u.lab 1x Leading From the Emerging Future Source Book 2019 MITx u.lab SOURCE BOOK
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u.lab 1x
Leading From the Emerging Future
Source Book
2019
MITx u.lab
SOURCE BOOK
Welcome! This workbook was created to complement the edX course u.lab 1x: Leading from the Emerging Future, which brings together over 9,000 participants from 125 countries for a 13-week experiential learning journey. This workbook is designed to give you the essential frameworks and tools presented in u.lab – along with a few bonus materials that we did not introduce in the online course, but have road-tested in various contexts around the world for many years. Why are we offering this course – and this book – now? The disruptive social, environmental and cultural changes we face confront us with challenges of a new order of magnitude. These challenges hold the seeds for profound levels of breakthrough innovation while also holding the possibility of massive disruption and breakdown. Whether it’s one or the other depends on our capacity to rise to the occasion and to reframe problems into opportunities for system-wide innovation and renewal. We believe it’s possible to create profound societal renewal in our generation. It will take all of us. We’re glad you’ve joined for the journey. Enjoy the u.lab Source Book! – The u.lab team September 2019 - Version 3
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Table of Contents General Resources
8
The Societal Transformation Lab
8
Intention Setting
9
Module 1: Co-Initiating The Iceberg Model
10
Theory U
13
Levels of Listening
14
Tool: Case Clinic
16
Tool: Empathy Walk
18
Tool: Listening Assessment
19
Module 2: Co-Sensing Tool: Sensing Journey
21
Tool: Stakeholder Interviews
25
Social Presencing Theater: 20 Minute Dance
27
Social Presencing Theater: Stuck Exercise
29
Social Presencing Theater: 4D Mapping
31
Module 3: Presencing Presencing
34
Absencing
35
Tool: Mindfulness Practice
36
Tool: Field of the Future Journaling Practice
37
Crystallizing
42
Module 4: Co-Creating Tool: 3D Mapping
45
Module 5: Co-Evolving The Four Distractions
49
Principles for Leading From the Emerging Future
50
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General Resources Scharmer, C. Otto, The Essentials of Theory U. Berrett- Koehler: San Francisco. 2018. Scharmer, C. Otto, Kaeufer, K. Leading From the Emerging Future: From Ego-System to Eco-System Economies. Berrett- Koehler: San Francisco. 2013. Scharmer, C. Otto, Theory U: Learning from the Future as it Emerges. Berrett- Koehler: San Francisco. 2009.
The Societal Transformation Lab u.lab: Leading From the Emerging Future was created by a team from the Presencing Institute, a network of practitioners who build social technologies and innovation infrastructures (such as this course) that enable people to connect (with each other and with their deeper selves), projects to take root and movements to amplify their impact. u.lab 1x is one part of an annual innovation cycle called The Societal Transformation Lab that consists of three interconnected offerings: 1. 2. 3.
u.lab 1x: Leading From the Emerging Future: a journey from sensing and connecting to deeper sources of knowing to generating powerful prototype ideas. u.lab 2x: a journey from prototype intention to real world impact and change on the level of real world ecosystems. Global Forum & Dialogues on Transforming Society: connecting change makers across sectors and geographies through monthly online Dialogues on Transforming Society (DoTS) and an annual Global Presencing Forum (June 2020, Berlin).
As you progress through u.lab 1x and develop your own prototype initiative (or join and support an existing one), you'll have the opportunity to join this year-round innovation cycle by applying to participate in u.lab 2x. More information will be available in October 2020. For now, you c an click here to read more about the whole Societal Transformation Lab.
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Intention Setting I’m joining u.lab because… My most important challenge right now is… The level at which I’m focused on creating change is… (personal, organizational, systemic, etc.) u.lab will be a success for me when…
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Module 1: Co-Initiating The Iceberg Model The iceberg model suggests that beneath the visible level of events and crises, there are underlying structures, paradigms of thought, and sources that are responsible for creating them. If ignored, they will keep us locked into re-enacting the same old patterns time and again.
The Iceberg Model: Reflection Questions What are the deeper systemic forces that keep you, and the stakeholders in this system, re-enacting results that ultimately nobody wants? Which of the structural disconnects are most relevant to the challenge, issue, or system you want to address during u.lab? Share up to three responses.
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The Iceberg Model: Paradigms of Economic Thought The evolution of modern economy and economic thought mirrors an evolution in human consciousness - from what we call "egosystem awareness" to "ecosystem awareness". Paradigms of economic thought and deeper sources of creativity and self give rise to the structures and visible events we see around us.
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Journaling 1.
Where do you experience a world that is ending and dying? And in your response you can refer both to society, to your organizational context or to yourself.
2.
Where do you experience a world that is wanting to be born? In society, in your organizational context, in your personal context?
3.
Where have you experienced moments of disruption and what did you notice about your inner response to these moments?
4.
Lastly, how do the ecological, the social-economic and the spiritual divides show up in your personal experience of work and life?
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Theory U Today, it's not enough to create change at the level of symptoms and structures. We need to work even deeper, to change the underlying paradigms of thought, and to connect with our deeper sources of creativity and self. Theory U is a framework and method for how to do that. Module 1 covers the whole U process at a high level, with a particular emphasis on the stage highlighted in orange below:
Most learning methodologies focus on learning from the past. Theory U proposes a framework and methodology for understanding and practicing another learning cycle – learning from the future as it emerges.
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Levels of Listening One of the core ideas of Theory U is that form follows attention or consciousness. We can change reality by changing the inner place from which we operate. The first step in understanding the impact of attention on reality is to look at our own individual practice of listening. The image below introduces four levels of listening, representing four distinct places from where our listening can originate.
Leading through Listening: Reflection What did you notice?
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Theory U: Six Principles 1.
Energy follows attention.
2.
We have to go through a process that deals with three main movements, or "inner gestures": 1. Observe, observe, observe; 2: Retreat and reflection, allow the inner knowing to emerge; 3. Act in an instant.
3.
This three-stage process only works if we cultivate the inner instruments: Open Mind, Open Heart, Open Will.
4.
At the source of this inner cultivation process are the two root questions of creativity: Who is my Self? What is my Work?
5.
This process is the road less traveled because the moment you begin, you are going to face three enemies that prevent you from accessing your deeper sources of creativity: Voice of Judgment, Voice of Cynicism, Voice of Fear.
6.
This opening process is not only important to do as an individual; you need to hold the space to go through the same process on a collective level.
Reflective Journaling Reflect on your experience so far: ●
How, if at all, is the core question that you want to explore in u.lab changing after this first module?
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In these early beginnings of your u.lab journey, what have you noticed about the quality of your listening?
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Tool: Case Clinic Overview Case Clinics guide a team or a group of peers through a process in which a case giver presents a case, and a group of 3-4 peers or team members help as consultants based on the principles of the U-Process and process consultation. Case Clinics allow participants to: ●
Generate new ways to look at a challenge or question
●
Develop new approaches for responding to the challenge or question
Purpose To access the wisdom and experience of peers and to help a peer respond to an important and immediate leadership challenge in a better and more innovative way.
Principles ●
The case should be a leadership challenge that is current and concrete.
●
The case giver needs to be a key player in the case.
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The participants in the case clinics are peers, so there is no hierarchical relationship among them.
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Don’t give advice; instead listen deeply.
