New Website, New Respect: NancyBieber.com

Good collaboration is a real joy, and that’s why i was thrilled to spend time with Nancy Bieber over the past months, building a new website to promote her book on spiritual discernment.  Like a story out of The Secret, a book deal just fell in her lap last year.  It was a veritable sign from God after she’d just become clear of her desire to write a book for the first time. Such is the ease with which she seems to work – with me too at least. And the website was no different.

Website design for NancyBieber.com
The website design for NancyBieber.com used WordPress and a customized twenty-ten theme.

For me, Nancy’s new book, Decision Making and Spiritual Discernment is not just a website project.  It’s close to my heart.  While unemployed this past year, i spent some intentional time exploring professional possibilities for my life and my family.  Nancy played a key role in that process, convening a clearness committee with my wife and me  that explored one possibly risky venture.  In essence, we were walking a few steps of the book as she was writing it. Nancy is a master convener with the insight and patience of a classic Magician.  And she brings that insight to her writing, outlining a process and some very do-able practices that help cull the wisdom of the Divine into the practical Now.

Working with Nancy was a smooth and seamless collaboration. She had never ventured into webspace and i hadn’t read the book.  Any talk of “sales” or “marketing” in those terms made her cringe. And yet, we were of one mind that more people deserve to read and do the process and practices that she was sharing. Her “product” (don’t cringe Nancy!) has real value and deserves a wider audience beyond her family and friends in Lancaster County and throughout the Society of Friends where’s she’s already well known.

When someone practices what they preach — and “preach” pretty high-minded ways of being in the world as Nancy does — they win a deep, natural respect.  Nancy has won that — from me, from her community of faith in Lancaster and from others i’ve chanced to meet.  And her respect-full and ease-full collaboration with me is one more example of that.  So i heartily encourage you to check out this elegant piece of website design at http://nancybieber.com. And while you’re at it, check out her book too!

* A clearness committee is a Quaker process in which fellow Friends help someone gain clarity around a particular question or issue by asking open questions and offering occasional insight. The process was a blessing for my wife and me.  Incidentally, we are mentioned in the book, though i haven’t seen the final copy.

Playing with Forgiveness – Self and Others

Another Playback Theatre workshop is in the bag, and it’s been a thrilling ride. Eight intense hours with six others sharing a myriad of stories. By our conclusion at 5 PM, it was hot, and we were tired.  The day had been an intense sequence of stories and playing, and we’d struggled to name the common themes or “red thread” as we in Playback call it.  As we began to close, one participant suddenly interrupted, “you know what?  I think the ‘red thread’ is about forgiveness.”

The River Crossing Playback ensemble plays a scene of forgiveness  in Playback Theatre.I was bracing for a longer explanation, resisting another pull into a vast sea of discussion as I tried to facilitate a tidy ending. But that was it. “Forgiveness.” Hmm.  We moved to end.  And the more the day sinks in (now 36 hours old), the more it resonates. Sometimes the biggest gifts arrive at the most unexpected moments.

As with most workshops I facilitate, I spend the next day or so in evaluation, self-reflection and self-criticism. This one was no different. Even though i thought i’d wrapped things up emotionally with a spacious evening, the next day continued with somewhat humorous internal chatter of “what if’s” and “aw shucks.”  My practice of silent worship with Friends (Quakers) puts a spotlight on this kind of mental jabbering.  And so it goes.  Or does it?  When will i be able to just let it go?

The biggest realization for me, the facilitator is this: i also need to play our forgiveness.  Self-forgiveness.  The embodied art form that allowed us to develop a common story and process of seeking forgiveness (toward others) is also exactly what i need to enable forgiving myself.  In a world surrounded by disembodied media and disembodied social situations (including Friends worship perhaps), embodied arts seem to play an extraordinarily vital role in making forgiveness more than just a mental hoop to jump through.

This is about more than forgiving myself for choices made facilitating a workshop.  This is about the biggies:  the relationships i broke, the people i hurt, the family i grew up with, the anger i expressed, the jobs i lost, the people i let down, the oppression i supported, the victim i played, the ‘stuff’ i demanded, the debt i went into, the frivolousness i indulged in, the fear i cowered under. This could go on a long time. And i know i’m not alone. Most if not all of us have a decent list of self-forgiveness agenda.  Indeed, it’s the only thing that keeps us from forgiving (and fully loving) others. So how do we check things off of it?

More doing, less stewing.  That’s the phrase that came to me in Friends Meeting today.  We need practices to work through forgiveness.  We need to do, to act, to walk the talk. Just like every guide needs a guru and every counselor needs their own therapy, so every facilitator needs a forum where they can be facilitated. Can someone Playback me?

We are only as effective as our integrity – how much we walk our talk throughout our lives.  But many of us also live in an very impoverished world when it comes to natural, embodied community.   It’s often much easier to play roles – or escape them – than truly act – act out our true needs and our unselfconscious calling.  The task remains for us: maximize our real community experience, our embodied existence and our opportunities for honesty. Somewhere in there is a way forward to checking off all the “shoulda woulda coulda’s” of my last workshop – and a whole lot more.

Now anybody want to play that back?

The Jubilee Arts networking site is a place for practitioners to learn more, promote their own work and collaborate in this and other embodied, improvisational liberating arts. Click to find out more and play a part!

Next Stop: Playback Workshop in Marietta, June 19th

Chris Fitz and Rachel Slater play a Pair at the Centre for  Playback Theatre
Chris Fitz and Rachel Slater play a Pair at the Centre for Playback Theatre, July 2010.

This weekend will be another step in exploring “archetypes” through Playback Theatre.  Held at the Susquehanna Waldorf School in Marietta, PA, we will spend Saturday with the Warrior and the Altruist, two prominent characters that we see and play in our every day lives.  In the process, we’ll learn to use Playback Theatre to make these archetypes come a live more vividly on an intimate workshop stage.

The workshop will be held Saturday, June 19th from 9 am to 5 pm at the Susquehanna Waldorf School in Marietta, PA.  Please share it with your friends!