5-day Enspiral workshop - through the eyes of a participant

"One week ago, we came to the end of our 5-day Enspiral themed programme at YIP, but the fun didn't stop there. It's a really unique pleasure to be staying longer term at a community as a resident facilitator/mentor, as I am also being given the chance to hear feedback and grow/develop during the weeks here.

It's rare that you get to hear from workshop participants in detail about what worked for them, what didn't, and what they'd like more of next time. In the situation I am in, I also get to continue the work and continue offering sessions to draw out the impact and allow participants to keep practising skills and using tools they have picked up during our week.

Below is a short article written by Robbie Solway, one of the YIP participants, about his experience of the week. He in particular really took on a lot of the skills and tools we offered, and is now working on a fantastic project to build a network of solidarity projects in Toronto and its surrounding area... As well as taking an active role in building the online YIP Alumni network.

Thank you Robbie!

Article:

"What is Enspiral? This question [en]spiralled chaotically around our course last week... alongside our freely moving understandings of social enterprise, money management, network, project incubation and community culture. Regardless of the answer, we learned a lot from the Enspiral course contributors, Silvia Zuur and Phoebe Tickell, about working with each of these themes.

For the week, we each 'dated' one of our projects. These initiatives became the case studies on which we applied Enspiral-y practices, as well as the lenses with which we listened to Silvia’s stories of entrepreneurship. We envisioned our initiatives as social enterprises through the Social Lean Canvas, exchanged our rapid-fire pitches and created financial roadmaps. I noticed my plans becoming increasingly grounded: specific & realistic ideas formed for a series of events to bring together the people, families and communities of Toronto.

What makes Enspiral truly unique, it seems, lies in the eye of the beholder. From my perspective, one particularly unique quality is their jargon: the Enspiral community applies software development terminology like ‘refactor’ and ‘fork’ to projects way beyond their computer screens. I haven’t been quite sure how to fit my computer science background and my YIP experience together thus far, but last week I felt at home when Silvia started sharing her challenges with “merging into the master branch.”

Many of us took the opportunity to learn from the Enspiral network for reflecting on what the YIP network can also mean. In smaller discussions, we shared excitement around the August gathering, the alumni map, and the possibilities of how as YIP10 we want to enter the space of being YIP alumni. In the Brosbe check-in group, we’re experiencing a taste of what it means to open the relationships we’ve formed over 10 months to the wider community. Our name amalgamates those of Rose, Bruna, and Pheobe - the amazing people who have stepped into the rotating role of the Brosbe OT throughout the year.

We've been with each of them in spaces of deep sharing as well as learning from their work. Rose invited us into the world of Moral Technologies, Bruna brought her care for education & nature with the Amazon Summer School, and now Phoebe has opened us up to the world of collaborative networking through Enspiral. Phoebe’s role as both Enspiral Member and YIP OT invites possibility for how we can all connect even better together. Having Phoebe around as a friend, mentor and visionary brings a lot of excitement to our remaining time in Sweden."

Entrepreneurial mentoring, Enspiral, saunas, fjords and community life

I may have to work on my weekends at the moment, but when I do step outside I find myself taken on all sorts of adventures. And I'm falling quite in love with the participants here. It's going to be tough to leave! Today I read over and checked one of the participants' applications to university, he is 18 years old. I was completely bowled away by the application. It starts with a poem that he's written, and this is the first line:

"If you knew me you would know
that inside this white male body
there is a soul willing to help.
To empower, to teach and learn, to comfort.
A soul willing to heal the planet."

This is coming from an 18 year-old boy who will be going on to study Physics and Aerospace Engineering at a top university. Perhaps we have a chance on Planet Earth afterall.

This is a magical place. Today I decide to take a break and find myself walking with a group to the fjord, getting in a rowboat and crossing the water, arriving at a small ecovillage community who host us in their sauna. It is on the beach of the fjord, and we watch the sun set while dipping in the ice cold salty water after each round of the woodfired sauna. We row back, hike the final leg surrounded by huge boulders, moss and lichen, huge pine trees, a sky alive with pink and orange and the fjord stretching out on our right. 30 minutes later I'm back at my desk ready to finish off what I was working on... It's surreal!