Uses & Outcomes ●
Concrete and innovative ideas for how to respond to a pressing leadership challenge
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High level of trust and positive energy among the peer group
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Use with: Mindfulness and listening practices
An Example Participants of a master class program form peer learning groups. They do their first case clinic while they are in the program, and then use the process for monthly phone calls that allow each participant to present a case.
Set Up People & Place
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Groups of 4-5 peers
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Sufficient space so that groups can work without distractions
Time
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A minimum of 70 minutes is required
Materials
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Chairs for each group to sit in a circle or around a table
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The handout of the process
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Process Case giver: Share your personal aspiration and leadership challenge that is current, concrete, and important, and that you happen to be a key player in. You should be able to present the case in 15 min and the case should stand to benefit from the feedback of your peers. Include your personal learning threshold (what you need to let-go of and learn). Coaches: Listen deeply—do not try to “fix” the problem, but listen deeply to the case giver while also attending to the images, metaphors, feelings and gestures that the story evokes in you. Timekeeper: One of the coaches manages the time. Step
Time
Activity
1
2 min
Select case giver and time keeper
2
15 min
Intention statement by case giver Take a moment to reflect on your sense of calling. Then clarify these questions: 1. Current situation: What key challenge or question are you up against? 2. Stakeholders: How might others view this situation? 3. Intention: What future are you trying to create? 4. Learning threshold: What do you need to let-go of – and what do you need to learn? 5. Help: Where do you need input or help? Coaches listen deeply and may ask clarifying questions (don’t give advice!)
3
3 min
Stillness 1. Listen to your heart: Connect with your heart to what you’re hearing. 2. Listen to what resonates: What images, metaphors, feelings and gestures come up for you that capture the essence of what you heard?
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10 min
Mirroring: Images (Open Mind), Feelings (Open Heart), Gestures (Open Will) Each coach shares the images/metaphors, feelings and gestures that came up in the silence or while listening to the case story. Having listened to all coaches, the case giver reflects back on what s/he heard.
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20 min
Generative dialogue ● All reflect on remarks by the case giver and move into a generative dialogue on how these observations can offer new perspectives on the case giver’s situation and journey. ● Go with the flow of the dialogue. Build on each other’s ideas. Stay in service of the case giver without pressure to fix or resolve his/her challenge.
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8 min
Closing remarks By coaches By case giver: How do I now see my situation and way forward? Thanks & acknowledgment: An expression of genuine appreciation to each other.
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2 min
Individual journaling to capture the learning points
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Tool: Empathy Walk This practice was developed by MIT Professor Emeritus Ed Schein. Ed has shaped the field of organizational culture, learning and leadership over the past 50 years. He is the author of numerous books including Process Consultation Revisited, Helping and H umble Inquiry.
Purpose 1.
To develop empathy for someone very different from yourself.
2.
To develop your skill in establishing a relationship across a significant boundary.
Process 1.
Spend some time exploring (thinking and researching) what kind of person would live in a world that is most different from the one you are in—a person that may be very different from you. Be creative, let your imagination run.
2.
Having decided what kind of person to look for, figure out how you could actually find and meet such a person in the next week in your city or neighborhood.
3.
Make contact with this person and go meet them.
4.
Plan to spend several hours (one hour at the least) getting to know the person you picked and try to get into that person’s world enough to get a feel for what it would be like to be in that person’s world. How you go about this, what you say to the person, what kind of time you actually spend, etc. is all up to you. There are no rules or guidelines. Be creative. The idea here is to get away from your computer, go out into the world and practice empathy, relationship building and deep listening with another person.
5.
You can do the empathy walk on your own. Or, if you are participating in a hub or taking the u.lab course with friends or colleagues, the two of you can go together to meet this person.
When you are finished, write a short reflective journaling entry on what you learned.
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Tool: Listening Assessment Overview In u.lab, we offer an online tool (on presencing.org) that helps you to observe changes in your ability to engage in deep listening over time. Tracking your listening on a daily basis is one of the key tools to help you increase your capacity to listen at different levels as appropriate to the situation in which you find yourself. While the online tool is helpful, you can also track your listening in a journal. In fact, before we ever had an online tool, Otto had his MIT Sloan students track their listening in their personal journals. In case you’re unable to use the online tool - or if there are some days where you are unable to track your listening online - just use a journal. The power of the practice comes from reflecting on your listening on a regular basis, regardless of how you track it.
Process Part One
Once a day, at the end of the day, take some time to reflect on your quality of listening during the day. Estimate what percentage of your time each day you spent in each level of listening. As a reminder, here are the descriptions of each level: ●
Level 1: Downloading - Listening from your habits, from what you already know; the result is you re-confirm what you already knew.
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Level 2: Factual - Noticing something new, something that differs from what you already knew or expected to hear.
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Level 3: Empathetic - Listening from the place from which the other person is speaking, experiencing/sensing an emotional connection.
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Level 4: Generative - Connecting to the emerging future - to a future possibility that links to your emerging self; to who you really are.
Part Two
Share a story about a moment today when you experienced a shift from one level of listening to another. Then select the tag below that indicates which shift you experienced. In your description, simply describe what you noticed about the moment - paying particular attention to your mental state, emotions that were present, any felt sense in your body, and shifts in your perception of time and space. You may write as much or as little as you would like. Also note which level you shifted from, and which level you shifted to (example: shift from level 2 to 3).
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Module 2: Co-Sensing Principles In Module 2, we begin gathering data by suspending our habitual ways of seeing, going to the edges of the system we’re interested in learning about and changing, and listening with our minds and hearts wide open. We introduce the principles of co-sensing and fields of conversation: how the four levels of listening manifest in groups and teams.
Fields of Conversation
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Tool: Sensing Journey Overview
Sensing Journeys pull participants out of their daily routine and allow them to experience the organization, challenge, or system through the lens of different stakeholders. Sensing journeys bring participants to places, people, and experiences that are most relevant for the respective question they are working on. These Learning Journeys allow participants to: ●
Move into unfamiliar environments
●
Immerse themselves in different contexts
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Step into relevant experiences
Purpose To allow participants to break-through patterns of seeing and listening by stepping into a different and relevant perspective and experience. Sensing Journeys can also help build relationships with key stakeholders, and gain a system perspective.
Principles A deep-dive sensing journey requires engaging in three types of listening: 1.
Listening to others: to what the people you meet are offering to you.
2.
Listening to yourself: to what you feel emerging from within.
3.
Listening to the emerging whole: to what emerges from the collective and community settings that you have connected with.
Go to the places of most potential. Meet your interviewees in their context: in their workplace or where they live, not in a hotel or conference room. When you meet people in their own context you learn a lot by simply observing what is going on. Take whatever you observe as a starting point to improvise questions that allow you to learn more about the real-life context of your interviewee. Observe, observe, observe: Suspend your voices of judgment (VOJ) and cynicism (VOC) and connect with your sense of appreciation and wonder. Without the capacity to suspend judgment and cynicism, all efforts to conduct an effective inquiry process will be in vain. Suspending your VOJ means shutting down the habit of judging and opening up a new space of exploration, inquiry, and wonder.
