For Ziegler, envisioning is ‘… a discipline of the spirit that invites serious inner work to tease out, to discern, to generate compelling images of the future that leads to transformation through a commitment to new action illumined by that vision’.14 The components are dialogue, deep imaging (eliciting images of the future), deep listening (listening to yourself or to other people with silence, attention and empathy and without judgement) and deep questioning (listening for whatever questions inside yourself insist on being asked and asking them). The way to undertake this work (both as a practitioner and a participant) is to seek ‘paths to interiority’ and enter an internal state of listening, emptying, waiting and quieting.15 We are encouraged to find what lies within us about our future in our hopes, dreams, concern, beliefs, fears and assumptions.
For Ziegler, envisioning is ‘… a discipline of the spirit that invites serious inner work to tease out, to discern, to generate compelling images of the future that leads to transformation through a commitment to new action illumined by that vision’.14 The components are dialogue, deep imaging (eliciting images of the future), deep listening (listening to yourself or to other people with silence, attention and empathy and without judgement) and deep questioning (listening for whatever questions inside yourself insist on being asked and asking them). The way to undertake this work (both as a practitioner and a participant) is to seek ‘paths to interiority’ and enter an internal state of listening, emptying, waiting and quieting.15 We are encouraged to find what lies within us about our future in our hopes, dreams, concern, beliefs, fears and assumptions.
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