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- The Soul of Place -  
Reflections on Place - Based Leadership

My dad could name a hundred miles of coastline by the taste of the air
~ Annie Proulx, Shipping News

Most organizational cultures are not at a loss for innovative ideas. What they do often lack however is a supportive environment - or fertile soil - for these seeds to take root and grow. In other words in managing change and creating environments for learning, leaders need to balance their focus on strategies for change with a deep understanding and empathy for the unique character of the places they are engaged in.

Over the past year I have been involved in series of events and projects that have been focused on recovering the soul of place and place - based leadership. These have included presentations on the Powers of Place at The Authentic Leadership in Action Conference (ALIA) in Halifax this past June and The Celebrating Communities - Growing Together Conference last fall in Truro Nova Scotia. This past May I co- facilitated a unique forum on The Powers of Place in partnership with the Powers of Place Initiative and Leadership Development at the Banff Ctr. And I have been engaged in series of corporate wide learning conferences for leaders focused on connecting with their future through a series of powerful conversations that are generative and placed - based.

The following essay highlights some of my own reflections on the soul of place and place-based leadership. If you have stories and/ or reflections you would like to share, I would love to hear from you. Please write to me at michael.jones@pianoscapes.com  Also visit The Power of Place Initiative web site (www.powersofplace.com/) where you can read and comment on many other wonderful stories and reflections on the power of place.

Recovering the Soul of Place: Reflections on Place-Based Leadership
By Michael Jones
(this essay is also posted on the web site for 
Tamarack; An Institute for Community Engagement
)

Think of a story of a place where you experienced the greatest sense of aliveness, vitality and connection? How did this connection to place shape how you think of your leadership and your community?

What makes a place, a place? Whether it is in nature, our built environment, community or language and arts, in its presence we feel more at home and more like ourselves. Place speaks to us in some important way about the central themes and aspirations in our lives. And particularly it brings to life those illusive qualities of authenticity, creativity and spontaneity that we most value in ourselves but which are sometimes difficult to connect with when we spend much of our time in surroundings that don't feel right or very vital and alive.

From our earliest days, being deeply connected to a place in our physical environment or the imagination has instructed us in how we engage our world. Through the symbols, stories, metaphors and images with which we hold and describe the power of place, the future touches us, awakens our heart, enlivens our senses and attracts us ever more fully into life. Although much has been discovered and shared about the style, issues and processes of leadership, the significance of place as a source of inspiration and the container in which we bring people together to do their work has rarely been fully appreciated.

For example, when a group of community leaders in Atlantic Canada were asked about what the powers of place meant for them they reflected on finding common ground in their deep ties to land and sea - to a mist filled land both gentle and unyielding and to the enduring loyalty to their stories and community. This long history of living on a sea bound coast gave them the gift of a perspective larger than any one person or any individual's self interest.

For a local Chippewa First Nations community near Orillia, Ontario the defining narrative of place is that their land sits on the confluence of two distinct biospheres, where the Canadian Shield to the north meets the limestone plain to the south running from Georgian Bay and following the south edge of the shield to Kingston Ontario. This is The Land Between and their stories are about living in a meeting place where they needed to discover the best of these two worlds.

Too often we attempt to undertake large systemic transformational changes without taking into account the unique characteristics of the place that we are engaged with. Most communities are not at a loss for innovative ideas. What they may overlook however is how to partner with these unique qualities and features of the place they are in- the soil they inhabit - that enable these seeds of innovation to take root and grow.

This is the promise of place, the invitation to come into an alignment and harmony with our own inner music. This sensation of 'at homeness' in the world connects us to the unique and exquisite trajectory of ones' own work and life.

As we actively engage with place, we experience being witness to and participants in the furthering of this connectedness and with the entire complex web of life. That is we discover that place is not only a destination we seek or desire to return to - all places are fleeting - but also a presence we grow out from.

In times when everything around begins to look the same and we are led to believe that there is no such thing a place any longer - we need to re-align around the more hopeful perspective. A perspective that says that whoever we are and wherever we have come from - our primary work now as leaders and communities is to tap into the deep generative power of place by taking up the work of being place-makers.

When we engage with place we are also acted on by a place. So as place-makers our primary work is to ensure that each place we steward is free to express itself, as itself, through our work as leaders and in communities, in a manner that is true to its own deepest nature.

These insights set the context for a recent forum on Place Based Leadership and Transformational Change co hosted by Fetzer Institute-funded, Powers of Place Initiative and Banff Centre Leadership Development. The forum was an opportunity to come together to explore how our surroundings - nature, art, community and our built environment - can partner with us as leaders to inspire and revitalize our leadership practice as well as our organizations and communities.

More specifically the forum hoped to create experiences that would help build a language for leaders who wish to utilize the power of place in their transformational leadership work. It also sought to create a path forward for engaging communities in their thinking about place and how it can transform their leadership and their environments.

Some of the realizations that came from these Banff dialogues on place-based leadership were that place itself is alive in our surroundings and in us and serves as a sanctuary and source of belonging comfort and home in an uncertain world. Another is how the mystery of place keeps hope and possibility alive. A third is how place teaches us about love- and particularly about how to love something so deeply that we learn to love other - perhaps lesser things - later on. A fourth and perhaps most profound realization is how through place we learn to make a home for ourselves in the world. That rather than being separate and alien - the world is an intimate part of us just as we are an intimate part of it.

By looking at place not only as something to return to but also something to grow out from -orienting us to the future and not only the past; and by realizing that a place is not an object or a thing, but a power and a presence, we can partner with place in a way that is itself deeply transformative, opening our hearts to the experience of beauty, aliveness and possibility.

With warm regards,

Michael
michael.jones@pianoscapes.com


Michael is on the faculty at the Banff Centre Leadership Development and a Steward with the Powers of Place Initiative. He is currently writing a book on Recovering the Soul of Place; Place Based Leadership and Transformational Change.
  

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