Germany, July 2008 — MS Word
New York, October 2008 — MS Word
Florida, November 2008 — MS Word
New Country (Monica Pohlmann) — I love that Monica and I share a nationality. I love her artful words on growth, learning, and what we leave behind.
Light Hearted (Diana Durham) — Our hearts as the framers of light. Beautiful
From Blossoms (Li Young Lee) — Sweet. Particularly for those of us who like to pick peaches.
A Beautiful Rhythm It Is (Toke Moeller) — Action together to make better what is not good enough any more…
Simply Listen (Toke Moeller) — I love the invitation to hear what is in our hearts.
The Turtle (Mary Oliver) — Doing what we are born to do…
This weekend I was in a design call for an upcoming Leadership Symposium for a health care system. One of my colleagues, Toke Moeller offered the questions below as a a general framing for an agenda. I have learned there is an art to asking powerful questions and that the questions are a tool to focus a group in its learning and exploring. Eric Vogt, Juanita Brown, and David Isaacs have an excellent article on this topic. What I like about these questions in particular is they come from core assumptions, core process assumptions, about how a system, in this case a health care system, can be in transformative thinking. I’ve noted some of those core assumptions that I see below the questions.
How will we together create our short and long term solutions to care for our future health care system in Ontario?
What am I will to let go of and what am I inspired to contribute to be part of co leading a healthy health care system in Ontario?
What is a wise overall approach and practices that we all are willing to work within, practice and support for us to find the next level of our health care system in Ontario?
Together create — intractable problems and outrageous dreams require social technologies that support working together
Short and long term solutions — the work that we do must be grounded in solutions to real needs and purposes
Care for a system — transformation requires tending not just to the demands of the moment, but to the capacity of a system to support itself, including the relationships
Willing to let go — letting go is a choice; innovation requries some choosing to let go
Inspired to contribute — wisdom comes from many realms; innovative solutions are born from offerings and contributions
Co-leading — the best that we know on solutions that last is that they come from shared ownership and creation
Practice and support — innovative solutions don’t come tested; they come with challenges that require a commitment to practice, a willingness to make mistakes, and an agreement to support each other in levels of unknowing