Peggy Holman’s New Book — Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity

I’m happy to share Peggy Holman’s launch of her new book. She is the kind of friend and colleague that I always feel a particular appreciation for. Though we haven’t seen each other a lot, when we do, it has the feeling for me of old, old, dear friend. Her writings have often inspired me. Her presence is a gift. Her insights and ability to bring together many ideas and make them accessible is remarkable.

I was glad to have Peggy include a story I offered of hosting experiences with CUPE, the Canadian Union of Public Employees. It was work with friend and colleague, Cathy Remus of CUPE, and hosting colleagues, Chris Corrigan, Nancy Fritsche-Egan, and Angela Amel.

A longer version of that story is here — with a bow to Peggy for her tasteful and skillful edit to a shorter version that worked for her book.

Below is Peggy’s invitation. Check it out. And reach her directly too.

Engaging Emergence: Turning Upheaval into Opportunity is almost here… I’m excited to share the news that my book will ship from the printer on August 6th!

As it makes its way to the major online booksellers, and other retailers across the country, I’d love your support by pre-ordering the book. Pre-orders tell the online booksellers that the book is generating buzz in the marketplace and that it will have broad appeal once available.  A strong pre-order campaign also influences how many copies the online stores will order and stock.

To get that buzz going, I’m asking everyone I know to help me get the book off to a fast start!  Please consider picking up a copy of the book, perhaps even ordering a second copy as a gift for a friend.  Or forward this message on to people you think would find the book of interest so that they can pre-order a copy for themselves.

I’m thrilled with how the book turned out.  Esthetically, it is beautiful.  And based on the feedback from many of you, people find the content useful and inspiring.  I look forward to your comments.

Engaging Emergence offers principles, practices, and real-word stories for bringing compassion, creativity, and wisdom to the entire arc of change—from disruption to coherence.  For more about the contents, visit http://www.engagingemergence.com.

You can even check out the text – http://peggyholman.com/PH-WordPress/papers/engaging-emergence/engaging-emergence-table-of-contents.  For Tenneson’s story, see chapter 4, Prepare: Foster an Attitude for Engaging.  The story follows the subhead “Follow Life Energy: Trust Deeper Sources of Direction”.

To pre-order the book from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or directly from Berrett-Koehler Publishers use the links below:

Amazon

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1605095214?ie=UTF8&tag=opencirclecom-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1605095214

Barnes and Noble

http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Engaging-Emergence/Peggy-Holman/e/9781605095219/?itm=1&USRI=Engaging+Emergence

Berrett-Koehler Publishers

http://www.bkconnection.com/ProdDetails.asp?ID=9781605095219

Community of Practice Monthly Meetings — A Simple Design for Meeting in Circle

Many people that I know through Art of Hosting trainings (participants) are very hungry to be in regular contact with each other. Five – six years ago, that hunger was fulfilled through periodic phone calls, or list-serves, or other form of electronic connection. People lived in different geographic regions of the country, continent, and world. More currently, the pattern has been groups of people able to meet face-to-face locally. Eighty-five per cent of participants tend to be local. Local learning communities are forming to support each other in their projects. Many are carrying forward their learnings from the Art of Hosting, growing the more loose association of a network into a deliberate community of applied practice.

This is all good news. Yet, I’ve noticed that many people are wondering what form to meet in. What design. Sometimes it seems that the broad experience of three days together blurs the clarity of what to do with each other when there is two hours to meet. How can we do all of that in two hours!

Here is a format I’ve been recommending that has been helpful. With a couple of gratitudes. One to friend and colleague, Kelly McGowan in New York. She and a few other local colleagues offered a starting format for community of practice circles, every month, that were project focussed (their prototype is here). A second gratitude is to Christina Baldwin and Ann Linnea of PeerSpirit. They were my first teachers in the process of Circle, with is the best format I know for people to retouch a deep center of purpose together and then ground conversation in practical work and essential learning.

In this case, assuming a group of up to about 12 people meeting for two hours.

