an accompanying tool to Gifts of Circle. Each card (34) offers a quote from the corresponding chapter in the book, followed by sample questions to grow your Circle hosting skills and to create connection, courage, and compassionate action among groups you host in Circle.

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In My Nature
is a collection of 10 poems. From A Note of Beginning: "This collection of poems arises from the many conversations I've been having about nature. Nature as guide. Nature as wild. Nature as organized. I remain a human being that so appreciates a curious nature in people. That so appreciates questions that pick fruit from inner being, that gather insights and intuitions to a basket, and then brings the to table to be enjoyed and shared over the next week."

This set of Note Cards (8 cards + envelopes)  quotes a few favorite passages from poems in In My Nature. I offer them as inspiration. And leave room for you to write personal notes.

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Most Mornings is a collection of 37 poems. I loved writing them. From the introduction: "This collection of poems comes from some of my sense-making that so often happens in the morning, nurtured by overnight sleep. The poems sample practices. They sample learnings. They sample insights and discoveries. They sample dilemmas and concerns."

This set of Note Cards (8 cards + envelopes)  quotes a few favorite passages from poems in Most Mornings. I offer them as inspiration. And leave room for you to write personal notes.

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