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Stepping into flow

July 29, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Art of Hosting, Facilitation, Practice 2 Comments

I’m preparing to teach at an Art of Hosting gathering in Nova Scotia in a few weeks and as part of the conversations on design, we have been talking a little about what is required in order to confidently step into chaotic and unknown spaces.

This morning, my friend and other co-host Toke Paludan Moeller sent a short poem from an Aikido master that sums it up nicely:

When you step up,
claim the mat as your own.
Everybody you encounter
and everything that happens
is there by your invitation
and your invitation alone,
even the unexpected ones.

Your job is to respond with
grace and compassion.
You can’t hide and you can’t fake it;
we will all see.

Let the skills you have learned
and the wisdom of this art
flow through you
and all will be well.

[tags] aikido, art of hosting[/tags]

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Follow the resonance

July 28, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Appreciative Inquiry, Learning 3 Comments

David, a friend of mine, and I were having a conversation the other day about religion, We were both trying to understand our present day connection to Christianity. For him, he was trying to reconcile faith with his humanist upbringing and I related how I was very interested for a time in becoming a Minister when I was a teenager, and since then drifted away from mainstream Christianity although I have had an enduring, although somewhat academic, interest in Christian spirituality. It only creeps into practice through music: I sing in a Christian Evensong chorale and that experience has brought me into closer contact with Christianity.   I still do not call myself a Christian, unable to accept the truth of belief as stated in the Nicene Creed.

Ironically however, singing has not brought me closer to Christian teaching per se, but rather has drawn me closer to the inspiration for the music, tapping some of the same spirit that Bach and Bruckner and Verdi sensed.
I have written a little over the years about Christianity, and I’m number one on Google for “beatitudes vs. ten commandments”, because of this post from a few years ago. There is much that resonates with me about Christianity, and especially from the example of Christ’s life. But there is much that I cannot abide, like the tales of genocide in the Old Testament in the name of the God that sent Christ to earth.

So in conversation with my friend I expressed a concern that so much of Christian sacred text seems to me to be pointless, and yet, if one takes this as necessarily complete, then it all must come with the territory. I can figure out how Leviticus or Daniel applies to my life today, and I cannot accept those prescritions on my life and family. So am I just to selcect and pick and choose?   How is it that Christians reconcile their belief in the Bible as the exclusive source of their religion with some of the strange things that are contained in there?
My friend David gave me the appreciative answer to this question: notice what resonates with you and honour that response. There must be something to it.   This is not the answer that serves to move one closer to becoming a practicing Christian, but it is a useful response for a non-Christian in understanding the value of these stories and the traditions that have supported them for thousands of years
And here, finally, is good advice.   If we work on tuning ourselves, we can become more and more sensitive to what might land on us and find ways to incorporate that into the evolving beings that we are.

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Chaos and mindfulness in flow

July 27, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Organization, Practice 4 Comments

I am a very mindful driver.   For me driving is an exercise in flow and self-organization and I even see it as a bit of a giving practice.

So I was intensely interested when my friend Kathryn Thompson told me of an article entitled “Why don’t we do it in the road? recently published in Salon, which talks about how to make streets safer by removing controls.

“One of the characteristics of a shared environment is that it appears chaotic, it appears very complex, and it demands a strong level of having your wits about you,” says U.K. traffic and urban design consultant Ben Hamilton-Baillie, speaking from his home in Bristol. “The history of traffic engineering is the effort to rationalize what appeared to be chaos,” he says. “Today, we have a better understanding that chaos can be productive.”

In the past, in this space, I posted a video of traffic in India which demonstrates this point.

Chaos does make us more mindful.   We make better choices in more chaotic environments because we pay much closer attention to the subtleties of what is happening around us.   You cannot be on your cellphone, or talking to others or letting your mind wander when you are driving in unregulated traffic.   You have to use all of the capacities that every driving instructor tries to teach you when you are sixteen.   Pay attention, anticipate, leave space and be careful.   Good advice for a chaotic world.

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Learning to fly

July 27, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Uncategorized

In a meeting yesterday we were discussing the fact that the human species is approaching a cliff, a massive precipice, and that we have so far been completely unable to figure out how to turn back from the edge.

I suggested that maybe it’s too late for that and we only have time to teach each other how to fly.

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Appreciating one’s teachers 2: David Newhouse

July 21, 2006 By Chris Corrigan Being, Learning 2 Comments

Also in Peterbourgh I met with David Newhouse, perhaps my most influential university teacher and a good friend.   David arrived at Trent in 1989 from the Department of Indian Affairs in Ottawa.   He came to teach in the Native Management and Economic Development Program, which at that time was a fledgling effort, mostly focused on economic development and with no real management curriculum.   I was hired in May of 1989 to help research the field of native management, and I spent the first month of my employment searching for one book – any book! – on the subject.   There simply wasn’t one anywhere.

We quickly realized that if we wanted to teach the subject, we had to create it.   David, being an MBA graduate of Western University, felt strongly that we should be using the Western/Harvard case study method, which meant that I, as the researcher, needed to produce some cases.   And thus began a three year collaboration during which I wrote or co-wrote something like 24 case studies for teaching management in Aboriginal communities and organizations.

My opus magnum of case studies was a set of four I did on the National Association of Friendship Centre’s process to negotiation with the federal government for their funding program.   It was a large set, with many documents and many conversations detailed from notes taken by NAFC staff.   Working on that case set introduced me to the NAFC, and when I subsequently moved to Ottawa in 1991, I started working there.   They very much started my career, and my connection to them was facilitated by David and the cases I put together.

In my final year I undertook an honours thesis with David as my supervisor.   I produced an 80 page piece of original research, developing a model that might be useful for looking at Aboriginal organizational culture.   It was a rich learning experience writing that paper – the richest of my entire academic career – and on its completion (receiving the only A+ of my entire academic career) I felt no need to pursue academic studies further.

David is not a character without controversy, and this is why I love him.   He needles around the edges of things, finding the questions that change everything.   He is uncompromising, but curious and he quietly holds ground where he feels that truth is at stake.   Here’s what he says on his profile page for the Department of Indigenous Studies:

“My interest is in examining the ideas that are forming the basis of collective, i.e. societal or institutional action within contemporary Aboriginal society. I want to try and counter the idea that we laid in front of the bulldozer of western civilization and waited for it to flatten us. The historical and contemporary record indicates that we have always understood the world around us, knew what was happening and tried to affect the world to make it more hospitable and amicable to us. For the most part, our agency as living, thinking human beings has been erased. I want to show how we used our imaginations to live in the world we found ourselves in.“

I love that…it sums up much I know about this man.

The ideas that I was exposed to working with David have constantly resurfaced in my life over the past 15 years.   Like all good teachers, he teaches by being.   He offers much in his stance towards a world obsessed with the pre, post- and present day modernity of indigenous peoples by simply refusing to allow anyone to pin it all down.   Indigenous life is a slippery every changing world of transformation, conversation and change, and that is what David is too.   There are no easy answers, only an invitation to converse together thereby discover together who and where we are.

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