Posted from Inside Summer Institute 2011 via email.
What is ALIA?
ALIA Summer Institute is all of these things:
* It’s a place where you dive deeply into conversations within minutes of meeting new friends because you know that the longings in your heart are shared and your common passions built bridges with these people long before you arrived in the same space.
* It’s a place where you are reminded daily to be mindful, to make meditation a priority, to be a witness to all that is present in the world, and to recognize that the molecules that make you who you are are also the molecules that make the world the beautiful place it is.
* It is a place of incubation, where the tender shoots of your good ideas are fed by other people’s good ideas, and what emerges is exciting and beautiful and is owned not by anyone but by the collective whole.
* When you gather in a large sacred circle and hear the stories of your new Japanese friends, who survived the pain of a triple tragedy, you know that nobody’s job is to fix it, but everybody’s job is to listen deeply and hold them tenderly in a gentle space. And then after you depart, everyone’s job is to carry these stories in their hearts and let it change the way we interact with the world.
* Unlike a conference, you don’t spend the week sampling ideas like candy. Instead you dive deeply into a full, nourishing meal of ideas in an intensive workshop with a small community within the larger community.
* Holistic learning is part of your daily experience, whether that means dancing, singing, playing, painting, or doing aikido or big brush strokes. You won’t be at all surprised if one day you’re cavorting around the auditorium with other people, holding wooden sticks tenderly between your index fingers. It will all make sense when you’re there.
* The heirarchy you experience in other learning events will be flattened, and nobody will be too conscious of who the “experts” or “teachers” are. You have all come to learn and co-create, and your good ideas and passions are as valuable as anyone else’s.
* Though heirarchy is of no importance, the elders in the room have arrived knowing that they have responsibility to share their wisdom, and the youth have arrived with an intuitive sense that they have responsibility to share their vitality. And the sharing of these and other gifts makes this a vibrant and energetic place to be.
* You’ll hear things like “open space” and “world cafe” and you will learn that those are simply words that mean that you will be invited to dive into meaningful and intimate conversations in a large room with hundreds of other people doing the same.
* When you show up willing to play a role in the community, you may be asked to do your doodling on a large piece of paper at the front of the auditorium, or to host an intimate story-telling session.
* At the end of the week you will dance with wild abandon because you have new faith in your own body and new trust that your community will honour your fierce and feral movements across the floor.
* When it’s all done, an artist will make a mark on a large piece of paper, and without words, you will know that your experience has been honoured by the ink on that page.
Posted from Inside Summer Institute 2011 via email.
Innovation Marketplace: Multi-Generational Leadership
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Final calligraphy
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Barbara Bash
Video of Barbara doing a final expression.Posted from Inside Summer Institute 2011 via email.
Awwww…..
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My name, my art
Posted from Inside Summer Institute 2011 via email.
Meg Wheatley’s keynote – some notes
The great paradox is that this kind of passion creates blindness and burnout.
We think we know that we will be able to turn the tide of events. I realized: we cannot turn the tide of the world. The reward of patience is patience. (Sint Augustinus) The position of the spiritual warrior is to be present with what is, and to let unfold what is there. Of course we sense the urgency, but there is another place to stand. “To my fellow swimmers: Here now is a river flowing very fast…. those who are afraid will try to hold on to the shore… let go of the shore… the river has its destination… go into the current and there you can keep your head above the water…” (one of the Hopi messages)
let go of our old ways of thinking, our grasping of security…
it is not enough to go with the flow! we need to go into the turbulence – change our own life – then we will know how to stay grounded in the turbulence.
committed to gentleness, compassionate action before we do anything sitting, waiting, without forcing it into a way we think it should go…
how do we take in Japan?
not being afraid of pain and fear…
let tragedy in, then our heart-mind actually expands! I still believe fiercely in the values of justice! but we need to leave our agendas and use awareness instead. Most hopeful is to encounter the world as it is, because then our heart-mind will grow. Patience and perseverance is the same in Chinese characters: a knife expanded over a human heart. It is a very strong image – showing the path is not easy. it requires awareness. that’s why we need to start our day with some kind of peace – 5 to 10 minutes. prepare your inner heart-mind to meet the insane, hostile, fearful, psychotic … world. Trungpa: “When there is no speed or aggression, then there is space to move about. …. you can then work with more precision.” Problems are urgent! But urgency leads to rigidity, and agression… we loose touch with the relationships. we shut out so much. more openness will lead to more precise action. It is complex! more of the prophecy : “look there who is with you… banish the word struggle… celebrate! We are the ones we have been waiting for.” Let’s not take ourselves so seriously. We have the time to become more awake, to let in the suffering of the world; and realize we can have our heart-minds grow. Poem For the Children from Gerry Schneider(?)
stay together
learn the flowers
go lightPosted from Inside Summer Institute 2011 via email.