Perhaps a real work/life balance is possible like this? Living in community in a beautiful location which allows you to dip in and out of your own little world... Grateful for the internet allowing all my remote work and digital nomadism right now! Imagining the quality of life that will be possible in the future when we create these new villages and communities outside of cities, with the possibilities to connect easily in...

Day 1 of delivering a course on Collaborative Entrepreneurship inspired by #Enspiral

Without the time to properly write, I have reverted to Twitter to be sharing and open-sourcing what I am doing with the world... I hope to write up something from these shorter snippets soon! But just in case I don't, here they are...

Opening the #Enspiral Week with @SilviaZuur at Youth Initiative Programme - participants answer "Why do I do what I do?" #youth #entrepreneurship #northstar #purpose #work

Some figures - why do we need to change the way we think about work?

Data from the Australian Foundation for #Youth - the average 22 year old will have 17 #jobs and 50% of those #jobs don't exist yet #FutureOfWork #Enspiral #youth #future #work #inspired

What is the plan for our week together?

Day 1 is all about #Projects and #Identity. Where does your #self meet the #world's needs? And how do we actually make sure there is #balance -- not just what makes you come #alive! #Enspiral #YouthInitiativeProgram #YIP

Day 2 we will cover #Business and #SocialEnterprise, getting into the nitty gritty #business #tools - and talk about #money. Silvia will share about her experience starting #DevAcademy. #EnspiralWeek #YIP

Day 3 we move to #Customers, #Users, the #Humans we serve. Here we also focus on the #impact - #positive and unintended #negative #impact of our work. Let's have that conversation... #Enspiral #social #entrepreneurship #stories #masterclasses

Day 4 is all about #COMMUNITY. What is #collaborative, #community #entrepreneurship? What are the #tools we can use to #collaborate and create #value in a #community, #tribe or #team? Using the story of #Enspiral as an example. #socialentrepreneurship #Enspiral

Final day - Day 5 - the theme is #YouTheEntrepreneur - what is life like as an #entrepreneur in the #world - let's talk about #personal #leadership, #freedom, #loneliness, #community, #challenges, #failure, #heartbreak! What is it to be an entrepreneur of your own life? #Enspiral

What is Enspiral?

In #Enspiral, we #prototype and #build #Enspiral itself, and those #tools sometimes become #ventures which go out and have #impact in the world. #network #entrepreneurship #tech #tools

An afternoon of more practical creating...

Jumping into applying the #SocialLeanCanvas #business planning #tool to participant #projects and facing some #realtalk and #metrics... #socialentrepreneurship #Enspiral

Stay tuned for our time together tomorrow!

Important question from my friend Nora Bateson

Important question from my friend Nora Bateson:

"Who are the people who fund complexity / contextual / systems projects? Ideas??"

And some great comments from the discussion:

"System entrepreneurs are catalytic to communities but one step removed from impact and harder to fund."

"How do we fund the projects that shift epistemology but don't make money?"

And something that sounds exciting/hopeful in response:

"We are working on redesigning incentive structure for social entrepreneurship & philanthropy to legitimize and encourage systemic awareness and depth of intervention and use that to change impact metrics and funding criteria in the mainstream. It's the second year we are running the Evolutionary Future Challenge and are getting some very interesting results."

Call out to my network in case you have any leads. For context, Nora is working on tackling complex challenges and systemic problems which require systemic solutions - beyond a 'quick fix' solution or piece of technology to save the day.

You can read more about her work here: International Bateson Institute.

Looking forward to hear from you if you know of anything or have some ideas. :)

Islands of sanity, and some island hopping....

Laptop charger is broken. Phone is in planned obsolescence, thanks Apple. But adventures continue from YIP in Sweden to this last weekend in Schumacher with amazing teachers Stephan and Fritjof, digging into science and spirituality and a new Earth Wisdom, on global Earth day! Tomorrow morning early train to Brussels to help host the 'Going Horizontal' course introducing non-hierarchical organising and systemic thinking into organisations with Percolab and Spotted Zebras.