Uses & Outcomes ●
Increased awareness of the different aspects of a system and their relationships
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Enhanced awareness of the different perspectives of the stakeholders and participants in the system
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Connections between stakeholders and participants
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Ideas for prototypes
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Use with… Listening tools
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Example An automobile manufacturing firm’s product development team decided to use Sensing Journeys to broaden their thinking and to generate new ideas. Their task was to build the self-repair capacity of their cars’ engines. The team visited a broad selection of other companies, research centers, and even experts in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). As it turned out, the visits with TCM experts generated the most innovative ideas for this project (including the idea to design self-repair functions for the “dream state” of the car--that is, for those periods when the car is not in use).
Set Up People & Place
The group splits up into sub-teams of about 5 participants. The group composition matters because a mix of perspectives enhances the impact of the sensing journeys. Define places of high potential for the sensing journeys. The whole group of participants should go to several places that can provide insights into: ●
The different perspectives of the system’s key stakeholders
●
The different aspects of that system
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The ‘voiceless’: people in the system, those who usually are not heard or seen.
A good way to get a sense of the system is to take the perspective of its “extreme users”: these can be customers who use the services or products more than others or in different ways, or on a societal level, those with special requirements, such as a person living in a remote area needing access to a health system. Time
The length of a sensing journey depends on the size of the geographic area being covered. It is recommended to allocate at least 1 day to sensing journeys in a workshop context and several days or weeks (sometimes spread over a period of months) in a larger project setting. Materials
If the hosts agree, it is advised to take pictures and/or videos during the journey. These can be useful during reviews with the other groups and as a reminder for the participants. Other materials may be collected as well, after seeking permission from the hosts. A pen and journal are required for taking notes during and after the journey.
Process Step 1
Identify Learning Journeys: find places, individuals, organizations that provide you and the group with new perspective. Step 2
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Prepare as a group by discussing:
●
What is the context that we will experience?
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Who are the key players that we will talk to?
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What questions do we want to explore?
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What assumptions do I bring with me? What do I expect?
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Share your most eye-opening sensing experience to date
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Start by developing a short questionnaire (7-10 questions) that guides your inquiry process. Keep updating your questionnaire as your inquiry process unfolds. Prepare the host: Share the purpose and intent of the visit. Communicate that it would be most helpful for the group to gain some insight into their ”normal” daily operations, rather than a staged presentation. Try to avoid “show and tell” situations. Step 3
Small groups travel to the host’s location. While at the site: Trust your intuition and ask authentic questions raised by the conversation. Asking simple and authentic questions is an important leverage point in shifting or refocusing the attention to some of the deeper systemic forces at play. Use deep listening as a tool to hold the space of conversation. When your interviewee has finished responding to one of your questions, don’t jump in automatically with the next question. Attend to what is emerging from the now. Example questions for sensing journeys: ●
What personal experience or journey brought you into your current role?
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What issues or challenges are you confronted with?
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Why do these challenges exist?
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What challenges exist in the larger system?
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What are the blockages?
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What are your most important sources of success and change?
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What would a better system look like for you?
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What initiative, if implemented, would have the greatest impact for you? For the system as a whole?
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If you could change just a few elements of the system, what would you change?
●
Who else do we need to talk to?
Step 4
After the visit, reflect and debrief: To capture and leverage the findings of your inquiry process, conduct a disciplined debriefing process right after each visit. Don’t switch on cell phones until the debriefing is complete. Here are a few sample questions for the debriefing: ●
What was most surprising or unexpected?
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What touched me? What connected with me personally?
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If the social field h(or the living system) of the visited organization or community were a living being, what would it look and feel like?
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If that being could talk: what would it say (to us)?
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If that being could develop—what would it want to morph into next?
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What is the generative source that allows this social field to develop and thrive?
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What limiting factors prevent this field/system from developing further?
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Moving in and out of this field, what did you notice about yourself?
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What ideas does this experience spark for possible prototyping initiatives that you may want to take on?
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Step 5
Close the feedback loop with your hosts: Send an email (or other follow-up note) expressing a key insight you took away from the meeting (one or two sentences), and your appreciation. Step 6
Debrief as a whole group: After a one-day learning journey this debriefing would take place in next meeting with the whole group. In the case of a multi-days learning journey you plan to meet between the individual days if logistics allow. Structure of the whole group debrief meeting:
●
Get everyone on the same page by sharing concrete information about the Journeys: Where did you go, who did you talk to, what did you do?
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Talk about your findings and generate new ideas.
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Tool: Stakeholder Interviews Overview Stakeholder Interviews are conducted by practitioners with their key stakeholders; this could include customers, bosses, subordinates, or peers both within and outside the organization. The interviews allow you to step into the shoes of your interviewees and see your role through the eyes of these stakeholders.
Purpose The purpose of a stakeholder interview is to see your work from the perspective of your stakeholders. It answers the questions: What do my stakeholders want from me? What do they need me for? Stakeholder Interviews can be used in all phases of the U-process. Most common use is during the preparation phase of a project.
Principles ●
Create transparency and trust about the purpose and the process of the interview; establish a personal connection early on.
●
Suspend your voice of judgment (VOJ) to see the situation through the eyes of your interviewee. What matters at this point is not whether you agree with what your interviewee is telling you. What matters now is that you learn to see the situation through the eyes of the stakeholder.
●
Access your ignorance (access your open mind): As the conversation unfolds, pay attention to and trust the questions that occur to you, Don’t be afraid to ask simple questions or questions you think may reveal a lack of some basic knowledge.
●
Access your appreciative listening (access your open heart): Connect to your interviewee with your mind and heart wide open. Thoroughly appreciate and enjoy the story that you hear unfolding and put yourself in your interviewee’s shoes.
●
Access your listening from the future field (access your open will): Try to focus on the best future possibility for your interviewee that you feel is wanting to emerge. What might that best possible future look like?
●
Leverage the power of presence and silence: One of the most effective interventions as an interviewer is to be fully present with the interviewee and the current situation—and not to interrupt a brief moment of silence. Moments of silence can serve as important trigger points for deepening the reflective level of a conversation. More often than not, these opportunities go unused because the interviewer feels compelled to jump in and ask the next question. Be courageous. Stay with the opening of the NOW.
Uses & Outcomes Stakeholder interviews offer: ●
Enhanced clarity about how your work matters from the viewpoint of your stakeholders
●
An understanding of how your stakeholders assess the value you create for them
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The identification of barriers and roadblocks that need to be removed
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A better and deeper personal relationship with your key stakeholders
Example One participant in a leadership capacity-building workshop:
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“As a newcomer, I sensed that there wasn’t a lot of trust in the organization. With many questions in mind, I was asked to do ‘stakeholder’ interviews as a preparation for a leadership seminar. The first thing I realized was that stakeholder interviews are 180 degrees different from normal conversations - no checking out and bargaining over my pre-prepared plans and trying to convince the other person. On the contrary, I had to shift my perspective and put myself into the stakeholders’ shoes: ‘How does she or he look at my job?’ I had to find out how I could serve my stakeholders so that they could be successful… But then it was amazing: The interviews were incredibly helpful. They saved me months of work and communication! I learned things from the perspective of my stakeholders that I would never have heard in ‘normal communications’. Shortly after the interviews, people I didn’t know came and said, ‘We’ve heard about these open communications you’ve had. We must tell you that they’ve created a lot of trust. How did you do that?”
Process People & Place
Stakeholder interviews work best face-to-face. If in-person interviews are not possible, conduct them by video conference or phone. Time
Both figures are estimates and need to be adjusted to the specific context: ●
30-45 minutes for a phone interview.
