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Circles

circles – listen to others, understand ourselves

by Elizabeth Jetton CFP®
July 27th, 2011

I am starting to hear from a number of you about leading “money and personal finance” circles for women: clients, friends, centers of influence and prospects. We’ll begin a series of webinars on the circle process and topics starting in September, but I thought I would share some stories and ideas in the meantime.

First of all I must always honor those who introduced me and trained me well in the process of facilitating and participating in meaningful circle conversations, Christina Baldwin and Anne Linnea. Through their books and company, PeerSpirit, these two women have brought this ancient and wise form of leadership, governance and community building to the 21st century. They even worked with the FPA board early in its forming. The FPA board actually holds its board meetings in part, meeting in circle.

One of the profound aspects of circle is that we get to hear our own voice, our own emerging thoughts. As we speak, we begin to understand ourselves. As we listen to others, we understand ourselves. Realizations occur. Forgiveness occurs. Hope and encouragement unfolds.

One thing is key: EVERYONE in the circle must show up as herself! Not as your job, your profession, your “I wish this were me” self. Even if you have centers of influence, they must come as “they are”, not as what they do! You as the facilitator and host must be a participant as well. You can’t stand back from the rest. This is what distinguishes this process and makes it such a safe, unique environment for women to talk about money and learn. It’s the, “we are all in this together.”

Here are some great resources:

  • The Circle Way: A Leader in Every Chair (BK Business) by Christina Baldwin, Ann Linnea and Margaret Wheatley (Paperback – Mar 12, 2010
  • Calling the Circle: The First and Future Culture by Christina Baldwin (Paperback – Mar 2, 1998
  • A Hidden Wholeness: The Journey Toward an Undivided Life by Parker J. Palmer (Paperback – Jun 2, 2009
  • The Millionth Circle: How to Change Ourselves and The World–The Essential Guide to Women’s Circles by Jean Shinoda Bolen

We’ll be building in resources for you, to help guide you as you try circles and continue them. Share your stories with us as you go out there, courageously changing the conversation!

Categories Women and Finance
Comments (2)

Holding the Circle

by Eleanor Blayney
October 13th, 2010

We talk a lot at Directions about “Circles” as a way of creating safe space for women to talk about personal finances.  Throughout history, women have congregated in circles not purely for companionship and conversation, but also to do important work.  Yesterday’s sewing circles and quilting bees reappear today as book clubs, investment groups, and giving circles. All share education and helping others as their central purpose.

It’s not the shape, but the spirit of circles, that results in their transformative power.  Simply arranging chairs in a circle, rather than in rows, for a discussion of personal finance is not enough to get women talking about and engaging with a topic they may consider uncomfortable or boring.  What’s more important is the absence of hierarchy in the circle.  There is no one leader who sets the agenda or determines the outcomes of the discussion, nor is the flow of discussion unilateral, from “expert” to participants.

Circles are gently but firmly held.  They are not run.  The caller or organizer of the circle must hold and honor the collective wisdom of the group.  He or she must be able to sit with the questions, even the occasional discomfort, prompted by the discussion, and be willing to accept that more open-ended questions, rather than definitive answers, may indeed be the most important work produced by the circle.

At the same time, a circle does not just happen.  Considerable planning must go into the holding of the circle, starting from the first invitation into the circle, to the harvesting of the circle’s discoveries. Indeed, those proficient in the art and science of hosting conversations refer to circles as a “technology,” thus aligning it with other respected fields where deliberate study, development, and application of techniques come together to produce results.

I learned this in the way that a lot of women learn:  by standing back and watching someone else – a true circle “technologist” — at work.

Let me tell you about my Directions colleague, Elizabeth.  Trained in the art of hosting conversations, she has frequently written and spoken about the circle process for several years, and has used the technique as a governance principle while she was president of the Financial Planning Association.  In September of this year, she – the expert – and I – the novice – hosted two circles, one for advisors and one for women consumers in Atlanta.

Elizabeth is nothing if not a powerfully spontaneous, inspirational leader.  I plod, while Elizabeth soars, as we work together on the vision of Directions.  She’s totally comfortable and articulate “on the spot” and brilliant at taking what is immediately in front of her and organizing it into meaning and direction.

So going into the Atlanta circles, I assumed that Elizabeth would be totally relying on her extemporaneous ease and gift of conversational versatility to run the discussions.  I expected our pre-circle preparation to consist primarily of Elizabeth coaching me to relax, have fun, and be ready to “go with flow.”

Not so.  Elizabeth’s nerves had kicked in well before I even arrived.  My overnight bag was no sooner heaved into her MiniCooper when she announced that we had a lot of work to do, and please not to mind her bossing me around.  We then proceeded to plan for the next ten hours every detail of the circles that would take place:  the set-up, the questions, the transitions, the hand-outs, the timing, who would and wouldn’t speak, who would take notes, harvest the conversations, follow-up with the participants.

During the circles themselves we were busy as stagehands who knew the cues for changing and adjusting the settings, but not necessarily the play that would be performed.  The hardest part, for me at least, was resisting the urge to direct or play a major speaking role and simply listen with intention.  The amazing part was how much I, as a personal finance expert, learned about the many ways money can be experienced in our lives.

I also learned that circle hosting is neither for the intrepid nor the faint of heart.  You need courage to accept the wisdom of the group, even when it looks very different from your own.  At the same time, you need training and guidance – this is not a skill that you acquire simply by doing, but one that should be learned from an experienced practitioner.

We have been hearing from many financial advisors interested in how they can put circle technology to work in their outreach to women.  It’s our intention at Directions to provide guidance and training in this practice, as well as to incorporate the learning that advisors gain from circle practice.  For change that really matters, when it comes to how we talk to and advise women about money, we cannot do this effectively as individuals.  It’s back to the basic premise of circles: we learn better and we learn more when we learn together.

Want to know more? Click here to read another blog about circles by Elizabeth Jetton:
Circles – Listen to Others, Understand Ourselves.

Categories Personal Finance for Women
Comments (1)

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