Global Social Witnessing Facilitator Training
Holding Space for a World in Transition
In an era of escalating global crises, the ability to witness and respond with presence and compassion is more crucial than ever. The Global Social Witnessing Facilitator Training offers a deep exploration into the practice of attuning to world events with an embodied awareness, fostering a culture of conscious global citizenship.
This training is designed for individuals who seek to move beyond passive consumption of news and into a space of active witnessing, where presence becomes a transformative force for healing and change.
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Together, we will find out how this time of instability can become an opportunity for strengthening resilience, reconnecting to our innate agency, and stepping forward with thoughtful action.
With Thomas Hübl, Willam Ury, Deb Dana and Bayo Akomolafe
The training is activating agency and your impact on multiple levels: connecting your system of inner worlds and cultures with the mirrors of this in our environment, ecology and economies.
For example:
A healthy body is full of parasites and viruses – their ecosystems conspiring ironically to strengthen our immune responses. Here lies the paradox: the way to solve our problems today isn’t to provide ‘solutions’ (for they perpetuate the same logic they attempt to nullify), but to engage a different problem altogether – a new paradigm.
The imperative is not so much to ask the hard questions as opposed to the convenient ones – as it is to ask ‘different’ questions, which disrupt the linearity of the former. The imperative is not to tell the same story with a new accent or enhanced vocabularies; the imperative is to tell another story – totally different in subtext, assumptions, plot and pace.
Bayo Akomolafe
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Making the connections: Collective Trauma, Ecosystems and Nature
My understanding that nature is not ‘out there’, but that we, as part of the ecosystem, we live in, in nature ourselves, although not new to me, was deep in the expanded through my experiences
Participant, Pocket Project Climate Lab
Unpacking the connections
When collective trauma is present in a system – whether it’s a person, a society, or the entire biosphere – the flow of information becomes disorganised or even collapsed. This affects feedback loops, which are crucial for balance. In a healthy system, nature regulates itself. But when trauma accumulates, certain regulatory mechanisms no longer function properly.
Thomas Hübl