The We Space of Listening: A Jazz Lens
As with so many businesses, Greg and I have shifted our Jazz Leadership Project workshops and presentations to online platforms. It’s been great to connect with people around the globe and share the wisdom of the jazz model for excellence, collaboration, and high-performance through programs for Coaches Rising, Rebel Wisdom, and others.
We’ll be giving an hour-long online presentation in the upcoming Embodiment Conference on October 15th at 9:00pm entitled: The We Space of Listening: A Jazz Lens. Our presentation will highlight the praxis of the music to improve communication and demonstrate how we can better handle challenges and conflicts. We’ll focus on the principle of ANTAGONISTIC COOPERATION and the practice of BIG EARS from which we can build and strengthen embodied togetherness.
The Conference, running from October 14 – 25, will include sessions on trauma & social change, leadership & business, martial & healing arts, meditation & breathwork, ecology, and more. In addition to our presentation, you will be able to experience noted experts, such as philosopher and developer of the Integral Theory Ken Wilber, author of the Polyvagal Theory Stephen Porges, Founder of The Alchemy of Trauma Karine Bell, and many others.
The Conference is free to all. We invite you to reserve your place by clicking this link: register free.
At the conference you can:
learn about new ideas in each Channel of interest
gain deep personal insights
deepen your professional expertise
gain dozens of practical tools for stress and trauma
get inspired and reboot your own practice
connect with people across the globe for support and encouragement
Get your free place and receive as a bonus:
The free embodiment book.
A voucher for the Embodiment shop with a value of $200
We’re delighted to be part of this conference and hope you will join us. It will be a rich opportunity to come home to your body in our chaotic world.
Remember, there’s still time to register for Greg’s Cultural Intelligence course starting October 14. Here’s what a path-breaking scholar of psychology says:
Greg Thomas is a scholar on the leading edge of culture. His understanding of the dynamics of culture and its place in the cosmos is profound, as is his knowledge of Black American culture and the deep spiritual origins of jazz and the blues. His unique background situates him to be an outstanding guide in helping society cultivate cultural intelligence in these challenging times. It is hard to imagine what could be a more important endeavor in the 21st Century, and thus I strongly recommend this course and the wisdom Greg Thomas has to offer in it.
—Dr. Gregg Henriques, Professor of Psychology at James Madison University and author of A New Unified Theory of Psychology