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Opening day! Excitement for Rovers, meh for my other teams.

April 2, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Football, Sports No Comments

It’s the opening day for our 2025 TSS Rovers season. Canada’s only supporter owned football club, playing in the newly rebranded BC Premier League take to the field tonight away to Burnaby FC. We are fielding a very new team of men’s players, moving on from the past four years where we were a destination for many players wanting to get in the shop window thanks to our record of participation in the Canadian Championship. We were pipped at the last minute for the league title last year when Langley scored the winner on a last kick penalty in the last game of the BCPL season to secure the championship. So we aren’t in that tournament this year. As a result we are a mix of seasoned hands like Ali Zohar, now in his fifth year with our team, and young talent that has a chance to step into the spotlight. A number of player’s from our club’s U21 side will make the jump to the first team this year, including Ronan Ward, a promising young striker that blew away the competition for Golden Boot in the Vancouver Metro Soccer League U21 division.

On the women’s side, our team of warriors who secured their first ever Metro Women’s Soccer League championship this season will start the season together and will be joined by a number of veterans returning from University play in Canada and the USA. We have always finished 4th in the past four years, but we’re all very optimistic that this group can better that. Not an easy task when they are playing against the Vancouver Rise academy, and Altitude FC, a team made up largely of the national champion UBC Thunderbirds. Chemistry counts, and a season of holding on to top spot right up to the final game in the MWSL gave them much needed experience of that pressure to win. Winning it was a vindication for our approach that emphasizes development and style of play. The points followed.

There is nothing like opening night of the season to get the blood pumping. It feel like Christmas Day.

When I look around at the other sports teams I am emotionally invested in, the scene is bleak. The Toronto Maple Leafs are well out of the playoff race despite a good win on Monday. Tottenham Hotspur are facing relegation and with seven games left in this season they have appointed Roberto de Zerbi to replace Ange Postacoglu, Thomas Frank, Igor Tudor. Spurs are on the verge of suffering the worst punishment a Premier League team can endure. My son pointed out to me last night that a little under a year ago, we were at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium watching them beat Southampton 3-1, relegating the Saints in the process. That was only four Premier-League-wins-at-home ago. Dreadful.

Meanwhile The Vancouver Goldeneyes fell victim to the Montreal Victoire who set a PWHL points streak record and secured a playoff spot with a 3-0 win over our local women. The talk of tanking has stopped, becasue the PWHL, in all their wisdom have implemented the solution to the problems of rewarding the worst team with the perverse incentive of selecting the best available player in the draft. I’m just new to the league, so it was only this week when I was told about the Gold Plan, which ranks teams eliminated from the playoffs by how many points they acquire at the end of the season. This is the answer to the bizarre feature of North American sports where the worst team gets the biggest prize in terms of new talents.

On the pitch the Vancouver Rise are getting ready to start their season with two former Rovers in the side. Kirstin Tynan is back at keeper and Mia Pante has come home on a loan spell from Italian giants AC Roma, where she wasn’t getting a lot of playing time. I’m looking forward to them making a serious run at repeating as playoff champions.

On the men’s side, the National team played its final two friendlies before the World Cup during this break, finishing with two draws. They played Iceland to a 2-2 result on Friday and on Tuesday drew Tunisia 0-0. Former Rover Joel Waterman started both games. Our centre back positions have some tough competition and Joel survived the test. But once Bambino and de Fougerolles are healthy, he’ll need everything in his talent locker to get a start in the World Cup.

Bosnia and Herzegovina awaits. (Mi dispiace per la vostra perdita, amici miei italiani)

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West Side Story, estuarine thinking, and the art of hosting

April 1, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Complexity, Containers, Culture, Emergence, Facilitation, Featured, Organization, Power No Comments

Dave Snowden concluded his six-part series on the Channel and the Estuary this week. He used gangster movies and TV Series to illustrate the different kinds of contexts in which people are sense-making. The series contrasted the categorical ambiguity and gradients represented by the ecology of a tidal estuary with the managed and ordered passageway through uncertainty represented by the marked channel. The metaphors are meaningful for coastal people, and anyone who has had to navigate these kinds of marine ecosystems. The point is that navigating in the estuary and in the channel requires different approaches to sense-making.