There are so many changes afoot at Schumacher but feels like it's a transformative time, finally for the organisation and not just the people and students... Feels like maybe we should be running the 'Going Horizontal' course at Schumacher! But leaving the College today feeling that the community is in safe hands - many of us are stepping up and a new vision for things to be different appearing...

Feeling blessed and embedded in networks of change... the pockets of change network together into larger islands of sanity. And when islands join together... 

Facilitating Fritjof Capra's course on "Mind, Matter and Life"

Starting the second morning session of Fritjof Capra's course with a non-intellectual introduction to systems thinking, science and spirituality. Beautiful Indian guitar with my teacher, colleague, mentor, Stephan Harding. We are about to start a session on 'Final Participation' with the world, nature and reality, combine with science and deep ecology and find a whole new perception of reality.

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Morning conversation recorded on soulful learning communities... Watch this space!

I started the day today with deep, soulful conversation with Alan Webb of the Open Master's about reimagining education to serve the purpose of developing full-humanness. How do we each build a life full of purpose, freedom and meaning, and support others to do that? The conversation started around self-directed learning, the The Open Master's and learning communities but quickly ballooned into what it means to be human, to grow into wholeness, and the sociopolitical implications of radically self-directed one's own learning and self-development...

All at 9am before even a coffee! Thank you Alan for this deeply connecting foray into a subject so close to heart. It is priceless when you have a conversation that takes you back closer to who you are and what your 'soul work' (in Bill Plotkin's work) is in this world.

The conversation was recorded and I'll be looking forward to share it further on with the world! Traian Bruma from Universitat Alternativa you were also presenced in conversation as we let imaginations run wild with explorations into the un-university of the future... or the people's university :). It has many names and different iterations. And it exists as a mosaic made up only in collaboration, with many people bringing the many different pieces.

Here's to every human being having the chance within their life time to grow more into themselves and realise a part of their true belonging and reason for being on this planet. And from there knowing exactly what is theirs to offer in this "one wild life". Yes!

Life-long Continuous Learning: online panel discussion

Check out this panel on #Continuous (#Lifelong#Learning I was lucky enough to facilitate and host a couple days ago with Connectle - a community of practice for connected work that manifests online. Thank you #Connectle for the invitation! Great conversation - #learningcircles #collaborative #learning, #communities of #practise and learning and more...

We shared experiences from working in the education, learning and corporate worlds and discussed how to encourage a desire for continuous learning in the workplace, what we need to do in our educational institutions to prepare for the future of work and so much more.

Watch the full recording of the online panel here:

Or the short trailer here:

One of the listeners of the panel created this graphic harvest of the conversation - thanks you Julia Gumula

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This week... Erotic Ecology to a panel on 'Science with Humanity'

This week I have been resident at Schumacher College facilitating a course called 'Erotic Ecology'... An experience of 'doing' ecology through the skin. It is fascinating to combine the rational with the experiential, to offer people a glimpse into the total wonder and abandonment of the natural world in a way that truly touches them and their lives, and to make the scientific touch the personal.

The Universe keeps bringing me situations that make me go deeper into my inquiry of becoming more our 'selves' through 'other' - through our symbioses. At the same time I am reading 'Humankind' by Timothy Morton, as well as Andreas Weber's work (who is the main teacher of the course). A couple of weeks ago we had French philosopher Bruno Latour visit us at the College, and there we got into extremely interesting discussions about the 'networked self' - the self defined by other, biologically and also in contextual terms.

Andreas' current work revolves around the concept that 'ecos is eros'. Ecological and erotic relationships are of the same kind. That being alive is a yearning for otherness. Ecology now needs to be done 'through the skin' and 'through the senses' to reconnect to a wider, ecological self, which makes action to protect the living world a natural instinct, and not a cerebral response.

I really enjoyed the framing of this emerging field of inquiry as 'relational science'. I refer to my teaching at Schumacher as the 'science of relationships' - symbiosis, networks, stigmergy, emergence, collective intelligence. Andreas takes this into the personal realm and says literally 'I want to understand relating as desire for other. Yearning to touch 'otherness''. This was brought alive by experiential exercises we both facilitated in relating and reconnecting to ourselves, other and natural world.

