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3 Linden Road, Hartland, VT 05048 Tel (802) 436-1277 Fax (802) 436-1281 |
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Joanna Macy Leads ÒThe Work That ReconnectsÓ for Donella Meadows Leadership Fellows,
Sustainability Institute and Cobb Hill Cohousing September
23-26, 2006 ¥ Hartland, Vermont |
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A beam of sunshine shone like a warm spotlight on the
bouquet of flowers that moments earlier had formed the centerpiece of a
ceremony commemorating Donella
(Dana) Meadows. It was the end of a four-day workshop led by Joanna
Macy and the sixty participants were in the final hours of a magical learning
journey together. |
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This was the first time that four overlapping communities
– each a legacy of Dana Meadows -- joined together in their common goal
of creating a sustainable world. Two classes of Donella Meadows Leadership
Fellows, Sustainability Institute staff and residents of Cobb Hill Cohousing
gathered in Cobb HillÕs common house to enhance their efforts, individually and
collectively, towards what Joanna calls a life-sustaining civilization and
what Dana called the sustainability age. |
Joanna Macy |
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Dana and Joanna both base their environmental and social
change work in systems thinking.
Joanna said, ÒI have great regard and gratitude for Dana. She was a
source of brightening for my world even before I met her. She had realism,
and precision, a diagnostic eye, and brought such creativity, such zest to
it, such a jovial heart.Ó |
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Joanna structured the workshop around a spiral
map.
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The first day focused on gratitude, the second day on honoring
our pain for the world, the third on seeing
with new eyes and the last day on going
forth. Interactive exercises, ritual and discussion built
on these themes, leading participants to experience both the depth of their despair
for the world, and their intention and ability to turn the tide. |
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Joanna used humor, scholarship, intellectual liveliness,
emotional depth, masterful facilitation and talented storytelling to give
participants a multi-textured experience of coming alive to their place in
history, and to their unique contributions to a sustainable world. The workshop also included input from Sustainability
Institute staff. Beth Sawin presented Our Climate Ourselves in an evening session. This served as an example
of how to face the difficult truth about the situation and use it as a
teacher, helping us access what we care most about and the courage to bring
it forth. Describing what she calls, Òthe Great Turning,Ó Joanna put
our lives and work in the context of this transition from the industrial
growth society to a life-sustaining civilization, ÒTo see this as the larger
context of our lives clears our vision and summons our courage,Ó she
said. Joanna emphasized two
things about the Great Turning: 1) it is an inevitable present day reality,
and 2) its ultimate success cannot be known. She said, Ògreat spiritual power
is unlocked when we unlink our work from the need to see the results of our
efforts.Ó One participant likened the Great Turning to a school of fish or
flock of geese – it doesnÕt happen all at once but leader by leader, as
each takes their turn leading those around them. The Great Turning is happening concurrently on three
dimensions, Joanna said: |
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Joanna describing her
theory of systems thinking as a basis for the Great Turning |
¥ One is Òholding actions,Ó which slow the rate of social and ecological damage – these
include regulations, restrictions, blockades and boycotts. ¥ The second is Óshifts in consciousnessÓ in which old reductionist and materialist ways of
thinking give way to understanding the interconnectedness of all things, such
as we see with systems thinking. |
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¥ The third
dimension of the Great Turning is Òstructural changesÓ which include new economic and social formations
-- new ways of owning land, of sharing housing, of understanding healing, of
measuring prosperity. Examples include community-supported agriculture, new
currencies and collaborative living such as co-housing and eco-villages. JoannaÕs methods for bringing this to light called on the
intellect, the heart and the imagination. Participants ÒconversedÓ with
people seven generations from now and they studied the Great Turning from the
perspective of historians alive in the year 2106 researching that crucial
moment 100 years ago, when in 2006, change was gaining momentum. ÒHuge human
ingenuity was unleashed at that time,Ó she said. ÒWhat forms did it take?Ó
This Deep Time perspective, reaching both forward and back in time, is an
effective way to shed new light on the decisions and actions we take now. |
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On the last day Joanna led a deep time exercise to set
intentions for going forth. This was the final phase of the workshop. One of the Fellows left committed to
work on green house gas emissions mitigation within the California electric
utility industry. Already she
has scheduled two teleconferences to which 6000 industry clients have been
invited. Another Fellow wrote
about a tragedy she experienced soon after. She reported: |
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ÒBefore this workshop, I would have wanted to isolate
myself from the situation, and harden my emotions with fear. But I was able to reach out and
somehow form a web of comfort, and faced this together with a caring that is
so taboo in past society, but which is a healing and rational way for people
to share their sadness, fear, regret, and love.Ó The spirit of building relationship and community, rather
than retreating into isolation and misunderstanding, will hopefully stay with
us all for a long time as the four circles of DanaÕs legacy became one large
circle carrying on her, JoannaÕs and each otherÕs work. Thank you to the Morgan Family Foundation for financial support that made this workshop possible. |
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