The whole series deserves to be read and thought through, as it is an important declaration of what “complexity thinking” really is and what it requires from the complexity practitioner. It is also a warning against the way in which we receive the world in a pre-channeled, dredged state, made easier for us; “facilitated” one might say, especially by the digitization of our experience, which has dredged and channelled the world and offered us pre-designed categories of experience.

Dave’s series contains an embedded tribute to those whose lot in life requires them to practice estuarine thinking in a world of pre-cut channels. It recognizes the loneliness that such people sometimes experience and the separateness they often feel. It is also a call to action for an approach to organizational life that treats complexity as a context in which we are required to deploy “estuarine thinking.” These are lost capacities – exiled capacities, if you like – and we lose something essential if they disappear.

I have been wrestling with this series from the perspective of a person who hosts conversations in organizations and communities. Dave’s work has deeply shaped the way I view and practice facilitation over the past 15 years or so. It has left me in a liminal space of practice. I try to locate myself adjacent to those in the ‘facilitation’ world, those who are dialogic practitioners, and folks who are exploring the implications that complexity has for their practice. I say adjacent because I am aware that although I use the language of facilitation, dialogue, and hosting, I find that much of the practice in these fields fails to confront the complexity of human groups and systems. We all have work to do to build our practice around Dave’s invitation, not just in these posts but in his work in general as it relates to complex facilitation.

The thing about complexity is that once you see it you can’t unsee it, and Dave’s refection on the gangsters and business mavens from Guinness, Peaky Blinders and The Godfather had me noticing similar patterns in the stories I was encountering. Last weekend, we attended a screening of the 1961 version of the film West Side Story, which is unbelievably contemporary in many ways, not the least of which is that it explores what happens when people are born into a world of tight constraints not of their making. I have never seen the film or the musical, so this was all new to me. There is A LOT I can say about this film, and perhaps it deserves a whole other post to explore some of the themes, but one scene stood out to me in particular, and I think anyone who engages in facilitation (or community development or consulting or organizing) might find it beneficial to watch this and reflect.

The two gangs, the Jets and the Sharks, are locked in a struggle against each other, divided by ethnicity, neighbourhood, history, and class. Tony, the former leader of the Jets, falls in love with Maria, the younger sister of the Sharks’ leader. Their love crosses the boundaries of gangs, race, history, and tradition. Both gangs sing about the constraints of their worlds: childhood trauma, exclusion, racism, homesickness, loyalty, and the struggle to belong. At a critical point in the film, both gangs agree to meet at a dance in what they consider ‘neutral’ territory.

The dance is run by a social worker called Glad Hand, played beautiful by John Astin. Glad Hand, armed with his clipboard and his whistle, has some activities planned for the dance, and he naively tries to mix up the crowd of teenagers, probably so that they might have a different kind of experience of getting to know one another. His design for the evening is almost totally ignorant of the contexts that make it impossible for this dance to have any kind of success. It is a well-intentioned effort that goes terribly wrong. You can see the painfully earnest effort on Astin’s face, convinced that he is bringing a hopeful and helpful evening to this group of poor immigrant youth.

In the key scene, Glad Hand organizes the teenagers into a circle dance. the idea is that the girls walk one way and the boys walk the other and when he blows the whistle you have to dance with who ever you are standing in front of. He says “form a circle. Boys will be on the outside, girls will be on the inside.” Action, one of the Jets who has the best, most cynical quips in the films asks “And where will you be?” Glad Hand chuckles nervously with an awkward smile and ignores the question.

