Combine creativity and community and you have my attention. Attending this session at the National Council for Mental Wellbeing’s all-staff team building retreat in Washington DC sent sparks of inspiration through the room. Mark and Natalie shared their common goals with tangible examples of building community from experience. Images of community murals on huge canvases inspired the room. Mark invited his community to create together and the public art that resulted was powerful.
This session sparked collaboration. Markers and coloring sheets were distributed and in moments there was a silence that enveloped us. All heads bowed as we all became artists again, coloring with abandon. The only words spoken were, “are you using that green” or “can you pass me the pink?” It was gleeful.
The exercise in actual problem solving – using creative thinking to discover unique solutions then began. We were walked through a group of questions to narrow down our path while selecting different possibilities that led to other outcomes with more questions. Thoughtful and swift – we each created our own journey of discovery to engage with communities having specific needs.
The final question was a stumper. Which measure of success do you think is most important? The choices were Outcomes, Process, and Relationships. You could only choose one and I believe the consensus in the room was one of surprise. Most of us were surprised that in the beginning we would have chosen outcomes – did we succeed in our goals? But, after the session I chose relationships – new relationships and trust being established in the community. Many in the room commented similarly.
The final suggestion was for each table to combine the coloring sheets into a larger patchwork, mirroring the table’s creativity, and an analogy of the urban mural example that opened the session. hashtag#mentalhealthfirstaid hashtag#creativity Storycraft Lab
MLK a Beacon
The quotes from Martin’s speeches are moving and plentiful.
The images of he and his family over the years are a joy to my eyes.
Today, I was restricted from volunteering or activism because of the pandemic that rages still. I feel hopeless. It is not my place to claim this man yet he is such a part of me.
Know that I lived in a divided northern city when he was killed. I stood on my front step singing “Let There Be Peace on Earth” with no one to hear me. I was stooped at 10. A silly girl with much to learn. Today, I have been quiet. Awaiting this next week in our country’s history. Martin is here willing us to react wisely. Can we do the right thing?
Pick a quote, any quote and breathe life into it. “Let it begin with me”. Thank you, Martin.
International Day of Peace – 2020
Entries from Germany, the Netherlands, Italy, India, Florida, Oregon, and North Carolina. The goal is the same – heal our world through peaceful thoughts and actions. Thank you for participating everyone.
Impact
Sketching out thoughts is not a new idea. Thinking that the process of doing so will add value to instruction is. As educators, we have been drawing images of plot, the steps to an experiment, and the meaning of vocabulary words for decades. This, revisiting image to remember or to make meaning in a deeper way, is new to many. I like to think that taking a step back to introducing and accepting Sketchnoting or Visual Notetaking for our students will gain so much value that the time spent will save time in the long run.
Don’t take my word for it.
Welcome to Peacedoodle
We are here to share together, dream together, doodle together and yes, spread peace together. Thank you for stopping by and please stay tuned as we announce events and share news of spreading Peace, one doodle at a time.