Beyond writing

Writing stuff down can easily remove us from practical reality and suppress our intuition
Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Add Your Heading Text Here

Transcript of this video:

In his book on indigenous wisdom, Sand Talk, the writer Tyson Yunkaporta says something very early on that really stopped me in my tracks.

He talked about the challenge of trying to communicate his ideas with marks on pages representing speech… 

because he comes from an oral culture and it’s very challenging to people like me, brought up in the West, where the written word is the kind of byword of intelligence, the ability to read these squiggles on paper, and then make these squiggles on paper skillfully, is the absolute sort of beginning point of social acceptability.

And typically the production of a book is the mark of a certain kind of threshold of intelligence.

And Yunkaporta is really challenging this.

I like it because I think we so over-reverence things that can be written down and listed.

I was talking this morning about the UN’s inner development goals and although I quite like the idea of inner growth, when I read those goals, these long lists of idealised goals, I start to feel a bit resistant and incompetent.

I feel the same way about the four or five pages that I think it’s the International Coaching Federation has listed all the core competencies of a coach or I guess a facilitator.

I read those lists and I feel like, well, ironically, I feel they make me feel like I’m incompetent.

Well, actually, I think I’m quite competent as a coach and facilitator, but having these skills listed and enumerated, although they individually make a kind of sense, taken as a whole, they feel disconnected from what I think is

 – and I think this is true of genuine human processes – 

they are substantially intuitive and the act of writing them all down and listing them is reduces them and actually, I think, disconnects us from what it is to be truly human.

Photo by Luis Villasmil on Unsplash

Share Post

More Posts

Bunny Bunny

A funny game illustrates what we may be missing in many of our meetings

Leading from the clown

I shot this in a single eight-minute take, which is in the spirit of an experience of Ralf Wetzel’s workshop, Leading from the Clown. Clown training is probably the deepest and most challenging work I’ve done. Enjoy.

Noticing

The power of small gestures and noticing

Small p presence

Getting away from grandiosity or solemnity. small p presence is about being open to the life around us

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

The absurd

In moving house, I radically downsized my collection of books which I can highly recommend. I used to think I’d one day find a reason to keep all those volumes,

Johnnie Moore

Innovation or real needs?

Tim Kastelle has good post The Worst Innovation Quote Ever. That’s the one about inventing a better mousetrap and the world beating a path to your door. Apparently there are

Johnnie Moore

links for 2010-07-13

LEWIS 360°: You are what you Tweet Another case study in how not to do social meeja. In this case Gillian McKeith. "In her programme she insists on poking around