It takes a few moments for anyone to move into the circle. There is no trust between the teens and Glad Hand and everybody is HYPER aware of the dynamics in the room which Glad Hand has just gleefully ignored in favour of his plans and his clipboard. He has tried to create “safe” space and the gangs understand this as “neutral” space, which is a very different thing. “Neutral” requires that you keep your guard up and restrain your instincts. While Glad Hand is committed to civility, the gangs are actually committed to an uneasy peace in a social field that is filled with tension.

As the circle dance begins Glad Hand is clearly waiting for his chance to impose a predetermined outcome, where the Sharks girls will end up with the Jets boys and vice versa. It’s transparent and manipulative. The kids in the dance are looking anxiously around themselves, scanning the room and knowing exactly where they are in every moment. Glad Hand blows his whistle when the circles are lined up perfectly for his agenda. Immediately everyone catches on to what is happening. They stop, look around and break the exercise and go back into their couples and groups, and the dance disintegrates into a ritualized gang war, with the two sides doing their own thing more divided than ever. As the circle breaks down you can see the police officer running to Glad Hand and clearly reprimanding him for the situation he has created. This is the last we see of the social worker.

This is deeply familiar to me, and perhaps you too. For many of us the facilitation journey starts with tools and methods. A devotion to these creates a situation in which the context and pre-existing constraints are pushed into the background. When a group rebels against what I am doing. my experience has been that it is almost always the result of my own ignorance to what is happening in the group. These are hard lessons to learn, but important. It’s why I wrote the series on theory, to recognize that the dialogic containers in which we are working are embedded in multiple constraint regimes and landscapes of context which exert a more powerful influence on the present moment than a facilitated method.

Dave’s recent series pushes us to understand the capacity needed not only to enter into the ambiguous and uncertain space of complex situations, but to navigate once we are there. It calls me to a practice of constant self-reflection, knowing that in any situations it is impossible to map the next step, and recognizing that the channel markers I encounter are often the ones I have put down before, to protect myself, to avoid the messiness I can’t handle, to steer the group into a place where I am most comfortable or hopeful. Channels are not bad in and of themselves. But one cannot lose sight of the estuary in which the channel is dredged.

Relentless self-awareness is critical to leading in the estuary. Being aware of where we are in relation to what is happening, and knowing how to respond to the steadily changing context is the capacity. It is not often what people are contracting you for; so often the client wants certainty and structure and guidance. What is needed in complexity instead is a kind of learning scaffolding that for developing the capacity that people have for being in the estuary. Dredging a channel does not mean that we are no longer navigating in the salt marsh. On the contrary, it may well rob us of the ability to be able to do so.

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Cynthia Kurtz has a new set of PNI practicum offerings 

March 30, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Complexity, Facilitation, Learning, Stories No Comments

Earlier this month, Cynthia Kurtz announced that she was re-launching her Participatory Narrative Inquiry practicum courses.  This a really good opportunity to discover this set of practices and approach to working with stories.  

I was part of her first deep dive cohort a few years ago and it really was good.It stretched me and grounded me in this approach.  Cynthia is intending to offer these course three times a year starting in May. If you are curious about PNI, the introductory course is the way to go.  If you'd like to apply PNI to a small project, the PNI Essentials course will help you do that.

For a bigger project using NarraFirma, the Deep Dive course is what you need. It's important that you have a project in mind and ready to go for this course, because after all these are practicums.  You'll learn at a steady pace over 20 weeks with Cynthia and a cohort of co-learners. This is a significant investment of time, but it is well structured and incredibly useful and resource-rich useful learning.    

I'm really glad she is offering these programs.  Spread the word and consider joining one to learn directly from this font of knowledge and wisdom. Cynthia's work is powerful, practical and will almost certainly fill a need you're curious about, especially if you are a regular reader of this blog.

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Unrelenting Wave

March 26, 2026 By Chris Corrigan Football No Comments

San Diego Wave 3 – 1 Portland Thorns

Whatever is happening on the San Diego training ground, it’s paying off. The Wave played a disciplined, relentless, smothering style against Portland all night, giving the visitors little time to think about what they were doing, while at the same time exploiting space and creating chance after chance. If it wasn’t for Messner in the Thorns goal, this score would have been far less flattering to Portland.

