Evolving Through Deep Questions
An intention- which became my motto- whispered deep into my ear and into my heart as 2019 was being birthed: Be in the world *and* Be of Love.
Be in the world *and* Be of Love.
Let me first say, phew. And let me second say, PHEW.
What an intention. Surely, I will be journeying to embody this for the rest of my life.
2019 was a year where 3 different learnings converged, and where I became their constant student.
Learning number one came early in the year through a BTCC (Building a Thriving Compassionate Community) think tank. Stephanie Solomon presented something she’d recently learned from a Crossroads anti-racism conference: the difference between values of dominant culture and the values of transformative culture[1].
The tenets of our current modern day culture are rooted in values of dominant culture: scarcity mentality, based in competitive and individual preservation, focused on outcome, either/or and us/them thinking (ie binary narratives of good, bad, right, or wrong), and a hierarchy of power which is exclusionary and immersed in secrecy. Many of the institutions that we know and love are rooted in values of dominant culture. They are our “normal.”
Then there are the tenets of transformative culture: a resonance of abundance, collaboration and shared power, transparency and accountability, both /and thinking, a focus on the process/the journey, and an inclusion of history. Transformative culture is alive with paradox. WWFaC[2] is rooted in transformative values. In our current culture, this is the exception.
Learning number two started to drop in not too long after Stephanie’s think tank through Angeles Arrien’s The Four Fold Way[3]. In this book she reveals the ways of the shadow, and the ways ancestral wisdom.
As I was reading, I discovered that the ways of the shadow often mirrored dominant culture, while the ways of ancestral wisdom often mirrored transformative culture. The overlap was remarkable.
Angeles Arrien helps us connect to different gifts and shadows through the study of 4 archetypes- the warrior, the healer, the teacher, and the visionary. In short, the four archetypes invite us to:
-
- Show up, and choose to be present.
-
- Pay attention to what has heart and meaning.
-
- Tell the truth without blame or judgement.
-
- Be open to outcome, not attached to outcome.
I loved this blog. And I can see how the MIE course naturally developed from your 2019 year. I do want to learn more about the dominant culture and I imagine that means I’ll be learning about transformative ways in the MIE course. Your 5 blogs about discomfort including comfort, neutrality and struggle, I can already see as transformative ways. I am curious if the Four Fold Way is one of the resources for the class? Much love, Kathleen