Spent a lovely evening last night playing tunes with friends new and old at The Snug Coffeehouse on Bowen Island. Every so often, a couple of times a month or so, we gather there on a Saturday night to play Irish and Scottish tunes. Last night my old friend Dave Marshall showed up, which was lovely. He and I were regulars at the famous Tuesday night session at the Irish Heather in Vancouver in the mid to late 1990s.
Last night though was the first time I have ever played with Jocelyn Pettit. Jocelyn, who is all of 16 years old, is a phenomenal talent. A beautiful fiddle player, who has crafted a marvelous CD of tunes both traditional and recently composed, Jocelyn lives in Squamish, the town up at the end of our inlet.
Today, on my way to Kuujuaq in northern Quebec, Jocelyn’s music is filling my ears. Click through and listen to her music…
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- Sore all over from 2.5 hours of soccer with people half my age. Oh but what fun! #
- Rain is back in earnest. A good day for baking bread and splitting wood. #
- Added Bernie DeKoven's Pointless games (http://bit.ly/aVooEh) to my facilitation resources page: http://bit.ly/1BF6WH #
- RT @CreatvEmergence: It's not structure vs. flow…it's about creating new structures that liberate, rather than inhibit, flow. <~~ YES! #
- Deer are bleating on the road. Got a cord of firewood split. Little kids off to school. Busyness comes to the island. #
- A beautiful late summer dawn. The sea is the colour of red wine. #
- Added the Ultimate Guide to Anecdote Circles (http://bit.ly/b6yaef) to my facilitation resources page: http://bit.ly/1BF6WH #
- Wow…my Grade 1 teacher just send me a friend request on facebook. That was 36 years ago. Hooray for connections! #
- A little chill in the morning air makes the warmth if my sleeping bag a beautiful cocoon. #
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Some morsels:
- Bernie DeKoven explains that fun and funny are different beasts. (And see his pointless games page for more!)
- Think Global School is the new gig for my friend Brad Ovenell-Carter. The world’s first global trabelling high school.
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A lovely reminder about authenticity. Too often facilitators adopt the role of the uninvolved, disinterested session leaders. This little post reminds us that who we are is as important as what we are doing:
Once long ago, when asked by a reporter if he had a message he wanted the world to hear, Gandhi replied, “My life is my message.”
Whether we like it or not, this statement is just as true for you and me today as it was for Gandhi then. Who we are and how we are is the medium through which our message travels. That medium is far richer and truer than what we say in words. ”¨”¨When we present our material to a group we are facilitating or training, what we’re really presenting is ourselves. Our deepest, thoughts, feelings, fears, hopes, and aspirations come through as an unspoken wave of information that others pick up at a level usually below their conscious awareness. Yet this material influences others more powerfully than mere words. So in a very real way, you are your material, and your life is your message!
via The Center for Graphic Facilitation
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Mashable.com shares a useful primer on how to Plan and Promote Events With Social Media.
Inviting people to an event is at least as much work as organizing it. It’s not just a question of getting the right people in the room but jhaving them engaged before hand as well in order for a gathering to be a good a productive use of time. Using these tools is a big step in that direction.
For a recent example, see my mate Geoff Brown’s harvest of work we did together in May in Australia.