Enso

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In Zen painting, the Enso is a circle drawn with sumi ink and brush on rice paper. It represents our perfection amidst our incompleteness, a symbol of when the mind is free to let the body and spirit create an expression of the moment.

Blue Collar Zen

The Enso is a minimalist art form which captures the moment and one’s sense of connection with it. There is a  fluidity and mindfulness to the act of creating one of these simple designs. However, it is the repetition of the art that develops sense of discipline in the artist. This exercise allows one to become immersed in a simple act which begins to develop its own complexity and subtle variation. The more times the circle is painted or drawn, the more that moment comes to life in a single, smooth, curving brush stroke which meets itself back at the point at which it started.

The images above were created in a short space of time, and I have barely begun to explore this fascinating form.

From an Occupational Therapy perspective I think that there is potential for this to be used for a variety of purposes and interventions. Furthermore, this is a very accessible activity, and it can produce a large amount of work very quickly, then there is the potential for using other mediums, other materials, scaling up and down, repetition, printing, textiles, sculpture, murals and so on.

How far can you take it, well have a look at Bill Buchman doing his thing at one of his classes.

If you use this as an activity or intervention, please let us hear about it at kawacreative@gmail.com.

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Kawa Creative.

Kawa Creative came into being a year and a half ago as a blog for my own explorations of the Kawa landscape. Since then the metaphor has grown and the river itself has grown deeper and wider. Since that time we have had the APOT conference at which Michael Iwama was a speaker, Jouyin Teoh has worked dilligently on her new business and on raising the profile of Kawa. The Kawa itself has flowed accross the world, we have had contributions from Professor Kenichi Tsuchisawa from Japan who is developing his own theories on Balance of Life.  Professor Iwama has made a move of thousands of miles from Toronto to Augusta, Georgia. It has been an eventful time all told, and now we look forward to the further development of the Kawa community and this remarkable concept.

Kawa Creative is now at a critical stage of development where we are now ready to make the transition from a good idea to a functioning business for well-being, life flow and change management. This shift is a testament to the power of social media, local networks and the narrative force of the river itself. As yet we have done little more than write the introduction, so it is with high expectation and complete commitment that we enter into the beginning of the story proper.

We will keep the blog running and the contacts page, but there will be no other activity on this site until we have the next stage of development underway.

Back soon.

Wider, Deeper, Stronger.

“Rivers not only wind their way across the American continent, but course through American literature and art. T. S. McMillin offers a learned and lively primer for our reading of river literature and of rivers themselves—and in the process a primer for understanding how the human mind derives meaning from all of nature.”—Scott Slovic, author, Going Away to Think: Engagement, Retreat, and Ecocritical Responsibility.

Rivers have a place in human history unrivaled by any  human endeavour. The sheer elemental force of their presence in our development as a species has carved out a landscape on which the human story has been written. The oldest civilisations emerged from the banks of three great river systems: The Tigris and Euphrates, the Indus and the Yellow River. The Indus Valley is often considered the birthplace of civilization, with evidence dating back to 4500BC. However, what about the Nile region, where emergence dates back to 3200BC, or North America and the tribes living around the Colorado River, and the Yellow River and so on. The point is not to provide and ancient history lesson, but to understand the important role that rivers have played in the development of humankind.

We could think about the rich culture of the Mississippi, or the romance of the Seine, the industry of the Rhine or the mystery of the Amazon; and yet all of these rivers are a part of the whole system. All of them tributaries to the vast global water cycle that sustains life on this planet. In Roman literature, poets and writers looked to rivers for their inspiration. If one wanted to write a love poem, then a beautiful, full flowing river would be the source, and the writer would actually drink from this water to inform his art. If the subject was to be some kind of conflict or aggression, then the poet would drink from a turbulent river. The Roman poets literally drank their inspiration from their environment. This kind of connection is something which we are loosing in modern culture. We are no longer connected with our environment in the same way – in fact, using the term “connected with” is an indication of this. We are our environments, and perhaps rivers and water are the best ways to understand this. Afterall, the water that runs through your part of the world, has been all around the system. The water that flows in your river, flows in every river on earth. Furthermore, the water that flows in your river now, has flowed throughout the system all through history, and will continue to do so. It is not difficult to understand why so many creation myths use water as a key symbol. We all breathe liquid for the first nine months of our lives.