●
30-90 minutes for a face-to-face interview.
Allocate an additional 30 min. before the interview to prepare and 30 min after for review. Materials
Use the interview guidelines (questionnaire), but feel free to deviate when necessary. Paper and pen to take notes.
Sequence Step 1
● ● ●
Identify the stakeholders who are relevant to your current situation or challenge/opportunity. Define/revise questions to adjust to the specific context. Schedule appointments. Decide whether to send the questions to the interviewee in advance.
Step 2
● ●
Before you meet the interviewee, allow for some quiet preparation or silence. For example, take 20-30 minutes prior to an interview to relax and anticipate the conversation with an open mind and heart.
Step 3
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During the interview, listen with your mind and heart wide open, take notes, follow the principles below.
●
Ask questions spontaneously: Feel free to deviate from your questionnaire if important questions occur to you. The questionnaire is designed to serve you and your work—not the other way around.
●
Sample questionnaire:
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What is your most important objective, and how can I help you realize it? (What do you need me for?)
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What criteria do you use to assess whether my contribution to your work has been successful?
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If I were able to change two things in my area of responsibility within the next six months, what two things would create the most value and benefit for you?
Step 4
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Right after the interview, take time to reflect on key insights, capture your key thoughts in writing.
Step 5
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Close the feedback loop: Right after each interview, send a thank-you note to your interviewee (within 12 hours).
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Social Presencing Theater: 20 Minute Dance Overview Mindfulness of body is a foundational skill for Social Presencing Theater. And like any skill, we learn it through practice. The 20-minute Dance is a practice in which we pay attention to the feeling of the body, without thinking about it or judging it. We are not trying to fix or change or accomplish anything. We welcome every moment.
Purpose The invitation is to become more present and grounded in our bodies. To support fully being present in the moment by resting our attention (mind) on the feeling of the body. When body and mind are synchronized, we have access to a holistic intelligence.
Principles ●
This is a practice to restore the natural synchronicity of the body and the mind.
●
When we become lost in thoughts of the past or future or we fixate on our opinions and judgments we lose touch with the present moment.
●
Throughout the practice, the attention is on the feeling of the body; the sensations involved in movement and stillness. (It doesn't matter at all what it looks like.)
Uses & Outcomes ●
Slowing down and becoming more grounded, appreciating the moment to moment experience
●
Body, mind and heart become more open and aligned, resulting in greater emotional intelligence and heartfelt listening
●
Increase in confidence, clarity, and creativity
●
Preparation for Stuck and 4D Mapping
An Example This can be used as a personal mindfulness of body practice (as one might use yoga). Participants in leadership programs engage in this practice to transition from the speed and pressures of work life into a more grounded and receptive state of mind.
Set Up People & Place
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Room with a clean wooden or carpeted floor
●
Sufficient space so that everyone has room to lie down on the floor without feeling crowded
Time
●
Everyone begins the practice together. Use a gong or bell to indicate the beginning time.
●
Ideally the practice is 20 minutes long. It is fine to practice for 10 minutes.
●
Allow time for a short reflection.
Materials
● ●
Encourage people to dress comfortably Bell or gong to indicate beginning and end of practice
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Process Lying down
●
Begin by resting on the floor with the eyes closed. Feel the body resting on the big body of the earth. Bring some attention to abdominal breathing. Experience your body, simply, without judgment or a goal.
●
Let a movement begin. Do whatever the body feels like doing without planning anything. For example, the body might feel like stretching, rolling over, or wiggling its fingers. Keep the movement close to the ground. Any movement is good. Pay attention to the sensations, the feeling of the body, as it is moving.
●
Then, pause and feel the body as it is resting in a shape or a posture.
●
Then begin to move again, paying attention to the feeling of the body moving.
●
Continue in this way, alternating resting and moving, paying attention to the feeling of the body. As we move or rest, our attention can be on part of the body (we feel our lower back or knee or shoulder) or on a sense of the whole body.
●
When you notice that you are thinking, labeling, or judging the experience, let those thoughts go. Simply rest your attention on the feeling of the body.
Sitting
●
After several minutes, let the body rise to a sitting position. Continue alternating stillness and movement, allowing the eyes to remain closed.
Standing
●
Again, later in the practice time, come to a standing position. Continue to alternate moving and stillness. You might include bending or twisting, maintaining a sense of standing on one spot.
Moving through space
●
Open your eyes and begin to move around the room. Keep your eyes downcast with a soft gaze so that your attention remains in your body and is not drawn outward into what others are doing.
Finding an ending
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At the end of the 20 (or 10) minutes, stop and hold the still shape. Wait in the still shape until the others have found their ending shape and place in the room. Feel the back of the body. Feel the full three-dimensional shape of the body. Then become aware of the space above and below and around the body.
Reflection
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Reflect briefly in pairs, or in trios. Allow each person one or two minutes to speak. The others listen with their full attention. What did you notice? What did you learn about yourself?
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Speak from the first person voice about what you noticed, felt or did. Remember, there is no ideal dance or particular “better or right” experience. Experience is not the same as interpretation or thoughts about the experience. Each person’s experience is the perfect dance for them at that time.
Continue the practice
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As you go about the rest of your day, sitting in a chair or standing in line or walking to your car, remember to be aware of the body. Feel the whole body – the feet on the floor, the upright posture, the top of the head.
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Notice that once you feel embodied, there is a natural sense of being and of presence.
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Social Presencing Theater: Stuck Exercise Overview This is the main technique of Social Presencing Theater. The other forms (such as 4D Mapping) are variations on this practice. It is a process by which one experiences going through the whole U journey by moving from Sculpture 1 (current reality) to Sculpture 2 (emerging future). We do not know what the movements will be or where they will stop, but we can follow the movement and then reflect on our experience. Surprising insights can arise.
Purpose The invitation here is to notice the inclination of individual people and groups of people to move toward a saner, freer, healthier, more creative situation; to sense more deeply into the current reality, rather than trying to “fix” the situation from the same mind-set or frame of reference that created the stuck situation. Instead, we feel deeply into the situation, suspending our problem-solving habit. By paying attention to our “body-knowing” and to the social field, we discover new directions or fresh insights that were not accessible just by thinking.
Principles ●
Let the body be the guide. Do not plan, act, mime, pretend, manipulate or represent. Simply BE and DO.
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Lean into the “stuck” situation. The wisdom is there already. Notice what is emerging – what in Theory U language is sometimes called the “crack”.
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Trust the moment-to-moment experience.
Uses & Outcomes ●
Become more sensitive to and honest about the feeling-quality of their current situation
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Suspend concepts; build trust in body knowing.
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Feel ourselves as part of a co-creative system.
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Feel what is emerging, a future that we want to create.
An Example This exercise can be used by individuals or teams as a practice for letting the intelligence of the body guide us in decisions and actions. Fully embodying our situations gives us direct feedback that informs our decisions. Noticing the interdependence of many factors and influences in every situation gives us a broader perspective.
Set Up People & Place
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Groups of 4-6 people
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Sufficient space so that groups can work without distraction
Time
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Part 1 is 10 minutes. Each person shares a gesture and a few minutes of reflection at the end
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Part 2 is 5 minutes. All participants practice together.
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Part 3 is 10-15 minutes per person. Each person sets up Sculpture #1, moves to Sculpture #2, and there is time for reflection after each person’s “stuck”.
