Negative capability

there's a lot going on when I seem to be doing nothing
Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

sitting with uncertainty

Transcript of this video:

My friend David does a lot

of work coaching in organisations.

And he told me a story of when he was in Italy

at a conference where he was on stage

to demonstrate his coaching practice.

And the woman sitting opposite was speaking in Italian.

Now, David’s a smart guy, he speaks Italian,

but he realised once she started

that he was struggling a bit to keep up with her.

So what he found himself doing periodically as she spoke

to describe whatever her issue was,

he would just go “si.”

And he, he realised that seemed to be working.

So that’s basically what he did through the,

throughout the whole coaching session, at the end

of which she declared herself be very satisfied.

And it’s a funny story, which I slightly hesitate to share

because I think the, the skill or the capacity

or the talent that David is demonstrating

is easily dismissed as not doing anything,

which isn’t really true.

If you know David as I do, when you sit in conversation

with him, you kind of know that he’s paying attention.

You can almost feel him thinking you have a sense

of him chewing over whatever it is that you’ve said to him.

And when you pause and he’s about to reply, you can,

you can really sense the cogs turning

and anticipate something very interesting that is going

to say in response.

So this, this capacity, if you like to sit with

uncertainty and slowly make sense of it,

has a fancy term for it, which the poet John Keats

created in the 19th century.

Um, he called it negative capacity (capability), I don’t think

that’s quite the right phrase for it.

’cause that sort of focuses on what’s not happening.

But what actually is happening is,

and I recognise this in myself when I’m at an event taking

in all that is going on, I’m experiencing a series

of feelings and responses and impulses and thoughts,

and I’m making choices, some conscious,

some much more intuitive of which of these things

to do something about.

And a lot of the skill of

facilitating a group is in the things that you don’t do so

that the things you do feel like they’re actually

contributing positively.

And I think, um, this capacity for, I think another way

of describing it, this capacity for presence, not a,

not a big extrovert, loud look-at-me presence,

but a, a presence that lets people know

that you are paying attention is one of the things

that Jordan Soiiday

and I are gonna be exploring in our

Unhurried Practice Group.

I’ll put a link to that at the end of the video

or, or down in the comments.

If you’re watching this on the socials.

 

Photo by Deniz Vatan on Unsplash

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