How do we melt the barriers between us and the natural world?

The world is yearning to be met and touched by us, to be experienced through the skin and not just through the intellect. Suddenly the combination of science with art, dance, movement, metaphor and poetry becomes entirely necessary. There are some things and sensations that cannot be understood through thinking alone. What does it mean to be a story-telling, dancing, artist scientist?

The motivation to do this has a reciprocity to it: both for the planetary health, and for our own personal vibrance, health and well-being. As the planet's well-being increases, so do or personal well-beings. Do you agree? Are humans who are totally denied nature connection and connection to our wider human and non-human community liable to poor mental health? The studies are increasing, and you just need to Google 'forest bathing' to find the articles that correlate time in forests amongst trees with lower stress-related hormones.

Funnily enough, when I consider this I have an inner conflict. It's not too surprising seeing as I straddle worlds of ecology and technology, science and transformation. Maybe it is actually very possible to survive in a thrive in a totally nature and community barren context. Maybe it's true that emerging technologies of VR, AR, 360 video and others could seamlessly take the place of this thing we call Nature. Who am I to say otherwise? If studies emerge with evidence that supports this - that the technological can replace the natural in the well-being and connection in brings, then who are we to argue? But is there something that is not possible to quantify that is lost?

Waking up this morning at 6am to something I don't think I have ever witnessed: I was gifted the full chorus of birds welcoming in the day, singing all together in full blast. It didn't feel like a coincidence that the birds are surging to meet me in this place. The night before I woke up at 2am to hear the call of an owl, bright and clear in the nightly silence.

Now I travel to London to participate in a panel with senior scientists where I will be explaining my work around a need for 'Science with Humanity'. We'll see what comes of it!

4 minutes of inspiration... My application to the Edmund Hillary Fellowship last year!

Last year I applied to be one of 60 entrepreneurial fellows to join the first cohort of the Edmund Hillary Fellowship -- a brand new 3-year long fellowship offering the world's first 'entrepreneurial visa' for 3 years, to come and prototype global solutions in New Zealand.

I was chuffed to make it down to the very final stage (I think there were something like 400 applications for 60 places - and in the end only 30 fellows were accepted). Although I didn't make it through in that round, I found the experience hugely helpful and motivating, and so I share part of the journey with you here! Onwards and onwards...

A conversation with Nora Bateson

This is the first in a series of conversations we are recording, under the series name "Systers Thinking"...  Sisters doing Systems Thinking, in true collaboration. Our theme here is around being a systems change-maker, and what it means to show up in integrity, authenticity and true collaboration in a world where none of those things are incentivised. How do we help each other put forward what is important, and support each other to be strong enough to "walk the talk", even when sometimes that leads to missing out on something you think you need.

Nora makes for an amazing conversation partner, and I always look forward to when we can next come together... I hope you enjoy this too!

Cultivate constant awareness of the magic...

"Cultivate constant awareness of the magic, mystery and wonder if the world; educate the senses to see the ordinary as extraordinary, the familiar as strange, the mundane as sacred, the finite as infinite." - said Novalis

"The world is full of magic things patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper" - said Yates

Turn everything on its head, re-consider, see from a new angle, jumble it up and re-order, find magic in the ordinary, learn from each detail, open up to be inquisitive, joyous and curious. Fuse modalities, connect the unconnected, abandon silos.

Fritjof Capra, Systems Thinking and Barrio Solar

Last month, I had the pleasure of having lunch with Fritjof Capra, renowned physicist, author and systems thinker.

In the world of systems thinking, Fritjof's books are well known... In fact, the Systems View of Life is almost like a core textbook at Schumacher College. Other books include the Tao of Physics, which draws the similarities between ancient spiritual traditions and the new paradigm physics (of the 1970s!), and also a series of books on Leonardo Da Vinci's works, and his truly systems-thinking lens, work around nature, engineering and essentially biomimicry! Something that's crazy to think about is what modern day science would be like if we had discovered Da Vinci's manuscripts earlier.

We chatted about science, spirituality, new ways of learning, the networked future and why systems thinking is more important now than ever before. We also caught up on Schumacher and the connections between both of our works.

