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Sharon Daloz Parks: Common Fire—Connective Space and Imagination that Fuels the Courage to Risk

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Manage episode 175046936 series 1342403
Content provided by Emerging Future Podcast and Joel de Jong. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Emerging Future Podcast and Joel de Jong or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
"We all have the capacity to have our fire kindled on behalf of the welfare of others and our own." -Sharon Daloz Parks Sharon was in grade school when she first imbibed an image of a shared commons. Her mother made a rule that everyone in her class would get a birthday invitation because it was the right thing to do. Years later Sharon would find herself exploring similar values on a larger scale as a Professor at Harvard. She looked at faith as meaning-making, something that all human beings do, not just what religious folks have. This exploration lead to a collaboration with her now husband, Larry Daloz Parks and Cheryl and James Keen, to co-author the book Common Fire, an artfully crafted analysis of inspired lives that gets to the very primal dimensions of where our collective well-being is dependent... The Commons. Sharon describes the commons as, "a shared life within a manageable frame." When referencing physical space, these are places where we all come together, either planned or unplanned, as ourselves, and are vital for a vibrant society. The modern commons takes many shapes and forms. It may look like Starbucks, a park, a baseball game, or a market. Common Fire explains how integral these spaces are in creating a flourishing society because they create a sense of trust and a framework for understanding Other. These outer landscapes are essential to developing the inner landscapes and capacities required for humanity to lead within complexity on behalf of the collective well-being of others. However, this elemental, place-making, soul-shaping fabric of human society is at a premium in the world today, and it is creating a deep hunger to recover and reimagine the new commons. Although Common Fire was first published in 1996, it carries enormous relevance today as the velocity of change has accelerated leaving us with a gap in responsiveness, understanding and direction. What Sharon articulates so elegantly truly gets to the core of what The Emerging Future Podcast is about: being present and courageous enough to lean into the complexity and unknown of the gap, and to wait expectantly for transformative moments that surprise us, and give us a deep sense of where we are and what's needed to move forward on behalf of Other and the future.
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22 episodes

Artwork
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Manage episode 175046936 series 1342403
Content provided by Emerging Future Podcast and Joel de Jong. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Emerging Future Podcast and Joel de Jong or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
"We all have the capacity to have our fire kindled on behalf of the welfare of others and our own." -Sharon Daloz Parks Sharon was in grade school when she first imbibed an image of a shared commons. Her mother made a rule that everyone in her class would get a birthday invitation because it was the right thing to do. Years later Sharon would find herself exploring similar values on a larger scale as a Professor at Harvard. She looked at faith as meaning-making, something that all human beings do, not just what religious folks have. This exploration lead to a collaboration with her now husband, Larry Daloz Parks and Cheryl and James Keen, to co-author the book Common Fire, an artfully crafted analysis of inspired lives that gets to the very primal dimensions of where our collective well-being is dependent... The Commons. Sharon describes the commons as, "a shared life within a manageable frame." When referencing physical space, these are places where we all come together, either planned or unplanned, as ourselves, and are vital for a vibrant society. The modern commons takes many shapes and forms. It may look like Starbucks, a park, a baseball game, or a market. Common Fire explains how integral these spaces are in creating a flourishing society because they create a sense of trust and a framework for understanding Other. These outer landscapes are essential to developing the inner landscapes and capacities required for humanity to lead within complexity on behalf of the collective well-being of others. However, this elemental, place-making, soul-shaping fabric of human society is at a premium in the world today, and it is creating a deep hunger to recover and reimagine the new commons. Although Common Fire was first published in 1996, it carries enormous relevance today as the velocity of change has accelerated leaving us with a gap in responsiveness, understanding and direction. What Sharon articulates so elegantly truly gets to the core of what The Emerging Future Podcast is about: being present and courageous enough to lean into the complexity and unknown of the gap, and to wait expectantly for transformative moments that surprise us, and give us a deep sense of where we are and what's needed to move forward on behalf of Other and the future.
  continue reading

22 episodes

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