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Process Show Sculpture 1
(Corresponds to the u.lab video, “Stuck Part 2”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVeU1fTuSZc) 1. Sit together in groups of five. 2. Reflect on a place where you feel stuck, where there is a breakdown or an area of life or work that feels stuck. 3. Let that feeling of being stuck in this particular situation come into your body as a shape or a gesture. 4. Embody your feeling of stuck. Make it concrete and visible in the space. 5. One by one share this with the others in your group. Allow space between each person. 6. Brief reflection on what you saw or felt as a witness. Show movement from Sculpture 1 to Sculpture 2
(Corresponds to the u.lab video, “Stuck Part 4”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcxcGrqNRfQ) 1. 2.
In parallel each person embodies their stuck shape (sculpture 1) and then allows that shape to move. When the movement comes to an end, stop (sculpture 2). After all have shared their movement, briefly reflect together on what each person experienced doing the exercise and witnessing the others.
Group Stuck
(Corresponds to the u.lab video, “Stuck Part 6”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvgVt-JBpO8) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
Take 2 minutes to sit with the group in silence and feel the social body of the group. One person places the others in their stuck sculpture to emphasize, augment, or clarify their feeling of stuck. As a collective, stay with the feeling of stuck, deepening into it. Pay close attention to the collective or social body as it begins to move, shift, or change. Don’t talk during this phase. When the movement stops, rest in this Sculpture 2. Remaining in the Sculpture 2, each person says one sentence from the “I voice” Reflect as a group on what you noticed, saw, and felt. Gap of silence Next person does their Stuck Exercise, same as above.
Reflection
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
The reflection is built into each part of the exercise. Participants can reflect through several lenses. What is the difference between the stuck shape and sculpture 2? How are they different? What was the movement from sculpture 1 to sculpture 2? Where did the movement begin in the body? Where in the social body? In the group stuck, each person holds or expresses a different aspect of the system, but also embodies the whole system. Reflect on what literally happened, on the quality of experience and on the feeling. What insights or questions arose?
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Social Presencing Theater: 4D Mapping
Overview In Social Presencing Theater, the word theater is used in connection to its root meaning – a place where something significant becomes visible, or where a community of people can see a shared experience. 4D mapping makes visible the current reality in a social system, such as a school system, health care system, or government.
Purpose We use 4D Mapping with groups who are looking to gain new insights about their own system, and with clients who have a case they want to explore using this method.
Principles ●
4D mapping explores how the highest aspiration in a system might come forward. We assume there is an underlying wisdom – in spite of the diverse values or goals of stakeholders in a system – that could come to the surface and be visible as we move from Sculpture 1 to 2.
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Participants apply mindfulness of body and awareness of the surrounding space. 4D mapping is not about acting out preconceived ideas or concepts we have about a system.
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4D mapping is about surfacing and noticing what shifts in a system might be significant in going from a current reality to an emerging future reality.
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Movement is based on what is actually emerging, not based on manipulation or what we think something should be.
Process Roles & Space
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There are two basic types of roles in 4D mapping: players and space-holders. There is also a facilitator and a scribe (the scribe writes down the sentences that people speak from their shapes).
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Those who hold the space typically sit in a circle, and players embody roles in the center of the circle.
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There are typically 10-12 players, and everyone else remains in their seats in a circle (once the movement from Sculpture 1 to 2 begins, space holders can move around the periphery of the circle).
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4D mapping is a co-created event that depends on the quality of everyone’s attention; so both types of roles are equally important.
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The roles in the system should be predetermined. Whether you are working with a group looking to gain new insights about their own system, or with a client, determine the roles together with the group or client prior to beginning 4D mapping.
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Important: Always include roles that represent the 3 divides: the earth/environment, marginalized groups or individuals, and the highest future possibility of the system.
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Write the name of each role on a card. Use labels with tape on the back to help everyone remember the roles. It’s helpful to be specific with roles. See the u.lab 4D mapping Part 3 video for examples.
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Decide the order in which the facilitator will call out the roles. We find it helpful to begin with the more powerful roles in the system.
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Co-Initiating
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If working with a client, invite them to describe their case to the group, just as they would in the case clinic method, so everyone can sense into the current reality. This should take ten minutes or less.
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Pause for a moment, and practice mindfulness of body. Connect to the feeling of the body, especially the back of the body.
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The facilitator may remind everyone: When we step into the space, we let go of concepts of how it should be, or how it should transform – we don’t know the answers. We step into an open space with an open mind, and we embody our element of the system. We make a shape with our body that we feel expresses some quality of the role we’re playing.
Co-Sensing
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Facilitator says the name of the role and holds up the first card, with a pre-determined role written on it.
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One-by-one, a person from the circle will stand up and volunteer to embody that role. The only guideline here is not to choose the role you actually play in your daily life.
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The player takes the card with the name of the role and affixes it to his/her shirt so it is visible to others.
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That player finds a place in the room and a shape that embodies the experience of that role in the system. Each player comes in, finds a place in relationship to the center, the edge, and the other players. They may find it helpful to ask themselves, “Am I bigger, smaller, in the center, to the side; do I feel powerful, weak and vulnerable?” Whatever it is, they embody it in the space so that others can see it. Remember not to act, but to empathize, identify with the role, and embody it.
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Once in the shape, the player says one sentence from the experience of that shape, in the first person “I” voice.The scribe writes these down.
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Then, the facilitator calls the next role, and the process is repeated until all roles have been embodied.
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Once all players have entered the space, the facilitator invites anyone who feels they need to adjust their place, level, or direction in the space to make it more accurately embody the current reality to do so.
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The space-holders in the circle are very important because they hold the space without judgment.
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Once everyone has found a place and shape, that is Sculpture 1. Sculpture 1 represents a feeling of the current reality of the system.
Presencing
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The players let go of any idea of the outcome and stay with the stillness for a few moments.
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Somewhere in this sculpture, movement will arise.
Crystallizing
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Then the sculpture begins to move and continues moving, until the social body comes to a stop in Sculpture 2. This whole process could take about five minutes.
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From Sculpture 2, each player says the name of their role and one sentence about their experience. The scribe can record what is said.
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The facilitator can invite people from the circle to also offer one sentence
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Generative Dialogue
As a whole group, reflect on what you experienced. Describe your Sculpture 1 to Sculpture 2 journey. Emphasize real data.What did you notice, see, or do? The following reflection questions have proved to be helpful: ●
Where did movement begin in Sculpture 1?
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When did the Sculpture shift? Where did the process of transformation originate?
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What did you notice about how your attention evolved over time?
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How did your sense of Space, Time, Self, and Other shift over time?
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If the journey from Sculpture 1 to 2 were a film, what would you call it? Give it a title or name.
You might also reflect on the following questions: ●
What was your experience as a “player” or as a holder of the space? What surprised you?
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What are the key differences between Sculpture 1 (current reality) and Sculpture 2 (emerging reality)? What are the top three features that changed?
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What next steps will you take as a result of this experience?
Step out of roles
Before ending 4D mapping, invite everyone to step out of his or her roles. We’ve found it helpful if everyone briefly says (to themselves) that they appreciate the opportunity to embody this particular role, and that they will take the lessons to be learned and leave all else behind.