The Wave led through excellent team play and individual brilliance. They press high and hard and smothered the midfield, marking Jesse Fleming into near oblivion. This generated many turnovers, and the Thorns left huge amounts of space in which the sublime Dudinha could operate. Paired with Ludmila cutting in from the wing, the Brazillians created havoc for the Thorns backline throughout the first half. I Can’t imagine what will happen when Adriana Leon returns to this side after her foot heals.

Portland’s only goal came off a mistake in the first half. The Thorns threatened several times, notably through set pieces which were delivered with perfection by Olivia Moultrie but the story of the match was that they couldn’t finish their chances. Even a half time substitution which saw Sophia Wilson come into the game couldn’t spark much. The Wave simply didn’t afford them the space or time on the ball.

The last 15 minutes of the game opened up more, but it was Portland that paid the price, giving up a third goal that sealed the game. A terrific coaching battle, and although the Thorns held their own they gave up their first goals of the season after 180 minutes of clean sheets, and now the tactics board beckons.

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Co-sensing with Radical Tenderness

March 25, 2026 By Chris Corrigan CoHo, Featured, First Nations 2 Comments

On the advice of several people I have been reading Vanessa Machado d’Oliveira’s Hospicing Modernity and I have reached the end of “The Most Important Chapter” which outlines the seven key tools that d’Oliveira invites the reader to use as they navigate the text. The seventh tool is an invitation to a kind of lectio divina (my framing) on a text called “Co-Sensing with Radical Tenderness.” I invite you to visit that link, read the text and follow the exercise there, which is different from the one in the book.

As I am working my way through each of the seven tools, I am reminded of the various lessons I have learned in my life especially working in a with Indigenous communities. These are lessons that throw my own position in the world into uncertainty and knock me off centre constantly. I can find how each of these seven tools has come into my life in different ways in the voices of different people who have schooled me, often publicly, in ways that were humbling. D’Oliveira says that this book is written for people in a situation of low intensity struggle, where we have choices about how to benefit from, respond to, and perpetrate the violence of modernity. That’s a useful perspective, and a better term than ‘privilege’ which implies that all is well in a person’s life. Low intensity struggle is a thing, but it’s useful to see it in context. The pedagogy of “learning this from a book” is itself firmly rooted in modernity.

The book is not a simple exercise. It is uncomfortable to read, and even through I wrestle with paradoxes and entanglements all the time, it still places me in a slightly uneasy position, an unsettled position, as it were. And it is remarkable in being able to hold me there, suspended in being unsettled, which I have always said is exactly the place where settlers need to be in order for a post-colonial world to ever have a chance at life.

For reference, the seven tools are:

  • Mastery AND depth education: about different ways of knowing and having wisdom and intelligence
  • Wording and worlding the world: about how we use stories
  • The bus within us: about the different voices we carry inside us
  • Low- and high-intensity struggle: understanding what choices we have, especially important for folks in lo-intensity struggle to understand.
  • Generative disillusionment AND excited capacities: yeah, it’s falling apart. So now what? (Dave Pollard’s writing has helped me to understand this from my perspective.)
  • Co-sensing with radical tenderness: see above.

I don’t know where this book is going. Parts of it don’t make sense to me. Some of it seems performative, some of it seems like the real wisdom is hidden from view, probably because I don’t have the eyes for it. I think this is the intention of the book. It does not bring comfort, it does not make sense. It is directed at me NOT as a teaching guidebook per se, but as a lesson in what I will never know as much as it is a set of invitations about what I can learn. It reminds me very much of the hula ceremonies we were in 16 years ago on Hawai’i as I was walking in an immensely tense interface between Americans and Hawaiians and we were confronting these very same questions about modernity and what it would take to work from a platform of reverence.

We didn’t get that quite right, either.

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