C4C: Harnessing & Harvesting “the ignorant perfection of ordinary people” (Pt. 1)

Last week, I drove with friends and colleagues from Indianapolis to Cincinnati to attend the three-day Connecting for Communities (“C4C”) conference, “a powerful gathering of master and apprentice change agents and social entrepreneurs across sectors and communities, from around the world.”

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I came for many reasons and with many feelings.  I was excited to see “elders” and friends who have shaped my thinking and my growth throughout the years, including John McKnight, Peter Block and my friends Caitlin, Terri and Cheri, who do incredible work around inclusion and community organizing in Georgia. (See List of Speakers here)  I was eager to meet new folks in the field and hear their stories.

I came to see, as someone passionate about convening people myself, how these particular rockstars-in-the-field crafted our coming together. I also came to get a sense of what’s “new”–new learning, new challenges, new opportunities to shift the systems around us to more citizen-centered, bottom-up, effective ways of living and structuring our approaches to the problems we see around us. I came to be refreshed in a way that only these things can refresh me–finding solace, camaraderie, a community of my own among people who, unlike most of society, understand what I do without the need for a 1-hour explanation.

Finally, I came with a question and a doubt: going to yet another conference about “community-building,” was I going to learn the same old things? Was this going to be worth it?

On all fronts, I was not disappointed.

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I’d be crazy to try and fit the whole of what moved, stretched or stung me into a single blog post, so this is an attempt to fly overhead at those big patterns and most striking moments of “ahA!” which have been resonating with me since I arrived back home Friday afternoon. I’ll do this in a series of blog entries, beginning with the two themes that framed and reverberated throughout the gathering.

 

“Management” vs. Community, Local Living, and Mystery

 

Peter Block

Peter Block

Peter Block set the tone for the gathering with his opening words by laying out a distinction between the dominant culture and the “unnamed movement” of which we are a part. Of all the meetings going on that day in Cincinnati, and the world, Peter pointed out, most of them are about “making the world better through management”–ie. control, measurement, evidence, certainty. Underneath all of that is a belief in scarcity.

In contrast, what we are meeting about is a way of acting, living, and structuring things based upon a belief in abundance. Coming from all areas and sectors, we are each working to revitalize this over-commodified and over-managed. We’re doing this in our own corners of the world by experimenting with ways to reconnect people with each other, their neighborhoods and communities–and with the power of mystery and creativity in our lives and the world around us.

graphic recording by Avril Orloff, www.avrilorloff.com

graphic recording by Avril Orloff, www.avrilorloff.com

“The world wants to certify, and is based on certainty,” Peter offered. “That’s the world we’re trained in. The problem is, that world is incapable of caring for the common good–caring about how to reduce suffering, about the commons, poverty, raising a child—which we’ve given away in the last couple hundred years.”

To many of our dismay, key presenter and leader of the asset-based movement John McKnight was unable to attend due to poor health. While I was saddened not to see him–my first “gatekeeper” and mentor in this field–the poetic, compelling message he sent to us on that first day almost made up for his absence. An excerpt:

Management has emerged as the method by which tool-ruled life is controlled. Managers create systems that are power pyramids designed for a few to control many. Competition insures that control. Competition is a word that means “for me to win, you must lose.” It demands radical individualism that prohibits personal collective relationships that could threaten the pyramid and its technology.

The enemy of the senseless life is the world of the personal.  It is the world where we see each other and the magnificent natural world around us. Instead of glass screens creating images that we consume.  It is the world where we can hear each other’s stories and songs. Instead of electrically marketed noise. (…) It is the touch of the baby’s hand, the feel of a hammer and saw in the basement workshop, the caress of love, the touch of care. Instead of feel of false power created by touching a steering wheel or a gun.