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Module 3: Presencing Presencing
Presencing, the blending of presence and sensing, means to connect with the source of our highest future possibility – individually, and also as teams, organizations, and larger social systems – and to bring it into reality now. The videos in this module introduces the principles of presencing, the principles of absencing (the inverse of presencing), and eight ways of shifting the current economic model to one that generates well-being for all. Presencing requires us to let go of the old and open ourselves completely to something that we can sense but that we cannot fully know before we see it emerging. This moment can feel like jumping across an abyss. At the moment we leap, we have no idea whether we will make it across.
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Absencing In our everyday reality however, we often experience the tension between two different social fields: the field of presencing (sensing and actualizing the highest future possibilities) and the field of absencing (disconnecting from our sources of the emerging self). Whenever we find ourselves getting stuck in old patterns of downloading that put us into the collective space of absencing, our job is to bring ourselves back on track by realigning our attention with our intention. There are many mindfulness and other practices that strengthen that capacity.
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Tool: Mindfulness Practice This practice can be read aloud for another person or a group, or you can reference it for your personal practice:
First, be comfortable in your seat. Sit upright and comfortably in your chair, planting your feet right in front of you. Take a deep breath and relax. You may want to close your eyes. But if you're more comfortable with your eyes open that's also fine. Attend Downwards
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Move your attention slowly downwards, down your legs to your feet to the lower part of your feet. And as you begin to attend to your feet, the feeling of your feet, attend to the connection downwards.
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Imagine if we were trees, we would have roots going downwards. As human beings, we don't have these physical roots, but we still can feel the connection downwards.
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Attend to your feet and attend to the connection downwards. Imagine this connection would go all the way down to the middle of the earth. Feel that connection.
Attend Upwards
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And now slowly move your attention upwards, up the legs, up the spine to the head, to the upper part of your head.
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Attend to the upper part of your head, and attend to the connection that is extending upwards.
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As you attend to that connection notice how the sphere, the globe of your head is a small microcosm of the macrocosm that is surrounding us.
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Attend to that connection. Attend to the connection upwards.
Attend to the Micro-Macro Connection.
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And now slowly move your attention downwards to the middle sphere of your body to your heart. Not just to your physical heart, but to the whole energy field of your heart, to the whole middle sphere of your body.
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Notice how it is this part of our body, this part of our being that allows us to connect horizontally to all the beings that are surrounding us.
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Attend to your heart and attend to the connections that are emanating from your heart.
Attend to a Loved One
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And now as we explore that space of connection, picture a person that you truly love, and notice how focusing your attention on that person is opening up your heart. It's allowing you to connect with a different level of energy, to connect with deep appreciation and love.
Attend to the Global Body
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And now extend that quality of connection to the global community (to all u.lab participants) to connect to a larger whole that shares a common journey of relating more deeply with the sources of who we really are.
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Extend your heart, and the quality of your heart, to our entire community.
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And now even extend the quality of your heart even more, to all of us, to all 7 billion human beings on this planet right now.
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Try to embrace a whole community, the whole, the entire social field in that deep quality of your heart, which includes all our friends, people we know, people we don't know, and even people we may have problems with, we may disagree with, we may be in conflict with. Try to create a space in your heart that's broad and deep enough for all of us.
Attend to the Present Moment
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And now slowly let go of that. Come back to the here and now. Relax for a brief moment. Open your eyes and continue your day from this place of strength and connection.
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Tool: Field of the Future Journaling Practice Overview Guided journaling leads participants through a self-reflective process following the different phases of the U. This practice allows participants to access deeper levels of self-knowledge, and to connect this knowledge to concrete actions.
Purpose Guided journaling leads practitioners through a process of self-reflection that moves through the U-process. This process allows participants to step into a deeper level of reflection than in an un-guided journaling process, and identify concrete action steps. Journaling practices can be used in all phases of the U-process especially during the sensing and presencing steps.
Principles ●
Journaling is a personal process. If you’re facilitating this for others, it’s important that you never require participants to share their journaling notes in public.
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For facilitators: after completing a journaling practice you may create an opportunity to reflect on the experience of journaling. Again: emphasize that participants decide what they want to share.
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Journaling means that you write to find out what you think, rather than thinking, reflecting and then writing. As a facilitator, emphasize that participants should just start writing and see what emerges.
Uses & Outcomes ●
Access deeper levels of self-reflection & knowledge
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Learn how to use Journaling as a reflective tool
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Connect self-reflection to concrete action steps
Set Up People & Place
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Journaling Practice can be used in groups of any size. The exercise follows the co-sensing phase meaning that participants have already moved through the left side of the U-Process.
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It is important that the room is quiet and no noises or other distractions in the environment interrupt the participants.
Time
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A minimum of 45 minutes is required. Depending on the context this process can take up to 60-90 min.
Materials
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Pen
and paper for each participant
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Process Step 1: Preparation
Prepare a quiet space that allows each participant to enter into a process of self-reflection without distractions. Step 2: Guided Journaling Questions
Read one question after the other; invite the participants to journal guided by the respective question. Go one by one through the questions. Move to the next question when you sense that the majority of the group is ready. Don’t give participants too much time. It is important to get into a flow and not to think too much.
A 16-step Journaling Practice For Stepping Into The Field Of The Future 1. O ver the past days and weeks, what did you notice about your emerging self and what is wanting to be born? 2. W hat did you notice about what is wanting to be born in your context or community? 3. F rustration: What about your current work and/or personal life frustrates you the most? 4. H appiness: What about your current work and life inspires and energizes you the most? 5. Helicopter I: Watch yourself from above (as if in a helicopter). What are you doing? What are you trying to do in this stage of your professional and personal journey?
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6. Helicopter II: Watch your collective journey from above: what are you trying to do collectively in the present stage of your collective journey? 7. Your younger self: Look at your current situation from the viewpoint of you as a young person, at the beginning of your journey: What does that young person have to say to you? 8. Footprint: Imagine you could fast-forward to the very last moments of your life, when it is time for you to pass on. Now look back on your life’s journey as a whole. What would you want to see at that moment? What footprint do you want to leave behind on the planet? 9. F rom that future point of view: What advice have you given to your current self? 10. Now return again to the present and crystallize what it is that you want to create: your vision and intention for the next 3-5 years. What vision and intention do you have for yourself and your work? What are some essential core elements of the future that you want to create in your personal, professional, and social life? Describe or draw as concretely as possible the images and elements that occur to you. 11. Feel the connection of our global u.lab community that is present across the planet in this moment: What is our collective highest future possibility? What could we be an instrument for? What could we collectively create within the next 3-5 years?
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12. Letting-go: What would you have to let go of in order to bring your vision into reality? What is the old stuff that must die? What is the old skin (behaviors, assumptions, etc.) that you need to shed? 13. L etting-come: Where do you find the seeds of tomorrow in your context and environment NOW? 14. Prototyping: Over the next three months, if you were to prototype a microcosm of the future in which you could discover “the new” by doing something, what would that prototype look like? 15. People: Who can help you make your highest future possibilities a reality? Who might be your core helpers and partners? 16. Action: If you were to take on the project of bringing your intention into reality, what practical first steps would you take over the next 3 days?
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Self to Self Letter Take a moment and contemplate the following questions. What is it that is wanting to be born: ●
Within yourself?
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Within your relationships?
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Within your community?
Re-visit what you experienced during the Stepping Into the Field of the Future exercise. ●
What advice did you give yourself?
