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Archive for RestoringWholeness – Page 9

Solstice 07

Center

I just returned from a Solstice celebration held in a redwood forest in the Santa Cruz mountains. This ceremony and its ‘Dreaming’ counterpart held in the middle of winter have become necessary bookmarks in my year, rituals of integration and relationship that bring wholeness and balance to the busi-ness of my life.

One of my favorites moments in this pattern cycle is the night we dance a prayer dance in a medicine wheel built into a meadow, surrounded by redwoods and anchored by a mother tree that must be at least 600 years old. People have been dancing to the Tree of Life for millenia and you can feel a sense of eternity and timelessness that comes like grace as we dance around the delicate Oklahoma Redbud, our ‘tree of life’,  hour after hour.

Leg muscles powered by the relentless beat of a large hand made buffalo skin drum (and the energy of the rotating team of drummers that keep this beat alive), the dancers alternately rush to the center and ebb back to the perimeter, again and again. Running forward with outstretched hands, raising our eagle feathers to bless the tree that stands in the center representing Life, we offer our gratitude for the gifts she’s given us all year. Then we dance back in equal rhythm, gratefully receiving life’s bounty and drawing it deep into our own centers, again and again.

When the drums have stopped and we’ve finished dancing, those who want to stay pull a circle of chairs close around the tree … She’s lit from below by a thousand candles encircling her base, long white ribbons that decorate her branches dancing in the night wind. We sit in long silence as the stars and moon move above us and the night whispers its secrets to the trees. I drink this endless moment like water in the desert, stillness pouring into my body like holy communion wine.

.o0o.
My deep gratitude to my companions on this prayer dance journey, and to the hosts and conveners of this beauty: FireHawk and Pele at Resonance and their partners Bill & Marilyn Veltrop at Infinite Games and Craig and Patricia Neal of Heartland Circle.

To Whom are we Beautiful?

I wish I understood the beauty
in leaves falling. 
To whom
are we beautiful
as we go?

~David Ignatow

(cool signature on someone’s email)

My Neighbor’s Garden

My retired neighbor Grover’s house on the corner is graced by an abundant vegetable garden. This modest city-sized plot is a scene of endless transformation as he rotates his beds, alternately unloading bags of composted manure, tilling nutrients into the soil, planting seeds, and harvesting their fruit. What an invaluable community resource for gardeners, beauty-lovers, and all those children (and adults!) who don’t yet know the miracle of where food comes from.

Here’s what captured my eye in Grover’s garden on this morning’s beauty walk:

Squash

Online Community

I was just at a conference (actually, it was an ‘unconference’) in Mountain View for online community professionals. The design was Open Space Technology, which means the sessions were collaboratively designed ‘on the fly’ by the people who were there. That was a gas, and made it easier to connect with the other participants, including wise, experienced, ‘famous’ (ok, it’s all relative) online community pioneers like Howard Rheingold, Cliff Figallo and  Gail Ann Williams (all from the original WELL, Gail now at Salon).

Unfortunately none of them led sessions, and since this was my
first unconference, I was a bit too shy to propose one of my own. So, until I
connected personally with these folks and others like Jay Cross and Tracy Ruggles, etc. I was
actually beginning to wonder if I was in the right place.

It seemed that no matter what the
‘title’ of the first few sessions I was attending was, every session seemed to
be about control in one
way or another.

As I talked to more people, I realized that the majority of other
professionals at this event were
managers of internal forums at large corporations or equally large and specifically-targeted non-profits and
their main issues seemed to revolve around ”policing’ and managing
aberrant behavior. There were also many folks relatively new to this whole online community world who’d been given the job of developing community in their organizations. They came for ideas & inspiration, but were also bound by rules and objectives laid out by their bosses and/or organizational structures.

It felt a little foreign to me, since the issues and questions I am grappling
with are so different. Rather than struggling to control the interaction,
the groups I am working with want to foster self-determination and
initiative. Rather than wanting to set the agenda, we’re trying to
create the conditions for co-evolution and collaboration.

Maybe it is a matter of being at a different stage in the process, or at a different scale – many of the online communities I help steward or am involved with are smaller (under 1,000 people), more ‘personal’, and tend to be based on shared values and intertwined online / f2f relationships – but I think there are also profoundly different views of what an online community is, what inspires us about them and how to best engage within the field.

So I didn’t quite ‘find my tribe’ there in the way I would have liked, but it was undoubtedly exciting to have
online community be the topic of a large event like that and I
did have some fantastic conversations with the afore mentioned group of renegades. I also learned more about a few cool tools, made some
new connections and strengthened some older ones. Maybe I’m just too shy to really ‘get’ these events where everyone interesting seems to already know each other. I think I need a weekend slumber party to really get going…

At least I’m having a lot of fun with the wiki – provided by unconference sponsor  Social Text – which makes me think it’s just a matter of medium. Maybe I’m one of those aberrant people who is better suited to online conversation than in-person schmoozing in large groups. 🙂 Anyway, I’m having fun with the wiki and getting inspired about new creative ways to use the form.

Next time I’ll propose a session on the art of creating sacred space online, or the importance of beauty in supporting deep connections between people, or developing language for an earth-based internet…