Intentions
-a group of colleagues supporting each other in applied practice of hosting methods (and frameworks, and world view) to grounded work
-co-learning (even though each meeting is focussed on one project, the learning often applies to everyone’s current work)
-meet in inquiry, the magic of what is available in the group that isn’t available as an individual

Prework
-a simple and clear invitation so that people can know, and deliberately choose to come, and that offers a synopsis of the project focus for that time

Design
-10 minutes Welcome & Context (sit in circle; rename the project; the project host names the inquiry that is important to them, tells some of the story of why this matters to them)
-20 minutes Checkin (welcome each person to speak a bit personally of how they are, or to share anything that helps them be present; also have each person speak a bit on how they connect to the project focus of the evening)
-45 minutes Deepening (offerings of questions to the project host, open conversation about the issues, responses to the particular help that the project host has requested, relating stories, etc.)
-10 minutes Break
-20 minutes Harvest & Reflective Learnings (pass a talking piece on what each has learned and how it connects to the specifics of the project, as well as the general principles in conversational leadership; reflections from the project host on specific learnings; helps to have someone offer to harvest as they participate to give to the project host; notice together what had particular energy as the group interacted and learned; capture this and make it visible on flipchart that can be photographed and shared with all; this is also a time for offerings — some will offer specific bits of support or collaboration with the project host)
-10 minutes Checkout (have each speak to what they leave with; appreciations, gratitudes)

Of course there are many variations of this that will work. Great. These are a few essentials that just work. And our grounded in the deeper theory and patterns of conversational leadership and hosting conversations. And keep people in their learning and application of what they learn.

This is all something to practice. Have some fun with. To be light with. To be serious with. And, I would say, a way of tending to the work that we know we must do, with boldness, with deliberateness, and with simplicity and clarity.

Ideas that Inspire

In this case, inspire me and others to be in a new story. New story of change. Of who we are as humans. Of our ability to see the new and welcome it.

I read both in Meg Wheatley’s book, Perseverance.

“When his ship first came to Australia, Cook wrote, the natives continued fishing, without looking up. Unable, it seems, to fear what was too large to be comprehended.”

Jane Hirschfield, Poet

“We’re never ever gonna survive unless we get a little bit crazy.”

Seal, Singer / songwriter

Has me thinking of dialogues that feel important. What might we not see in a new story because it is so big? How might we welcome added capacity to be crazy?

Perseverance, Here Comes Everybody

I’m enjoying a bit of reading this morning. From my balcony on a sunny and warm summer day. Before I dive into a bunch of email and project tasks. In many ways it feels like I don’t have time, or shouldn’t make time for this reading. Yet, I can’t help but be drawn to the wellness of exploring some ideas. These always tend to ground my project work. And help me to feel a wellness that I know many of us seek in these busy and changing times.

I’m enjoying two books. One is “Perseverance,” by Meg Wheatley. It is a short book. One to carry with you. Read a page or two here and there. Open it randomly to a page and welcome a thought for the day. Meg is a master conversation starter in person and in her writings. This book is a great resource for those purposes, and the outcomes of wellness that show us when a community practices inquiry and listening together.

Today’s pages were on Choice, Being Stuck, and Control. I love the way Meg has woven her thinking into quotes and poems. This one today by the Sufi mystic and poet, Rumi, “Sit down and be quiet. You are drunk. And this is the edge of the roof.” Meg offered it with her short piece on Stuck. It is an invitation to notice our patterns when we are stuck, when we feel stuck.

The second book is one I’ve been reading for a while. Each time I pick it up I feel a particular energy with it. Clay Shirky’s, “Here Comes Everybody.” I reference this book a lot. Shirky helps me to feel the energy of working with self-organization and emergence through the stories he tells and the principles he shares.

Today, some inspirations from a chapter, “everyone is a media outlet.” Shirky describes the “mass amateurization” of media. Many avenues to name news and amplify it through connected networks and “radical spread of expressive capabilities.”

Both these books help me to feel more of the pulse of work that I am in. Clarity. Insight. And a lot of joy on a summer morning on a balcony.

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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