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Health CareBuild Adaptive Capacity
April 14, 2016
Traditional paradigms of health and care have helped cure many ills and revealed others. The challenge of tomorrow is to take Adaptive Action to see and shift patterns of intractable health challenges, and to address all these issues cost-effectively and sustainably. Listen to the recording to hear stories of transformation that demonstrate a new paradigm and its potential to heal the hurt in systems of health and health care.
Build Adaptive Capacity
It’s the New Year, and coaching clients are often focused on new goals and aspirations. Many of my clients are thinking about, planning for, or pursuing new jobs. Questions pile up, and the process can become overwhelming with too many options or too narrowly focused with too few options.
Build Adaptive Capacity
February 4, 2016
Glenda Eoyang explores the cause of intractable challenges and identifies three conditions for finding your way through the intractability today and tomorrow: Adaptive Action, Pattern Logic, and Inquiry.
Build Adaptive Capacity
Usually I groan when yet another sports analogy is used to explain an insight about complex human systems. Don’t get me wrong. I love sports and spent the better part of my teenage years in a gym playing basketball. My dad was a football coach, and I love the game.
Build Adaptive Capacity
December 3, 2015
Glenda Eoyang talks about aging and how we move through the aging process in a complex adaptive system. She describes the steps of iterative cycles of Adaptive Action: What? generates energy in the patterns of a complex adaptive system? So what? are those patterns in personal experience of physical, emotional, mental, social change? Now what? can we do to use this information to age gracefully?
Build Adaptive Capacity
There is a great deal of noise in the popular culture today about your “bucket list.” It seems everyone should have a magical list of things they want to do, people they want to see, and places they want to go before they are too old or too infirm to follow those dreams. I would like to propose a new tool.
Build Adaptive Capacity
I attended my grandson’s wedding last weekend. I would hurry to say that I’m too young to have a grandson getting married (which is true), but more on that later. In the glorious autumn sunshine of Los Angeles, we came together to celebrate the joining of a pair of lives, and all pairs and all lives.