[COURSE] Embodied WaysFinding starts October 31. Click here to learn more
Navigating Cycles of Expansion: Becoming

Week 6: Navigating Cycles of Expansion: Becoming

Call details:

This last live session is a celebration of our journey together. We’ll start off with a little dance session (videos can be off).
Come dance with us from 14:55.

The theme this week is stepping into continuous becoming

There will be lots of space for reflections and we’d love to hear about your “getting lost” home practice and the frontier conversations in your POD.

We’ll share a Frontier Becoming practice and touch on topics like Kairos time and WaysFinding with others.

Feedback please

There is no pre-reading content or preparation for this call.

But we would really appreciate your feedback here.

Your last Pod

In this last POD session, we encourage you to get lost in a meandering frontier conversation, reflecting on these two M.R. O’Connor quotes using STAR:

“Navigating becomes a way of knowing, familiarity, and fondness. It is how you can fall in love with a mountain or a forest. WayFinding is how we accumulate treasure maps of exquisite memories.”

“Maybe WayFinding is an activity that confronts us with the marvellous fact of being in the world, requiring us to look up and take notice …calling us to renew our species’ love affair with freedom, exploration, and place.”  

M.R. O’Connor

And, consider how you will weave WaysFinding, COOL and STAR into your everyday becoming i.e. how will you make sure WaysFinding doesn’t remain another “cool course you did” and becomes part of your continuous becoming?

 

WaysFinding Community

We’re so excited to announce that we’re launching a WaysFinding Community early November.

Discover all the ways to keep your WaysFinding practice alive and maintain momentum after this journey ends (and others start…)

"Navigating becomes a way of knowing, familiarity, and fondness. It is how you can fall in love with a mountain or a forest. Wayfinding is how we accumulate treasure maps of exquisite memories.” 

M.R. O’Connor