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Community-Driven Consulting - Book List

In following up on Monday’s post, Nick has just transcribed the book list we generated from our 4 days of planning the Consultants’ Curriculum for the Community-Driven Institute.

And so I thought it would be fun to share that list here. For those heading into Summer Reading Season, this list will keep you busy. For those heading deep into winter, these will be great books to curl up in a blanket with.

The books range from consulting titles to community titles to life titles and all in between. I have read a number of them, and can’t wait to read the rest. Here goes!

The Starfish and the Spider: The Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations
by Ori Brafman and Rod A. Beckstrom

How community efforts can multiply their passion and power through shared leadership. (A favorite in our office - we have given it as gifts and made it a required text in the Masters degree course we teach!)

Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die
by Chip Heath and Dan Heath

Whether we are creating a movement to turn the “nonprofit” sector into the Community Benefit Sector, or focusing on local neighborhood initiatives, we can learn to make those ideas “stick” with the people we want to engage in that work!

Reframe Your Blame, How to Be Personally Accountable
by Jay Fiset

The first principle of the Community-Driven Institute is “We accomplish what we hold ourselves accountable for.” Need I say more?

The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: Democracy, the Internet, and the Overthrow of Everything
by Joe Trippi

Joe Trippi used the Internet to take Howard Dean’s 2004 presidential campaign from unknown to superpower. The Internet is distributing power to the people right now. Trippi shows how to use that power to accomplish our missions.

No Easy Walk to Freedom
by Nelson Mandela

The collection of Nelson Mandela’s articles, speeches, letters from underground, and transcripts from his trials. I cannot wait to read this book!

Reconciliation: Islam, Democracy, and the West
by Benazir Bhutto

I simultaneously read this book and mourned the loss of so brilliant a soul. I learned more about Islam, and more about the path that has led to the present reality in the Islamic world than I dreamed one book could teach. Bhutto’s thoughtful analysis of how to reconcile the West with the Islamic world is masterful. Both the book and her death create a call for us to follow her lead.

Attracting Perfect Customers: The Power of Strategic Synchronicity
by Stacey Hall and Jan Brogniez

The authors - both consultants - make one simple and compelling point: Consultants will make more money and be far happier if they only deal with customers whose values mesh with their own. As true for Community Benefit Organizations as it is for the consultants who serve them!

Good to Great and the Social Sectors: A Monograph to Accompany Good to Great
by Jim Collins

According to Collins, the difference between successful organizations is not between the “business sector” and the “social sectors,” but between good organizations and great ones.

No Contest: The Case Against Competition
by Alfie Kohn

This was actually suggested in response to my post about the Collaboration Prize being self-defeating. The premise of Kohn’s work fits with so much of my own writing - the fact that competition is not necessarily reality, and that we can instead assume “cooperation” is reality, creating grand results!

Black Elk Speaks
by John G. Neihardt

The story of Lakota visionary and healer Nicholas Black Elk. Read it as a tale of a Lakota life, as a history of a Native nation, or as an enduring spiritual testament. This one came enthusiastically endorsed by a number of our group’s members.

The Biology Of Belief: Unleashing The Power Of Consciousness, Matter And Miracles
by Bruce Lipton

Bruce Lipton synthesizes the latest research in cell biology and quantum physics to show that our bodies can be changed as we retrain our thinking. (His You Tube video was one we watched during our sessions last week - see Monday’s post for details!)

The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements
by Eric Hoffer

Hoffer’s work is 50 years old, and is just as fresh in light of the religious fanatacism that seems to have our world in its grip today, as it was then. This is a classic.

Mastery: The Keys to Success and Long-Term Fulfillment
by George Leonard

Drawing on Zen philosophy and his expertise in the martial art of Aikido, Leonard shows how the process of mastery can help us attain a higher level of excellence in all areas of our lives.

The Hero Within: Six Archetypes We Live By
by Carol S. Pearson

Reaching our fullest potential by achieving a balance between work, family, and the self.

Million Dollar Consulting: The Professional’s Guide to Growing a Practice
by Alan Weiss

Can a group of consultants gather without extolling the virtues of Alan Weiss’s practical advice? If you are a consultant and do not read this book often, start now. Really.

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry Into Values
by Robert M. Pirsig

Another classic. The argument of quality vs. quantity, set as a story of a cross-country trip on a motorcycle by a father and son, is more accurately a journey through 2,000 years of Western philosophy. I know more than one person for whom this book has been life-changing.

Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation
by Parker J. Palmer

Letting your life speak means really listening. It also means tuning out the preconceived ideas about what a vocation should and shouldn’t be so that we can better hear the call of that spirit within. There are no how-to formulas here, just fireside wisdom from an elder who is willing to share his mistakes and stories as he learned to live a life worth speaking about.

Hope Unraveled: The People’s Retreat and Our Way Back
by Richard Harwood

Richard Harwood examines the U.S. as a nation struggling with consumerism, distorted realities, and false divisions that cut across cultural, political, and media landscapes. From there he lays out an alternate path for politics and public life for all Americans.

I am quite sure I am forgetting at least one or two. And if you have a favorite, please share in the comments - what a grand list we might just create!

Happy reading, all!

Community-Driven Consulting - Stay Tuned!

Last week, something life-changing happened for 10 people who did not expect it. A group of consultants from across the U.S. and Canada gathered for 4 intense days, to develop the Consultants’ Curriculum for the Community-Driven Institute.

I will try to describe our time together, knowing that instead I might simply say, “Magic happened.”

We worked nonstop from 8:30 every morning till dinner time, and then relaxed over amazing food and wine and stories and laughing. Then by 8:30am, we were back at it. We kept up that 12-hour-day pace for 4 days. On the last night, we celebrated with an evening stroll through the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, under the watchful eyes of Saturn and the desert moon.

Each day, the group watched as I taught processes that have become so much a part of my being that I no longer can describe how I do them. The group then broke down every portion of every process. They asked what I was thinking, dissecting how one thought had led to the next. They explained and described and analyzed what was really happening to achieve the consistent results we have seen from this work.

They made it teachable.

But that was just part of it. In that 4 days, we shared stories, we laughed, we cried, we hugged. There was a profound sense of joy in the room, and a profound lack of ego. We realized we were giving birth, with all the pains and celebrations that entails. And that happened, each in our own ways, for all of us.

My brain is exhausted and liberated all at once.

In the coming weeks and months, I will share here what we developed and learned. For now, I will simply share some of what we watched on You Tube - both for our edification and for our distraction.

Bruce Lipton on the biology of community.
Eddie Izzard as Darth Vader at the Death Star Canteen (warning - there is a word or 2 of foul language here)
• An animation about how DNA is formed.NickGraphing
• (As an aside, in a conversation unrelated to DNA, Nick graphed the mathematical cosine of the vision behind the civil rights movement.)
• And of course, Indiana Jones taking his famous leap of faith, first showing the dots and then connecting them, so others could follow as he moved forward.

After 4 intense days, we have a plan. We know what the curriculum will be.

So stay tuned. We are in for one heck of a ride as we create the future of the sector that will create the future of our world.

(If you want to be notified when the Community-Driven Consulting Program is up and running, just follow this link.)

My undying gratitude to Rick Carter, Bonnie Koenig, Michael Kumer, Tracey McConnell, Bob Moore, Elizabeth Sadlon and Tracey Sisson - and of course to Dimitri Petropolis and Nick Perona, my partners in crime. Your combined wisdom and tenderness and patience and openness was a gift I cannot begin to describe. I am humbled and honored to have each and every one of you in my life.

(Post update:  You  can find the book list we generated in this incredible four days at the link.)

Photo Credit: Cactus & Moon photo is from the incredible work being done by Greg & Mary Beth Dimijian to raise environmental awareness - see their stuff here

The Fall

Perhaps this is Part Deux of this week’s Monday Morning Rock Out - focusing on what is possible. This weekend, I saw the breathtaking labor of love that is The Fall.

If you are like me, you often see a scene in a movie, marvel at its beauty, only to find it is computer generated. I’m not sure why that always disappoints me, but for me, part of the wonder of seeing some grand scene is knowing that such an incredible place is, in fact, real.

Perhaps that frustration is what motivated the director of The Fall - Tarsem Singh - to shoot this incredible visual masterpiece on location in 18 countries around the world. Every place you see in this stunningly beautiful film is real. And because shooting this film was not Tarsem’s day job (he does commercials for a living), he shot this sweeping canvas of images “on the side” over a four year period. Wow.

It is possible to reach for something no “sane” person would try. It is possible because one of the things that differentiates us humans from the rest of the animal world - our humanity, our true “human” nature - is that we can conceive of something that does not yet exist, and make it happen.

So if you need a shot of inspiration, go see The Fall. (And yes, the critics who say the story itself doesn’t live up to the imagery are correct. Consider it an inspirational evening at the art museum.)

And then consider what is possible in the world of change we all want to create in our communities. And let’s go make that happen.