Conversations

“The time has come,” the Walrus said,
“To talk of many things:
Of shoes—and ships—and sealing wax—
Of cabbages—and kings-
And why the sea is boiling hot—
And whether pigs have wings.” - Lewis Carroll

This coming Wednesday evening, twelve of us from the Redwood Coast (Mendanoma) are having a conversation.  We don't all know each other but we have one thing in common: we are hungry for real conversations. We're out of practice. We know how to instigate projects and fight battles. We know how to be against things and for things, but really we don't know the art of conversation.

 In preparation I have just finished reading a book named: Conversation: How Talk Can Change Our Lives by Theodore Zeldin.  "Conversation is a meeting of minds with different memories and habits. When minds meet, they don't just exchange facts: the transform them, reshape them, draw different implications from them, engage in new trains of thought. Conversation doesn't just reshuffle the cards, it creates new cards."

Our first conversation will revolve around "What is conversation?" I guess this is a bit like an Escher design of his Drawing Hands.

What new cards will be created as our Redwood Coast community instigates and practices conversation?  What stories and ideas will unfold? What difference will this small effort make over time?

 

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2007 - Cycles Unfolding and Enfolding

"...This sounds unnerving -- I haven't stopped wanting someone, somehow to return with the right answers. But I know that my hopes are old, based on a different universe. In this new world, you and I make it up as we go along, not because we lack expertise or planning skills, but because that is the nature of reality. Reality changes shape and meaning because of our activity. And it is constantly new. We are required to be there, as active participants. It can't happen without us and nobody can do it for us. Meg Wheatley, Leadership and the New Science, 1993

As the calendar turns from '06 to '07, I wonder, does a new year matter? And what is this measure we call 'time'? Keeping time goes back in time ... maybe almost as far back as humans do. Until recently, time was seen and experienced not a linear progression, but as cycles, continuously repeating yet always new. The word commencement signifies endings and beginnings. I like this. December 31st may be an artificial ending and January 1st an arbitrary beginning, but it commands (for me) reflection, digestion, exploration, reframing, ending, or letting go to make room for new emergent explorations.

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Finding Unseen Messages

Our imagination is stretched to the utmost, not as in fiction, to imagine things that are not really there, but just to comprehend those things that are there. Richard Feynman, The Character of Physical Law

I get a kick out of my MacMail message as it searches for new emails. "Finding unseen messages" seems so easy for it to do. Within seconds it either reports that there are no new messages or that I have something in my "in box." How I wish my mind could work like this! Einstein's comment: "The only thing that interferes with my learning is my education" certainly holds true with me. How is it that we become so trapped by our assumptions and what we have been told as truth that we often fail to see what is right in front of our face? I wish I had a reset button that would take help me see what's in my inbox ... differently!

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