• View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  • add a primary image (only if there is none)

    add a secondary image

    add a suggested image

     

    Image Ideas

     

    Heart

    To work with Spirit is to invite the deeper forces of the universe to be with us as co-creators. Bringing in this wider perspective keeps us in touch with what's most important and provides wisdom, inspiration, and support.

     

    Description

    Context

    There is so much more to the world than just us humans and our day-to-day concerns.  When we ground ourselves in that larger perspective in a deliberate way, special things happen. 

     

    Instructions

    While Spirit cannot be commanded, it can be befriended.  Groups that choose to deliberately tune into the larger whole--regardless of whether those groups have any religious basis--often find surprising results. 

     

    Calling in Spirit (whether you choose to call it God(dess), Source, Intuition, or whatever else) may happen through prayer, setting intention, a simple, genuine call for help, or other means. 

     

    EDIT MORE to include recognizing, accessing, deliberate invocation, tuning in, of larger whole, universe, transpersonal, higher realms, Source, creative power of the universe.  Why: for wisdom, wholeness, takes us beyond our limited perspective, energy source, inspiration

     


    "Mould clay into a pot, but it is the emptiness inside that makes the vessel useful."

     

    Cautions & Caveats:
    Don’t talk about it too much, “it outruns language” . . .  and don’t fake it.

     

    Examples

    Add +examples

     

    Related patterns


    Spirit points primarily to:

    How Related

     

    Other patterns Spirit also points to (secondarily):

     

    Add +pattern relationship descriptions

     

    Patterns that point primarily back at Spirit

    How Related

     

    Other patterns that also point back at Spirit (reverse secondaries):


     

    Category and tags

    Category:
    Keystone Pattern for this Category? Add +keystone
    Tags: 



     

     

    Resources

    Harrison Owen: The Power of Spirit: How organizations transform; The Spirit of Leadership; Spirit: Transformation and Development in Organizations; “Open Space and Spirit shows up” on OpenSpaceWorld.com (Excerpt above)

     

    Other

    William Hutchinson Murray (1913-1996), from his 1951 book The Scottish Himalayan Expedition (often mistakenly attributed to Goethe):

     

    “Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back. Concerning all acts of initiative (and creation), there is one elementary truth, the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then Providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one's favor all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance, which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Begin it now.”

     

     

    (from Harrison Owen: Open Space World: Spirit Shows Up):

     

    “Although I have written much on the subject of Spirit, I have never been able to define it. Then again, I have never felt any particular need to. My experience, shared by many I believe, has been that we know Spirit when we meet, and no precise definition is necessary, or even particularly useful. We know that when Spirit is present in a group of people, wonderful things can happen. We also know that when Spirit is somehow absent or flagging, no amount of money in the bank, technology in the backroom, or executive talent on the roster makes much difference - nothing really seems to go right.

     

    Of course there are times when precise statements about the quality and nature of Spirit are important, but in the work-a-day world, it is usually sufficient to acknowledge the presence of Spirit, by whatever name. Call it what you like - team spirit, esprit de corps, Great Spirit of the Cosmos - sooner or later they all connect. I think. But the critical thing is to acknowledge Spirit when we meet, and somehow summon it again when it is absent.

     

    For me, quite simply, Spirit is the most important thing in my life, my work, and in the organizations I serve. When it is present, I experience power, flow, and endless possibilities. When Spirit goes on a holiday, it is a dull day indeed. I do not think I am alone. So allowing (inviting, encouraging) Spirit to show up is not an incidental consideration.”

     

    Stage

     

    Personal Stories about Spirit

    Each card listed here has at least one relevant story. Add your own stories in Anonymous+Personal Stories.

     

  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit

  • Spirit is one way to describe an indefinable quality that enables a group to work passionately, with intention and flow, seemingly without effort. WHen spirit “shows up,” unexpectedly positive things can happen. And no amount of money, technology, process or talent can make up for its absence.

      --LisaMarie DiVincent.....Mon Nov 22 08:18:40 -0800 2010


     
  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  •  

    Recently added patterns


     
  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  • News   

    more... (includes older news)

     
  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  • Help   
    • If you are signed in, you can double-click inside any "card" to edit it.
    • To make a link to another card when you're editing, place the card name inside double brackets, e.g. [[card name]].
    • To post URLs or links where the text you click on has different wording than the technical location of the link, put the real location before a "pipe" character | and the displayed name after, like this:  [[exact URL|display link]].
    • To get to the page (and web address) for a card, click on .
    • There's a link to your home card in the header — My Card: your name, and you can put information about yourself there, and change your password (in the Options tab).

    If you have questions see the Wagn documentation, contact John Abbe, Amy Lenzo, Raines Cohen, or leave a question here:


     


     
     
     

    Text is available under the Creative Commons attribution, share-alike license (for more detail, see Copyrights).

    Creative Commons attribution, share-alike license

    See the link under any image for its licensing information.

    Wheeled by Wagn v. 1.7.1