On top of that, we also connected over our joint paths in activism. Which brings me round to...

One of Fritjof's latest projects: Barrio Solar. A self-organising, on the ground, solar network serving hard-hit communities in Puerto Rico.

This is a really worthwhile project that Fritjof co-founded with his wife, Elizabeth Hawk, and Indira Cortez, an engineer from Puerto Rico.

Barrio Solar was created on September 21st, the day after Hurricane Maria devastated the island nation of Puerto Rico.

The idea is to purchase small, off the grid, solar units (battery packs/portable solar panels and gravity lamps) and distribute them directly via partner distribution networks on the ground in Puerto Rico.

The solar devices to be shipped to Puerto Rico will be collected and distributed by a network of 35 women’s shelters and aid organizations under the leadership of Paz para la Mujer. By partnering with these women’s networks, we will be avoiding the risk of black market profiteering and, as we are at this moment a fully volunteer network, the entire distribution effort will be done for free.

They will be sent to communities hit the hardest on the island... Distributed to shelters, community centres and homes - especially the small towns in the centre and south of the island - where immediate aid and reconstructed power sources are least likely to be deployed.

What is being shipped: solar kits (solar panels), a gravity power lamp (it has a slowly descending weight that drives an electric generator). The aim: to help rural communities in Puerto Rico get back on their feet and provide lights and electric outlets.

$90 will buy a gravity lamp and $350 will buy a solar unit.

Please consider giving to the Crowdfunding campaign! They are $16,000 of the way to $25,000 and it seems like a really direct way to support what's happened in Puerto Rico.

Two years ago today - Science, Technology, Humans and Nature workshop in a school in Mumbai

"What a morning. The creativity, limitless-ness and ability to totally change and explore new dimensions and angles of thinking of these kids continues to excite/astound/energise me.

Why are we not achieving this level of joy and excitement in every classroom?

Why are kids feeding back that they found science lessons boring before, that it's usually too complex - and asking me what subject this is, because it can't be science. WHY ARE WE NOT TEACHING ABOUT LIFE AND HOW THINGS WORK AND WHAT IS POSSIBLE?

By creating workshops that are pumped with excitement, relevance, and cutting edge science, kids as young as 11 are already grasping the concept of DNA as a code, As bonding to Ts, Cs to Gs, and grappling the ethical dilemmas of genetic engineering, and the subtle tensions of using Nature as a technology with people in power/with money.

What's more, is through the balance of OBSERVATION and CREATING, which yesterday we covered as the feedback loop and branches of science, kids can continuously learn and take on new thinking, facts and skills, and immediately apply them creatively to build, design and make. A constant discussion of ethics, intentions and purpose allows the connection between the what and why, which can be carried into everything we do.

Every child is a genius. How we frame their learning and their environment of learning, how we create spaces within us and within schools that are fearless and safe, and how we create two way channels of communication so that learning can be tailored, shared, and bi-directional is so so so very important.

What is holding back our current education model? We have amazing resources, amazing technology, and also amazing Teachers. I think framing and prioritisation is what is important -- allowing teachers to have freedom of how they frame content, and prioritising communication, emotional intelligence, creativity, kindness, consciousness into our centres of learning."

Millenials

I like millenials. I like the quality in them that says "I won't 'settle'". I won't settle for slavery at work. I won't settle for doing something I hate. I won't settle for a lack of choice. Now all we need is millenials with ethics, with deep concern for the planet, human and non-human beings, with care and responsibility and service. Millenials 2.0.

Far away in an intentional community in Oakland, California...

I am sleeping in a simple small hut stacked with books, herbs and potions, in the middle of a permaculture garden in Oakland. Life is blissful and adventurous. I am in an intentional community of about 30 that serves as a hub for the work that reconnects, social and environmental justice, and youth initiation. This place is like a hidden oasis in the middle of the city, in total service of The Great Turning. My trip continues in meeting and talking to people across all kinds of movements building the more beautiful world. Whether in Silicon Valley or this tiny acupuncture point in Oakland, lots of us are deep in the work of developing and uncovering Technologies For Humanity... all with different ideas as to what that is. It makes me hopeful. But not lazy - there's so much work to be done.