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Articles Spirituality in Business and Life:
Asking the Right Questions, by Peter Senge

"People are trying to run organizations that are more adaptive, flexible, capable of adjusting to a dynamic world. But we will not get there by running around like a bunch of chickens with our heads cut off. To become more flexible and adaptive requires more awareness, and more awareness actually requires slowing down. " Read more (PDF) ...

On Fields, by Otto Scharmer
"One of the things my father, one of the pioneers of biodynamic farming in Germany, taught me, was that the living quality of the soil is the most important thing in agriculture. Each field, he explained to me, has two aspects: the visible, which is what we see above the surface; and the invisible, which is what we find below the surface." Read more (PDF) ...
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From the
Field
Tipu Ake: An Update from Peter Goldsbury in New Zealand
Peter returned to the community where he grew up — the Maori community of Te Whaiti — three years ago, after 40 years in mainstream organizations. In his words, "The achievements (against all the odds) of the people and my little old school at Te Whaiti completely turned my ideas about leadership and innovation upside down." Read more (PDF) ...

Healing Trauma in the Middle East: An Emerging Future
A psychologist by training, Whit Jones came to the Authentic Leadership program in June 2003 in search of a focus for a new project. ... After starting two foundations, he was interested in finding ideas for a third; the Shambhala Institute seemed like a good place to scout for possibilities. And what he encountered in Halifax was exactly what he was looking for.
Read more (PDF)

Snake Dance in the Canadian North
Let me set the scene for you — fluffy white snow gently falling, on a crisp autumn night in the Yukon. With the fresh snow comes a muffled stillness. The only sound is from the snow geese overhead, chattering directions to each other on their migration south. It seems to be a ripe time to try something new.
Read more (PDF) ...
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Shambhala
Insights
Statement of Strength, by Cynthia Kneen
"When you take your seat in meditation, you are like this shadow warrior. Your approach is that you are a dignified person. You are sane, regal, and worthwhile as you are." Read more (PDF) ...
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News Summer Program Updates
The 2004 Authentic Leadership Summer Program is now fully launched on the Institute website and includes two-day workshops, one-day community of practice dialogues, and a five-day core program. See http://www.shambhalainstitute.org/2004/index.html Be sure to take advantage of early registration and team discounts.

Highlights from the 2003 Summer Program, including summaries and transcripts, are now available at http://www.shambhalainstitute.org/2003_review.html

Reflection and Action: September 2003 Retreat
A Reflection and Action retreat took place at the Essex Conference Center near Boston, Mass., September 19-22, 2003. This pioneering inquiry, co-hosted by the Shambhala Institute and the Society for Organizational Learning and coordinated and facilitated by Susan Skjei, continued an exploration that was begun at the 2003 Summer Program. Participants included several people who had been part of that June dialogue — Peter Senge, Otto Scharmer, Michael Chender, Frances Baldwin, Judy Brown. They were joined by corporate leaders from manufacturing, health care, real estate development, high tech, and other fields, and by Institute staff and artists. These people came together around a shared a commitment to bringing the "mind of reflection" into the stream of their activity. The format included meditation, creative process, fishbowl story-telling, presentation of theory, and dialogue. Some of the organizing questions: How does the mind of reflection (or meditation or contemplation) reveal itself in the midst of action? What is the role of “presence” in challenging change settings? What are the collective or organizational equivalents of the individual contemplative practices that we know? How can we build capacity, individually and collectively, to participate more consciously in bringing forth new realities?

Through the Gate: Post-Retreat Reflections, by Judy Brown
"It seems to me that experiences like…the reflection and action retreat operate like a gate through which we pass, after which leadership is both the same and transformed. The transformation has to do with a new awareness of the 'inner dimensions' of leadership, of the self as the instrument of leadership. One is left with a variant on 'After enlightenment, wash dishes, carry water.' — 'Before enlightenment, work to lead wisely; after enlightenment, work to lead wisely.'" Read more (PDF)...

December 2003
. see all issues .

On Fields
Otto Scharmer

Snake Dance
Lyn Hartley


Statement of Strength
Cynthia Kneen


2004 Summer Program
Online Now


Through the Gate
Judy Brown
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Why Fieldnotes? This newsletter arose from the inspiration to make visible what is now invisible — the rich field of connection, dialogue, and activity that is arising around the Institute's Authentic Leadership programs. This field now extends far beyond the programs themselves, in both time and place. This newsletter also provides a forum for people who are pioneering the emerging field of what could be called "authentic" or "transformative" leadership. We hope you enjoy this inaugural issue and invite your feedback, letters, and submissions. We are especially interested to hear how you have been applying your learning and insights in your own field of work. If there is sufficient interest, Fieldnotes will be published monthly, with a new issue posted on this website at the beginning of each month. We look forward to hearing from you.

Editorial Team: Lyn Hartley, Susan Szpakowski, Dinah Wakeford & Barbara Zielinski


Appreciations. Many thanks to our volunteer editors Lyn Hartley and Dinah Wakeford, and to Barbara Bash for her beautiful masthead calligraphy. Thanks also to web designer Bernardine Wood for her cheerful and thorough work, and to Barbara Zielinski for ongoing assistance with e-mailings and everything else.

Fieldnotes is a publication of the Shambhala Institute for Authentic Leadership, based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The views expressed in this newsletter do not necessarily reflect those of the Institute.