[read full message here]

 

graphic recording by Avril Orloff - www.aprilorloff.com

graphic recording by Avril Orloff – www.aprilorloff.com

One of the key struggles we face, Peter added, is that within our movement and practice not to give in to the pressure to “reduce what we’re doing to a methodology that can be taught in an academic setting.” If we do that, we will ossify and lose the core spirit of the work. Peter referred to a an ongoing conversation he has with Harrison Owen, known for his “discovery” of Open Space technology, in which Peter–whose background is in Engineering–keeps bugging Harrison to acknowledge as a technique. During one such conversation, Harrison looked at Peter and said, “You’re sitting there. You think you’re a structure? You’re just an accidental combination of water and molecules.”

graphic recording by Avril Orloff, www.avrilorloff.com

graphic recording by Avril Orloff, www.avrilorloff.com

Rather than a methodology, community-building along with all of its many tags and headings, “is both a movement and learning a language of communal possibility.” Toward that end, we can develop “an alternative set of protocols for welcoming people in from exile.” In addition to what was offered by the people who would be speaking during the conference and the protocols they offered, such as Peter with his A Small Group work, Harrison Owen with Open Space, each of us came with valuable protocols and practices to add to the pot. Our purpose was therefore to share with each other, “what’s working for you?” This gathering and this movement is an ongoing harnessing, and harvesting, of “the ignorant perfection of ordinary people.”

 

 

“Don’t Wait to be Chosen”  

Creative, personal, community, people-powered versus managed, commodified, certified individualism–this would become a resounding theme throughout our three days, and it resonated with me as much as each “uncredentialed” change agent in the room. When we split periodically into small groups of three in order to process and connect around each powerful topic introduced, our facilitators reminded us, “Don’t wait to be chosen.”

 

Most immediately, this meant of course not to wait for a person to choose us for our group, but the deeper meaning struck me hard…  Both this calling “not to wait” and the idea of ours as an “uncredentialed, unnamed”–but vitally necessary function–revealed to me that, deep inside, I’m still waiting to be chosen, named, legitimized from some outward source. Sometimes it’s larger society’s blessing I’m chasing–when I hesitate or squirm before the question, “What do you do?” Going deeper, I realized that day that I’m just as dependent upon the legitimization of those I look upon as mentors in my field… and what a stupid, stupid thing this is.

 

One of the greatest struggles I carried with me to Cincinnati is that of feeling blocked in my practices in community–that of both telling stories of bottom-up change and that of working to build relationships and discover assets, strengths and “abundance” within my own neighborhood. Since moving to Indianapolis, I’ve gotten what I sought: surrounded on all sides by some of the most amazing natural community-builders and innovators I’ve ever met (De’Amon Harges, Mike Mather and Anne Mitchell). While I found it such a blessing to be able to absorb their brilliance and try to mimic it first-hand, I also found myself stunted, held back, terrified in doing the work myself.

Just as I don’t need to wait for larger society to “bless” me with a widely recognized and celebrated title to do good, important work (and make a living doing so), I also don’t need to cower in the shadows of these “greats.” After all, what made them great was their courage to try things they didn’t know how to do and to follow the call in their hearts toward a possibility they knew existed but didn’t see around them–to follow gleaming threads into dark places, speak truth to power despite the quaking in their guts, and to push forward day after day to bring concepts into birth as real stories of concrete and undeniable world change.

 

 

The Power of Story

and Relationship with Self

 

One resounding theme of the conference was the immense power of story. to give life and power to the growing restlessness toward abundance-based thinking and doing that is surging from the ground level of our communities and countries.

Angeles Arrien
source: www.angelesarrien.com

Angeles Arrien, a cultural anthropologist  known for her work around the common stories that weave us together across cultures and centuries, joined us by phone that first day. She has noticed seven purposes of story: it “restores, regenerates, reveals, reconnects, reconvenes, re-conveys, remember.”

Angeles shared three stories that bring to life three predominating themes throughout the history of humanity and of story: the story of Self, Relationship, and Community. Each story she shared struck me deeply, but the first got me in the gut:

A Story about Self-Work:

There’s an old story from Judaic tradition of the wise man Zusya, who went to mountain too pray and asked for guidance for his community. He came down from the mountain after three days and three nights and he was terrified. The community saw him for first time, said “Zusya what did you find that you are afraid?”

 “I now know what the angels will ask me on the last day. …They will not ask me contributed. What they will ask me is—(and put your name before this question)–”the question they will ask me is, ‘Zusya, Zusya, why weren’t you Zusya?’

