Drawing The Curtain - by Sue Davidoff - 23 September 2021
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Behind every living phenomenon – manifest in our physical world – lies an invisible, generative energy which renders it visible to our senses and to our experience. The dance between the visible and the invisible can be understood as the Dance of Life. How we make meaning of what we experience in the sense-perceptible world is to a large extent dependent on our ability to ‘see’ the (invisible) underlying unity of any phenomenon with our thinking, and with our imagination. Every social process has, too, this underlying wholeness, invisible to the senses but shaping the process itself. Each person brings an entire world into the process with them, and all these worlds are at all times intersecting with one another. Part of my work as the facilitator, is to be attentively receptive; to listen for the energy currents which signal the worlds that are co-existing. And to enable these – through facilitating movement – to become healing forces in the process and the people.
The CDRA Writing Workshop, which took place in November 2019, at Towerland Wilderness, brought a range of people together to begin writing of their practices, practices shaped and influenced by their relationship with CDRA. This piece describes this encounter – how it unfolded, and how the dynamics which held the process captive initially began to shift towards a more enabling and creative movement, bringing disparate forces closer to themselves and to one another. Writing as creative act, as deed, was central to this healing process.
The CDRA Writing Workshop, which took place in November 2019, at Towerland Wilderness, brought a range of people together to begin writing of their practices, practices shaped and influenced by their relationship with CDRA. This piece describes this encounter – how it unfolded, and how the dynamics which held the process captive initially began to shift towards a more enabling and creative movement, bringing disparate forces closer to themselves and to one another. Writing as creative act, as deed, was central to this healing process.