Understanding that we are our environment is a central concept within the Kawa model and key aspects of the Kawa poetics (the language of rivers). To become fully imersed in the Kawa approach, one must understand that the construct is not simply a mechanical interaction between water, rock, driftwood and channel; but a whole environment full of dynamic complexity which is ever changing and adapting to new challenges and events. Applied to oneself, the river metaphor becomes a powerful tool for reflection, communication, understanding constructs, organisation and transition and change. Very often we become stuck in our development, especially as adults, when we don’t expect to be confronted by fundamental challenges to our perception of how the world works = or more accurately, how we believe it should work.

The kawa Creative approach is to look at what is happening now, and to illustrate this using the river environment. The process of change or “unsticking” is then undertaken as an exploration of this environment. In the same way that Boal’s “Theatre of the Oppressed” is a rehearsal for revolution, the exploration that an individual undertakes in the Kawa process is a “rehearsal” for the life change that they wish to undertake. This exploration might be undertaken as a conversation, visually, via digital media or by using whatever skills and resources are available. All of these explorations are personal journey’s which have significance and meaning within the participants’ physical, social and emotional environs, which allows  them to identify the direction of the emerging flow. Being able to bring one’s river into focus, provides the enpowerment needed to begin shaping a new environment, which is in harmony with the participants’ needs, abilities, resources and aspirations.

Over the past eighteen months Kawa Creative has worked and liased with several individuals who have been looking for change in their working or personal lives, as well as introducing the concept to organisations outside of the healthcare sector. These explorations and consultations have been integral to developing the Kawa Creative approach, which is one of imagination and exploration, underpinned by the central premise that we exist as “overlapping spheres of shared experience.” This blog is a reflection on how this development process has led to a place of new growth and increased flow, as well as an outline of the Kawa Creative approach to facilitating positive change.

A great many thanks should go to Michael Iwama, Jouyin Teoh, Amy Leader, Sarah Bodell, Gillian Crossley, Beki Dellow, Jon Pearson, Sue Walpole, Kiran Narang, Bee Jasko, Chris Selby, Mark Davey, Mark Wisbey, Joci Hunter, Martin Haigh, Anita Hamilton, Cathy Clarke, Kee Hean Lim and all those who have contributed in some way to the development of these ideas (even if it was unknowingly at the time.) All of these rivers flow through the Kawa Creative environment. 

The next stage of development for Kawa Creative has now begun with a collaboration with John Pearson and Karen Linde.

More to come…

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Forthcoming Event

Kawa Creative is collaborating with Karen Linde (Leeds University) and John Pearson (Calderdale Yoga Centre) to deliver a three day event in the beautiful Calder Valley. The programme will include approaches from transactional analysis and the psychology of leadership as well as teaching the values and process of the Kawa Model as a tool for managing and improving life flow, balance and change.

Video Haiku

Video Haiku – A haiku is a Japanese poetic form which adheres so a set of conventions to produce a meditative approach to writing. The video seeks to achieve a similar “moment” of realisation or awareness. The video haiku can be made as a group project or individually. The rules to the video haiku are:

  • The piece should be focussed on an environment (natural or manmade)

  • There should be no devised spoken or written language in the video.

  • Sound should come from background noise or an appropriate instrumental sound track.

  • A video Haiku will contain 17 shots which will each be no longer than 10 seconds.

  • The shots will be grouped in the haiku form of 5-7-5.

  • Each group will be cross faded. Between each group there will be a fade to and from black.

Reflection:

The first shot was of a spiral stair case outside an under dwelling. This first shot in the film gave me the idea of things being beneath. This also resonated with a conversation I had with a psychotherapist who described an underground river being a metaphor for “scripts” developed in early childhood. This became the thread for the film: “beneath and above.” I began thinking about the relative relationship between these two aspects and the fact there is no under without over. This of course presents a duality which needs to be resolved.

The Video Haiku technique provides an opportunity to engage in a creative and mindful act, which then provides and opportunity for reflection and further exploration.

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