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What footprint do you want to leave behind?
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What practical steps could take you into this direction and allow you to learn by doing now?
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Who are your key partners in this?
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What is it that you could do every single day that could re-align your attention with the deeper intention that you are holding for your journey forward?
Now, write a Self to self letter (from your emerging future Self to your current self) that captures the essence of your responses to these questions. What small next step would you like to commit to now?
Empathy Walk at Home Sometimes the presencing experience (letting go, letting come) can leave you feeling groundless. One way to shift your attention from what's happening inside to what's happening around you is to return to the practice of listening. The Empathy Walk at Home is the same exercise you did in Module 1, only this time your empathy walk will be with a significant other, family member, or someone else who is close to you. The point of the Empathy Walk at Home is to apply the same type of empathic (Level 3) and generative (Level 4) listening that you practiced with a complete stranger - someone very different from you - only now, with someone who you know very well. If you're thinking: well that sounds even harder! You're right. It usually is. When you do your Empathy Walk at home, you may want to start by watching one of these clips together with your partner before beginning the conversation. ●
Watch the S teve Jobs Stanford Commencement Speech (2005)
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Watch B rene Brown's TED Talk on the Power of Vulnerability (2010)
If you can, plan to spend several hours together. If you don't have that kind of time, just spend as much time as you can. Try to listen to this person with the same quality of open mind and open heart that you accessed last week, when you met a stranger (or someone you didn't know well). Notice how often you find yourself listening at Level 1. Try to suspend your assumptions and judgments and get into this person’s world enough to get a feel for what it would be like to be them. How you go about this, what you say , what kind of time you actually spend, etc. is all up to you. There are no rules or guidelines. Be creative. The idea here is to get away from your computer, go out into the world, and practice empathy, relationship building and your deep listening skills.
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Crystallizing Principles Often times, the first thing that happens after a presencing experience is: nothing. No-thing. It’s just a connection. But, when we succeed in keeping alive that connection to our deeper source of knowing, we begin to better tune into emerging future possibilities. Acting now, from a different place or sphere, we are able to begin to operate from a different source. We envision, prototype, and embody the new. The term presencing can be used as either a noun or a verb and designates the connection to the deeper source of self and knowing. But because we keep that connection alive across the whole right-hand side of the U, we can say that we keep presencing (connecting and operating from source) throughout our entire journey. The term crystallizing designates the first stage of that process. What's important in this stage is: 1. 2. 3.
You actively maintain the connection to source. You take small, concrete actions to operate from that source and learn what it wants you to do. You notice whether you've reverting back to downloading. You might experience judgment, cynicism or fear around this new connection. That's normal. Just stay with it.
Resources Dialogue on Leadership: A Conversation with Otto and Ken Wilber: To help explain the often-misunderstood transition from presencing to crystallizing, we would like to share an interview Otto did in 2003 with the writer and philosopher Ken Wilber. You can download the PDF here. Pay particular attention to the description, on page 5, of how Ken articulates the process of "calling forth the future and embodying it." Moving From Sensing to Presencing to Crystallizing:The following excerpt comes from Presence (Senge, Scharmer, Jaworski, Flowers, 2004). The full book is available on Amazon. Not all visions are equal. Some never get beyond the "motherhood and apple pie" stage - good ideas that unleash no energy for change. Others transform the world. "There is nothing more powerful than an idea whose time has come," said Victor Hugo one hundred and fifty years ago. Yet, the power Hugo refers to remains elusive, carefully guarded by a paradox: there's nothing more personal than a vision, yet the visions that ultimately prove transformative have nothing to do with us as individuals. The resolution of this paradox comes from the transformation of will that starts as we move through the bottom of the U. The seeds for this transformation lie in seeing our reality more clearly, without preconceptions and judgments. When we learn to see our part in creating things that we don't like but that are likely to continue, we can begin to develop a different relationship with our "problems." We're no longer victims. When we move further, from sensing to presencing, we become open to what might be possible, and we're inevitably led to the question "So what do we want to create?" But the "we" in this statement is the larger "we." The visions that arise out of genuine presencing come from "the field knowing itself," a spontaneous expression of discovering the power to shape our reality and our responsibility to an emerging future. As we begin to move up from the bottom of the U, this larger intention becomes accessible to us. By contrast, many visions are doomed from the outset because those who articulate them, whether consciously or not, are coming from a place of powerlessness. If we believe that someone else has created our present reality, what is the basis for believing that we can create a different reality in the future? In terms of the theory of the U, the problem with most attempts to formulate visions is that they occur "too far up the left side of the U." When this happens, people formulate visions that are disconnected from a shared understanding of present reality and a sense of shared responsibility for that reality. If people are still externalizing their problems, they create, in a sense, "externalized visions," which amount to a kind of change strategy for fixing problems which they have not yet seen their part in creating. Only when people begin to see from within the forces that shape their reality and to see their part in how those forces might evolve does vision become powerful. Everything else is just a vague hope.
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) on Crystallizing Below, we offer answers to questions people commonly have about crystallizing. How is crystallizing different from a normal visioning process? Crystallizing means clarifying vision and intention from our highest future possibility. The difference between crystallizing and the normal visioning process is this: crystallizing happens from the deeper place of knowing and self, while visioning can happen from just about any place, even from the place of downloading. In our definition, if your will or action comes out of yesterday's habits, you're not moving from presencing into crystallizing. But when you begin to connect with and act from a bigger sense of self - a sense of what's emerging - you know you're on the right path. My group went through the presencing process together. How do we know if we're ready to move to crystallizing? After a moment of stillness or presencing, in groups, you can notice a subtle shift in identity and a different foundation for working together and moving forward. Up to this point, we have only felt the possibility of a future. After a presencing moment or encounter, people are now poised to bring this individual and collective potential into reality. “We can’t not do it.” The first step in this journey is to crystallize the vision and intention more clearly. We put into specific language what it is that we want to create. What is the connection between crystallizing and prototyping? Crystallizing means to stay connected to Source and to slowly clarify the vision and intention going forward. As we do this, our image of the future keeps evolving. Then we need to take this process of bringing the new into reality to its next level by enacting living examples or prototypes of the future that we want to create.
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Module 4: Co-Creating
Prototyping Principles Having established a connection to the source (presencing) and having clarified a sense of the future that wants to emerge (crystallizing), the next stage in the U process is to explore the future by doing (prototyping). Prototyping is the first step in exploring the future by doing and experimenting. Chapter 13 (free download) of Theory U offers an important theoretical underpinning for the type of prototyping process we teach in u.lab. This chapter will help you make connections between examples we presented in Module 2 (Bagger Vance and the Social Field, the Healthcare Transformation story), the emphasis in presencing and crystallizing on stillness and connecting to source, and the action-oriented principles of prototyping. The single most important thing to do in the prototyping phase of the U is to develop, create, and test your prototype in whatever format you choose to do so. A plan is not a prototype. A prototype is something you do that generates feedback from others that then helps you to evolve your idea. So long as it's an action that generates feedback, no prototype is too small. In this module, you'll go through a three-step prototyping process: you'll start by watching the prototyping principle videos and answering a few reflecting questions. You'll then use the 3D mapping practice to construct a physical model of your idea, initiative or systems change project. You'll then return to the reflection questions and consider how your answers have evolved. The whole process is relatively quick and can be completed in 1-2 hours. After completing this process, you may feel inspired to pursue your prototype even further. Our u.lab 2x course is specifically designed to move you from prototype to ecosystem impact. More information on u.lab 2x and the Societal Transformation Lab can be found here.