What is getting in the way of what I already am?

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graphic recording by Avril Orloff – www.avrilorloff.com

In my small group following this rich session, I had the pleasure of sitting with two young women, Avi Kruley (Mount Madonna Institute,CA) and Rasmia Kirmani-Frye (Comunity Solutions, NY), and Rachel Clayton (Tamarack Institute).  Together, we unpacked our reactions to the story. Especially hard-hitting for us was the story of self–and, in addition, our shared story of this as often the hardest, most dysfunctional relationship in our lives.  We recognized the tendency across this and other “world-changing” fields for folks to burn out, often due to a lack of care for our own bodies, minds, or souls.  But how can we do anything good if that relationship is not healthy?

My small group - Rachel, Rasmia, and Avi

My small group – Rachel, Rasmia, and Avi

Perhaps the most healing part of this conversation was the last, when, at prompting from the facilitator, we spent time telling each other what we appreciated in one another. Sounds hoaky, right?  Well, despite how many times I’ve done this kind of thing, or had it done to me, it never ceases to be an extraordinarily powerful experience.  And, despite the fact that we’d only just met, each of us was able to pinpoint something of significant brilliance or value within the other, when asked.

The energy that I got from this exchange stays with me still today, almost deeper still than the fascinating concepts, stories and tools that were shared over those three days.  This reminded me that a) we are all hungry for this kind of appreciation, and that’s OK, and that b) people are willing and able to see and name each others’ gifts–it’s all about creating the space and the invitation to do so; c) beyond any fancy set of rules or tools, this simple (yet sometimes scary) practice of seeing and naming gifts out loud to one another is one essential practice that must never be left out, and which never, ever gets old.

*  *  *

These were the words, stories, feelings and thoughts that launched our first day. More challenges and spaces would come…  Among them, these were the questions that haunted, and haunt me, most, and which I’ll unpack in my next few blogs:

  • How do we look out for the “top-down” and other destructive habits of power within this movement?  How do we address patriarchy as it appears among us as women, people of color, or other marginalized groups?

  • How can stories be used as a tool for measurement?

  • How can we tell these compelling stories more broadly, effectively and collaboratively to shift the dominant narrative?

 

Please tell me–what strikes you most from these thoughts, ideas and stories?  In your own relationships and practices of community, what’s working for you?

*  *  *

For Further Reading ~ here are some other great blogs on the gathering:

 

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6 Responses to C4C: Harnessing & Harvesting “the ignorant perfection of ordinary people” (Pt. 1)

  1. April you have done an amazing job of capturing the essence of C4C. I thank you for your care, your interest, your compassion and incredible commitment to learning in service of building community.

    • April says:

      Charles, I’m so glad to hear that from one of the key orchestrators (apparently that’s not a word??) of the gathering. I’m eager to get the photos edited as well to hopefully convey more of the shining faces and eyes, and warm connections that abounded all three days. Thank you again for making this possible.

  2. Mary Armitage says:

    I deeply appreciate this blog. I am struggling to find words and images which will allow the flow of inspiration to unfold in my community. So far, bits and pieces are haltingly unleashed and then I can only admit that I am still processing. Your blog will help me carry the message of this beautiful gathering to my world in Kalamazoo. Kinda like rose petals in a basket…dropping those petals along the path of my day.

  3. Shannon McQuillan says:

    Hi April,
    Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts on C4C! It was a great reminder to me of my amazing experience in Cincinnati last year. So rich and rewarding on so many levels. I’ve subscribed to your blog and look forward to hearing more on the topics you’ve noted. Thanks again for your evocative and inspiring piece! It almost made me feel like I was back in the room with all of those wonderful people!

  4. Todd Fuqua says:

    A lot to digest from the three days…and equally from your blog. Both dripping with insights, lessons, connections, stories and individuals. Thank you for taking the time to pull this together for us. Glad you’re in our community here in Indianapolis for a time… We are each spiraling upward, creating connections and community as best we can. Thank you for your gifts.

  5. Pingback: C4C (2.1): Power & Patriarchy in the Community-Building Movement | Aprilart Studios

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