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/We all get by with help from our friends. But there is more to giving and receiving help than meets the eye. Let's help each other out with our help stories!
Read MoreWe all get by with help from our friends. But there is more to giving and receiving help than meets the eye. Let's help each other out with our help stories!
Read MoreA reflection in poetry and photos by Jeanette Mayo. The goal is not to pray more, or worry less…
Read MoreWho needs one more thing to do? And more people to manage relationships and communication with? I know I don’t. Yet…
Read MoreFabric Young adults get a chance to disconnect from technology and the fast pace of life while finding connection to ourselves, each other and something we can’t quite put words to.
Read MoreI think the biggest thing for me at camp was it was the most peaceful and present I had felt in a long time. It felt really good to step away from real life for a moment.
Read MoreROAM through some readings to stretch your doubt muscles.
Read MoreOlivia Jutila and Alexa Miller share their talents of writing and digital art to reflect on our High School trip to Appalachia.
Read MoreThere is a common refrain I hear from folks as they first start getting to know Fabric…
Read MoreOur direct dive into the Dangerous Book, a.k.a. the Bible, has ended. But like all of our conversations it was designed to spark beginnings.
Read MoreA way to be Fabric with Kali Pliego. On the topic of Purposes and Preferences, I had an opportunity to live into purpose drop into my lap recently at work…
Read MoreWe are excited to welcome Jen Metz to Fabric's staff! She will be working very part time, but bringing big strengths to bear. Her main role will be Nest coordinator, connecting our youngest kiddos and their families. She will also serve as Sunday Site Host, guiding our set up an tear down crews most weeks.
Read MoreAn introvert’s take on being with yourself versus by yourself.
Read MoreOur takeaway from this week’s message—Hope is a mode I can practice—got me wondering…
Read MoreTurns out that TRUST is important for relationships! It’s time to learn how to build it.
Here’s the scenario. You are going to be together with someone with whom you have major differences in attitude and opinion. You can employ Tactics, Speaking, and Listening to deal with the situation. Some of them are more helpful than others. Which of the following will you do and why? And what ones do you find yourself doing even though you probably shouldn’t?
TACTICS
Avoid the person
Avoid the conversation
If THE subject comes up, Say nothing
Say nothing to them and complain to everyone else
Change the subject
Hang out around them
Express interest in them
Learn something about them ahead of time and do some research so you can talk about it
Calm yourself beforehand
Let someone else know what you are doing so they can support you
SPEAKING
Tell them they are wrong
Explain why they are wrong
Explain why they are wrong nicely
Call them names
Ask them, Do you REALLY believe that?
Ask them, Why do you believe THAT?!?
Ask them, HOW can you believe that?
Explain to them the ramifications on the world of what they believe
Ask them if they want to know what you think.
Explain how you are trying to be open to them, and that they aren’t doing that for you
Ask what brought them to believe what they do?
Ask clarifying questions
Reflect what you hear to confirm understanding
If asked what you think, use “I” statements instead of “You” statements.
LISTENING
Listen for the weakness in their argument
Roll your eyes often
Interrupt
Listen for a pause… so you can get your point in
Listen to understand
Listen for the person behind the words
On my own, “doing something” about racism (and other deep divides on display right now) feels daunting. And it is easy to get caught in traps of helplessness, defensiveness, shame and blame.
Read MoreTo see a World in a Grain of Sand
And a Heaven in a Wild Flower
Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand
And Eternity in an hour
--William Blake
Check out this video of a starling murmuration:
Each starling is a data point that is constantly reacting and changing and is a part of a whole. Starlings can just do this. How can I be a data point that is also the change and a part of a whole?
I was talking with someone about Katy Schalla Lesiak and Bjorn Westgard’s podcast The Stories that Data Tell saying, I wonder if and how God is in data?' They were reminded of a moment they had looking out at the ocean thinking about it as an infinite number of data points rolling with and in the waves. I was thinking about the movie the matrix coupled with a line from the William Blake poem above and wondering how maybe so many things in nature are millions of data points that we perceive as a whole and present as a flower or a waterfall or the wind.
I am continually connecting the To Get to the Other Side series to where it began with Erin Tripolino’s sharing of Adrienne Maree Brown’s Emergent Strategy. She says,
[Emergence] is another way of speaking about the connective tissue of all that exists --the way, the Tao, the force, change, God/dess, life. Birds flocking, cells splitting, fungi whispering underground.
Adrienne Maree Brown also quoted Octavia Butler’s Parable of the Sower,
All that you touch
You change
All that you change
Changes you
The only lasting truth
Is change
God is change
I read these and think about my friend talking about the change/data/god within the ocean and find comfort. God is change. The only lasting truth is change. Watching nature constantly react and change in very small movements that create systems and patterns like ocean waves beating up against a shore or a starling murmuration, I feel held and connected to God in everyday encounters and even the natural rhythms in me. Trees are so damn good at being trees, and I can connect to that same energy that lives in me and be a damn good Maia.
This is my prayer and where I start today.
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Fabric MPLS
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Field Elementary School, 4645 4th Ave S, Mpls, MN 55419 (map)
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