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Tool: 3D Mapping Overview 3D Mapping is a tool we use to bring multiple dimensions and perspectives to understanding how an idea, initiative or system might evolve.
Set Up People & Place
3D Mapping can be done individually or with a team. When working collectively, team size ideally consists of 5-8 people. Time
Individually, the process will take about an hour. As a team, allow 2 hours for the process and debrief. You will also need time to obtain materials and for set-up. Supplies
See 3D Mapping Workshop Materials (below) Roles
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If you are doing this individually, skip ahead to the next section. If you are working as a team:
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One Facilitator/Scribe from the core team
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5-8 people max per-group as 3D Modelers (including facilitator). Multiple groups of 5-8 can do 3D modeling at the same time.
Process Part I: Reflect on Vision, Intention and Core Team
Before you begin mapping current reality, spend a few minutes to reflect on the following questions which build upon the first two prototyping principles. Record your reflections in a journal or on a piece of paper: Crystallize vision and intention: ●
What is wanting to be born in my life and work right now?
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What future stands in need of me to come into reality?
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What questions have energy for me now?
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What questions is my prototype seeking to explore?
Form a core team:
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Who could help me most to bring my intention into reality?
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Starting small and then broadening the circle, who could be my ○
Core team?
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Core holding group?
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Supporting network?
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Part II: Map Current Reality
As a team (or individually), use the materials you’ve obtained to form a model that represents current reality and includes a seed of the emerging future possibility you want to be in service of. Each object in the model will represent a different element, quality (inner or outer) or stakeholder of the system. Let your hands create the model (don’t overthink it). Create your model in about 25-30 min if working in a team, or 10-15 if working individually or in pairs. For teams: as you place an object onto the table, share with the other team members (if applicable) what the object represents. Do this one person at a time to get into a co-creative flow as the process unfolds. Include: inner and outer realities, internal and external stakeholders, and your own roles. Part III: Reflection from Different Directions
Walk around the model and reflect on it from different directions. If you’re working in a team, the facilitator/scribe reads aloud the following questions and captures key data points on a flipchart for the group. If you’re working alone, keep this worksheet with you and read the following questions to yourself. “0.8”: The Seed Idea For My Prototype ●
What do I love about this model?
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Where do I see the seeds of future possibility around which I could quickly create a prototype that allows me to explore the future by doing?
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How might others feel about this situation?
Platforms And Spaces (Soil) ●
What are the essential relationships (connections or separations) between the parts and what feelings do these relationships generate?
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How can I / we create collaborative platforms and generative holding spaces that provide a fertile ‘soil’ for my ‘seed’ idea to grow and evolve?
Listen To The Universe ●
What are the key messages I / we’re hearing from the various stakeholders?
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What is the real need my prototype is aiming to address?
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What are the most important barriers or bottlenecks that, if removed, could help the current system to evolve?
Integrating Head, Heart And Hand ●
Where do the different sources of power lie in this system?
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What do you sense as the highest future potential that is being called for in this situation?
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For the highest future potential to land, what is mine / ours to do?
Part IV: Sense and Co-Shape The Emerging Future
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Now change the model so that it better represents the emerging future you want to be in service of. If you’re working with a team, do this together.
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Begin with a moment of intentional stillness. For a minute or two, just gaze at the model in light of this question: What highest future possibility is trying to manifest / is trying to be born?
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Then, after a couple of minutes, silently move into a process of modifying the model so that it better represents the future that you want to co-shape. Teams can do this collectively.
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Part V: Harvest and Capture Key Insights
(For teams: a scribe can capture the essential points on the flipchart) Reflect on the Key Differences between Model 1 and 2 ●
What are the most important structural differences between model 1 and 2?
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What key intervention shifted the old structure (model 1) into the new (model 2)?
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What did you do first? What was the first significant change that you undertook?
Part VI: Vision, Intention and Core Team
Reflect on how the modeling experience is further crystallizing or modifying your vision and intention, and also your definition of the core team. Refer back to what you wrote in your journal before beginning the 3D mapping practice. Update your entries as needed. Crystallize vision and intention: ●
What is wanting to be born in my life and work right now?
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What future stands in need of me /us to come into reality?
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What questions have energy for me now?
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How can I / we clarify and evolve the questions that my prototype seeks to explore?
Form a core team: ●
Who could help me most to bring my intention into reality?
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Starting small and then broadening the circle, who could be my ○
Core team?
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Core holding group?
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Supporting network?
Part VII: Actions
What actions can I plan in the next 3-5 days to explore the future by doing? For ideas, refer back to what you did first (Part V).
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Module 5: Co-Evolving
In this module, you will continue iterating and begin co-evolving your prototype. We all know about many episodes and stories of great transformational change and breakthrough. But at the end of the day they remain merely that: episodes. Sooner or later the larger system snaps back into the old way of operating. It's less common for transformational episodes to spread like wildfire across the remaining system. Why is that? That is the question we will explore in this module. Imagine your prototype as a seed of the emerging future. For it to develop and evolve, you need to attend to the quality of the soil in the social field. The core content in Module 5 will cover the principles and practices that have proven helpful in creating conditions to co-evolve a prototype, as well as "four distractions" that can interfere with your most essential practice - which is being present now.
The Quality of the Soil For those interested in going deeper into the phenomena of social fields, Otto’s HuffPost article “The Blind Spot: Uncovering the Grammar of the Social Field” is a good starting point.
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The Four Distractions
Distraction #1: The past
When our attention and thinking is trapped in regrets of what happened yesterday, replaying conflicts, thinking about “what I could have said or should have said”, or what others could have said, we get stuck in the past. We are drawn away from the sources of what’s wanting to emerge. When this happens, it’s important to cultivate the capacity to lean in to the past; to attend to the past in a way that keeps sight of our own sources, of our own role in what happened yesterday. Distraction #2: The future
When we worry about tomorrow, we lose our connection to the present moment - which is the only thing opportunity we have to connect with reality. The past is gone. The future is not here yet. The only way to shift how reality unfolds is to connect with the present moment. The antidote here is to cultivate the capacity for sensing and leaning into the unknown, the space of possibility around us that is wanting to emerge, or that could happen. Distraction #3: Them
When we get caught in a mindset that sees other people as the source of all our problems, we locate the source of all issues outside ourselves. In doing so, we lose our agency to create change. The antidote here is deep listening and deep dialogue. That is what in u.lab we call the third and fourth level of listening. These ways of listening allows us to connect to others in a way that dissolves the boundary separating us (or me) from them. Distraction #4: Me
The opposite of #3 is the mindset that it’s all about me: being overly consumed and absorbed by what may happen to me in this situation or that situation. To overcome this distraction, we apply the same kind of connection described above, to ourselves. What do we call this quality of connection? That's what we call mindfulness or paying attention to our attention. That really is, in a nutshell, the u.lab curriculum. The case clinics, empathy walks, journaling practices and all other tools are designed to help you connect more directly to the present moment, to not be overly distracted by the past or present, by others or yourself, and to instead stay connected to what’s wanting to emerge around you, and through you.
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Principles for Leading From the Emerging Future Daily Practice Toolkit
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