Quarantine Time: 10 Questions for Reflection

By |2020-03-12T12:46:52-04:00March 12th, 2020|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

How has the oralonea virus helped our hindered our response to the corona virus? How has political and social polarization contributed to poor preparation and response to this crisis? (See oralonea virus) What ways of thinking and tools will support us into the future? How might things be different if there were more women

Thanks to Your Donations – A LIVE EVENT!

By |2020-03-11T10:43:42-04:00March 11th, 2020|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

A special invitation just went out to key political and policy influencers from government, non-profit, academia, and think-tanks for a May 13th workshop entitled:  From Polarized to Optimized.  We only had space for 30 people -- so if you didn't get an invitation and are experiencing FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out), Fear not!  We’re exploring ways

Joint Chiefs of Staff Paper on Polarity

By |2021-02-12T15:43:30-05:00February 18th, 2020|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

Among the award-winning papers for 2015-2016 that were recently featured on the Joint Chiefs of Staff website is, “PARADOX & POLARITY: TOOLS FOR MANAGING COMPLEXITY” by Tod A. Roy of the Defense Intelligence Agency.  JPME (Joint Professional Military Education) institutions are potentially valuable sources for lessons learned and of military academic research results. Mr.

AND! Action and Contemplation

By |2021-02-12T15:36:05-05:00January 5th, 2020|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

I love and highly recommend Richard Rohr and his work at the Center for Action and Contemplation (https://cac.org/). He lives and talks polarities and is a frequent visitor to my gratitude journal. In a recent post, he talked about the polarity of Action AND Contemplation -- and about “and”!: "The most important word in

2020 Optimism

By |2020-03-11T12:34:20-04:00January 1st, 2020|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

Contributions in the final hours of 2019 helped us maximize the 1-1, $2500.00 match -- thank you! Now that 2020 is official, I want to share that I’m feeling optimistic about the year and about democracy -- despite the volatility of the political environment. One reason is recent personal shift I had to make.

IPD Year in Review: Investing in Change and Creating Impact

By |2020-03-11T11:36:07-04:00December 27th, 2019|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

Dear IPD Friends and Colleagues, When I received confirmation of the Institute’s nonprofit status on April of 2017, I remember saying out loud... “This. Is. POWERFUL!” The “power” envisioned was to advance healthy, sustainable, and just organizations and communities in the marriage of two theories and practice tools. The theories: Polarities of Democracy (POD) developed

Medical Education Pole Dancing and “How-to” for Starting to Leverage Polarities

By |2020-03-11T12:35:50-04:00August 8th, 2019|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

If the title of this Cliff’sNOTE intrigued you, you’ll love Samar Ahmed’s article entitled, “A Pole Dance for an Educational Reformer.” Samar is a friend, colleague and Professor of Medical Doctorate, MHPE, FF and Director of Ain Shams MENA FAIMER Regional institute. It’s a delightful read as well as a “how-to” engage key stakeholders

How the Army is Looking at Avoiding War

By |2019-08-05T19:39:36-04:00August 5th, 2019|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

Umm. OK. Check this out… A new book, titled “Empirical Paradox, Complexity Thinking and Generating New Kinds of Knowledge,” uses mathematical modeling to address why thinking in terms of either/or outcomes means the inevitability of another world war. (JULY 23, 2019 by U.S. Army CCDC Army Research Laboratory Public Affairs1 https://www.arl.army.mil/www/default.cfm?article=3480) "Adversaries think in such

A Blueprint to Revive American Democracy

By |2019-08-05T19:54:36-04:00August 4th, 2019|Featured, Polarity Thinking|

Many writers now say we’re in code blue, and we need a blueprint to revive American Democracy. In his Washington Post August 4th review of two books Carlos Lazoda highlights how in the weeks after Donald Trump’s inauguration, the muse of the death-of-democracy bookshelf began expanding – and not focused exclusively on Trump. He says,

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