In pockets here and there, gathered around kitchen tables or in the in-between spaces of online connection, a patchwork of conversations has been maturing over these past years. They are conversations in which we step back from the rush to action or to answers, where we hold each other in the process of "giving up" on promises that no longer make sense and responses to the crisis that turn out to be themselves a part of the crisis.
At the same time, there are questions brewing among those who have already been part of this work for a while: how do we tell the story of what is worth doing now? What kind of maps are worth making to help each other find paths through an uncertain landscape? How do we release resources from the structures of a world that is ending to contribute to the possibility of worlds worth living for in the times to come? How might we move together in the space between the crumbling familiar and the worlds we won't live to see? What are the practices that help us leave good ruins, become good ancestors?
In At Work in the Ruins: Finding Our Place in the Time of Climate Crises and Other Emergencies, Dougald Hine wrote about finding "the small paths" into the unknown world that lies ahead. In this session, as he prepares for a US tour to accompany the paperback release of this book brought forth by Chelsea Green Publications, EcoGather's Network Weaver Nicole Civita (of Sterling College) will hold space for Dougald to share where this work has been leading over the past year. We will explore how it joins up with the conversations that EcoGather convenes. Finally, with attendees, we will surface observations and insights from which we can mobilize responses to the questions alive in this long moment.
TOMORROW: Saturday, August 31, 2024
11am -12:30pm Eastern time
Free & Virtual - Via Zoom
Learn more & register here: https://www.ecogather.sterlingcollege.edu/schedule/regrowing-a-living-culture-the-work-that-[...]now